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Volume II, by S.M. Dubnow

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Title: History of the Jews in Russia and Poland. Volume II
       From the death of Alexander I. until the death of Alexander
       III. (1825-1894)

Author: S.M. Dubnow

Translator: I. Friedlaender

Release Date: April 30, 2005 [EBook #15729]

Language: English

Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1

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HISTORY OF THE JEWS
IN RUSSIA AND POLAND

FROM THE EARLIEST TIMES
UNTIL THE PRESENT DAY

BY
S.M. DUBNOW

TRANSLATED FROM THE RUSSIAN
BY
I. FRIEDLAENDER


VOLUME II


FROM THE DEATH OF ALEXANDER I. UNTIL THE DEATH OF ALEXANDER III.
(1825-1894)


PHILADELPHIA
THE JEWISH PUBLICATION SOCIETY OF AMERICA
5706--1946

Copyright 1918 by
THE JEWISH PUBLICATION SOCIETY OF AMERICA





TRANSLATOR'S PREFACE


It was originally proposed to give the history of Russian
Jewry after 1825--the year with which the first volume concludes--in a
single volume. This, however, would have resulted in producing a volume
of unwieldy dimensions, entirely out of proportion to the one preceding
it. It has, therefore, become imperative to divide Dubnow's work into
three, instead of into two, volumes. The second volume, which is
herewith offered to the public, treats of the history of Russian Jewry
from the death of Alexander I. (1825) until the death of Alexander III.
(1894). The third and concluding volume will deal with the reign of
Nicholas II., the last of the Romanovs, and will also contain the
bibliographical apparatus, the maps, the index, and other supplementary
material. This division will undoubtedly recommend itself to the reader.
The next volume is partly in type, and will follow as soon as
circumstances permit.

Of the three reigns described in the present volume, that of Alexander
III., though by far the briefest, is treated at considerably greater
length than the others. The reason for it is not far to seek. The events
which occurred during the fourteen years of his reign laid their
indelible impress upon Russian Jewry, and they have had a determining
influence upon the growth and development of American Israel. The
account of Alexander III.'s reign is introduced in the Russian original
by a general characterization of the anti-Jewish policies of Russian
Tzardom. Owing to the rearrangement of the material, to which reference
was made in the preface to the first volume, this introduction, which
would have interrupted the flow of the narrative, had to be omitted. But
a few passages from it, written in the characteristic style of Mr.
Dubnow, may find a place here:

  Russian Tzardom began its consistent role as a persecutor of the
  Eternal People when it received, by way of bequest, the vast Jewish
  population of disintegrated Poland. At the end of the eighteenth
  century, when Western Europe had just begun the emancipation of the
  Jews, the latter were subjected in the East of Europe to every
  possible medieval experiment.... The reign of Alexander II., who
  slightly relieved the civil disfranchisement of the Jews by
  permitting certain categories among them to live outside the Pale
  and by a few other measures, forms a brief interlude in the Russian
  policy of oppression. His tragic death in 1881 marks the beginning
  of a new terrible reaction which has superimposed the system of
  wholesale street pogroms upon the policy of disfranchisement, and
  has again thrown millions of Jews into the dismal abyss of
  medievalism.

  Russia created a lurid antithesis to Jewish emancipation at a time
  when the latter was consummated not only in Western Europe, but also
  in the semi-civilized Balkan States.... True, the rise of Russian
  Judaeophobia--the Russian technical term for Jew-hatred--was
  paralleled by the appearance of German anti-Semitism in which it
  found a congenial companion. Yet, the anti-Semitism of the West was
  after all only a weak aftermath of the infantile disease of
  Europe--the medieval Jew-hatred--whereas culturally retrograde
  Russia was still suffering from the same infection in its acute,
  "childish" form. The social and cultural anti-Semitism of the West
  did not undermine the modern foundations of Jewish civil equality.
  But Russian Judaeophobia, more governmental than social, being fully
  in accord with the entire r�gime of absolutism, produced a system
  aiming not only at the disfranchisement, but also at the direct
  physical annihilation of the Jewish people. The policy of the
  extermination of Judaism was stamped upon the forehead of Russian
  reaction, receiving various colors at various periods, assuming the
  hue now of economic, now of national and religious, now of
  bureaucratic oppression. The year 1881 marks the starting-point of
  this systematic war against the Jews, which has continued until our
  own days, and is bound to reach a crisis upon the termination of the
  great world struggle.

Concerning the transcription of Slavonic names, the reader is referred
to the explanations given in the preface to the first volume. The
foot-notes added by the translator have been placed in square brackets.
The poetic quotations by the author have been reproduced in English
verse, the translation following both in content and form the original
languages of the quotations as closely as possible. As in the case of
the first volume, a number of editorial changes have become necessary.
The material has been re-arranged and the headings have been supplied in
accordance with the general plan of the work. A number of pages have
been added, dealing with the attitude of the American people and
Government toward the anti-Jewish persecutions in Russia. These
additions will be found on pp. 292-296, pp. 394-396, and pp. 408-410. I
am indebted to Dr. Cyrus Adler for his kindness in reading the proof of
this part of the work.

The dates given in this volume are those of the Russian calendar, except
for the cases in which the facts relate to happenings outside of Russia.

As in the first volume, the translator has been greatly assisted by the
Hon. Mayer Sulzberger, who has read the proofs with his usual care and
discrimination, and by Professor Alexander Marx, who has offered a
number of valuable suggestions.

I.F.

NEW YORK, February 25, 1918.



CONTENTS

CHAPTER                                   PAGE

XIII. THE MILITARY DESPOTISM OF NICHOLAS I.
   1. Military Service as a Means of De-Judaization                   13
   2. The Recruiting Ukase of 1827 and Juvenile Conscription          18
   3. Military Martyrdom                                              22
   4. The Policy of Expulsions                                        30
   5. The Codification of Jewish Disabilities                         34
   6. The Russian Censorship and Conversionist Endeavors              41


XIV. COMPULSORY ENLIGHTENMENT AND INCREASED OPPRESSION.
   1. Enlightenment as a Means of Assimilation                        46
   2. Uvarov and Lilienthal                                           50
   3. The Abolition of Jewish Autonomy and Renewed Persecutions       59
   4. Intercession of Western European Jewry                          66
   5. The Economic Plight of Russian Jewry and Agricultural
      Experiments                                                     69
   6. The Ritual Murder Trial of Velizh                               72
   7. The Mstislavl Affair                                            84


XV. THE JEWS IN THE KINGDOM OF POLAND.
   1. Plans of Jewish Emancipation                                    88
   2. Political Reaction and Literary Anti-Semitism                   94
   3. Assimilationist Tendencies Among the Jews of Poland            100
   4. The Jews and the Polish Insurrection of 1831                   105


XVI. THE INNER LIFE OF RUSSIAN JEWRY DURING THE PERIOD OF MILITARY DESPOTISM.
   1. The Uncompromising Attitude of Rabbinism                       111
   2. The Stagnation of Hasidism                                     116
   3. The Russian Mendelssohn (Isaac Baer Levinsohn)                 125
   4. The Rise of Neo-Hebraic Culture                                132
   5. The Jews and the Russian People                                138


XVII. THE LAST YEARS OF NICHOLAS I.
   1. The "Assortment" of the Jews                                   140
   2. Compulsory Assimilation                                        143
   3. New Conscription Horrors                                       145
   4. The Ritual Murder Trial of Saratov                             150


XVIII. THE ERA OF REFORMS UNDER ALEXANDER II.
   1. The Abolition of Juvenile Conscription                         154
   2. "Homeopathic" Emancipation and the Policy of "Fusion"          157
   3. The Extension of the Right of Residence                        161
   4. Further Alleviations and Attempts at Russification             172
   5. The Jews and the Polish Insurrection of 1863                   177


XIX. THE REACTION UNDER ALEXANDER II.
   1. Change of Attitude Toward the Jewish Problem                   184
   2. The Informer Jacob Brafman                                     187
   3. The Fight Against Jewish "Separatism"                          190
   4. The Drift Toward Oppression                                    198


XX. THE INNER LIFE OF RUSSIAN JEWRY DURI...
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