To
understand Jewish responses to the Nazi threat, it is important to understand
the various ways in which European Jews had reacted to the development of a
world in which religion did not necessarily define people’s status. The process began at the end of the 18th
century, when a number of governments for the first time enacted laws promising
Jews (and other citizens) equal status, regardless of their religious
identification. Among the first
countries to do this were the United
States (after the American Revolution), the Austrian Empire (Joseph II’s Patent of Toleration, 1782),
and especially the French National
Assembly (1791, two years after the start of the French Revolution). In some cases, notably in
These laws offered the Jews emancipation and the
possibility of assimilation (becoming like everyone else. In some countries, such as the
(1) Conversion: Some Jews, usually a minority, accepted conversion to Christianity and tried to merge completely into the surrounding community. Some converts became sincere Christians; others accepted conversion because they had ceased believing in any religion, and saw no reason to continue to accept the disadvantages of being classified as Jewish.
(2) Liberal assimilation: Jews adopted the language, customs, and
nationality of their surrounding community.
They often initiated reforms in Jewish practices to make them more like
Christian ones. Nevertheless, they did
not become Christians and they maintained some distinctive forms of
behavior. Jews following this pattern
moved into new occupations that they had previously been barred from, but not
usually into the most common occupations in the surrounding community,
agriculture or factory work. Dominant
pattern in US, France,
(3) Traditionalism: Religious Jews often tried to resist
pressures to assimilate, by clinging to traditional religious practices,
speaking a separate language, and avoiding social interaction with non-Jews. Traditionalist Jewish communities continued
to exist in
(4) Revolutionary radicalism: Because some prejudices against Jews
persisted even after assimilation, some Jews turned to revolutionary movements
that promised to create a new society in which there would be no distinction
between Jews and non-Jews. This response
was most common in societies where anti-semitism was strongly entrenched,
particularly
(5) Zionism: Another response to the perceived failure of
emancipation and assimilation was Zionism, the movement to create a Jewish
national state similar to other people’s national states. The organized Zionist movement was founded in
1896 by the Austrian Jew Theodor Herzl.
Zionists argued that non-Jewish societies would never really accept Jews
as equal members, and that Jews therefore had to create their own separate
nation and culture. Zionism found its
strongest support in the same areas where revolutionary radicalism was attractive,
particularly