The Jewish Chronicle

For Jews, paths to and away from secularism led to the same place

German Jews embraced non-religious education before those to the east, but this divergence mattered little in the Holocaust

- By David Aberbach

THE RECENT media attention on the strictly Orthodox reminds us that insularity once characteri­sed the Jewish people as a whole. Some striking difference­s between Jewish communitie­s today go back to the 18th century when European Jewish emancipati­on began, and secular education emerged as an alternativ­e to the traditiona­l religious education universal in all Jewish communitie­s.

In the land of Israel and the Jewish diaspora, in theocratic Christian Europe and in the Muslim world, Jews kept their traditions, with the same sacred texts, until the French Enlightenm­ent and the Revolution of 1789.

Revolution­ary France, the first secular European state, and the first to emancipate its Jewish population, led the way. But most Jews prior to the Holocaust lived in Eastern Europe, where change was slower to come than in the West.

In our age, it is easy to forget that until relatively recently anyone who wanted a secular education and to lead a secular life had to fight for it.

Jewish resistance to secular learning has ancient roots. After 70CE, when the Romans destroyed the Jewish state, rabbinic Judaism was increasing­ly opposed to learning associated with the Greek culture of the hated Roman Empire.

Jews tended to avoid classical studies until the 19th century.

In the Age of Enlightenm­ent, European secular education began to spread in Western and Central Europe. Jewish society, too, began to change.

In Western Europe, Jews led by Moses Mendelssoh­n in Berlin, formed a small minority aiming to reform the traditiona­l Jewish curriculum to include sciences and the humanities.

Rabbinic reform followed in Germany and elsewhere in Western Europe. From the time of its birth in the early-19th century, Reform Judaism required its rabbis to have a thorough secular education. However, the East European rabbinic leadership continued to oppose all schools except the traditiona­l cheder, bet midrash and yeshiva; and the rise of Chasidism in the 18th and 19th century created new barriers to secular education.

In his autobiogra­phy, the philosophe­r, Solomon Maimon (1754-1800) writes that the Jews of his time were almost totally ignorant of secular learning.

Maimon describes from experience the Chasidic rebbes who, despite their ignorance and superstiti­on, were widely revered as faithheale­rs; science-based medicine and medically trained doctors were practicall­y a heresy. By the early 1800s about half the European Jews were Chasidim, with almost no Jews in secular schools and universiti­es.

Even so, maskilim recognised that in a largely illiterate continent, Jews with their ancient tradition of religious education from childhood, had the advantage of a high level of literacy. They were reluctant, however, to use this advantage to gain secular learning.

In response to the Russian Education Act of 1804, requiring Jews to give their children a secular education, Nachman of Breslov (grandson of the Baal Shem Tov, founder of the Hasidic movement), declared that no secular learning was more efficaciou­s than the power of faith.

As late as the mid-19th century in Tsarist Russia, with the largest Jewish population in the world, no more than a few dozen Jews were enrolled in secular schools and universiti­es. There were almost no medically trained Jews.

Yet religious barriers alone did not account for the reluctance of Jewish parents to send their children to secular schools. There was fear that in Christian schools their children would be indoctrina­ted in Christian faith and become alienated from Judaism.

These Jews were shocked by Mendelssoh­n’s enlightene­d circle in Germany: by the early 19th century the German Jews were the most educationa­lly advanced Jewish community in the world, with many obtaining higher education in a variety of fields, but a significan­t number (including most of Mendelssoh­n’s children) abandoned not just their religious practices but Judaism itself.

The Haskalah promoted Hebrew as a language of modern education, but those who adopted it as a didactic tool tended to abandon it for the language of the country.

Insofar as secular education led to the betrayal of Jewish tradition and communal life, observant Jews felt their rabbis were right to insist it had no place in their lives.

In any case, secular studies were normally incompatib­le with traditiona­l Judaism. Training

in medicine was impossible without breaking Jewish law, especially the dietary laws, the Sabbath and festivals.

Yet, the pressure of modernisat­ion proved irresistib­le. By the late-19th century, Jewish parents increasing­ly sent their children, girls as well as boys, to secular schools and universiti­es; and the number of profession­ally trained Jews in Russia shot up, out of proportion to their numbers.

Slowly in Eastern Europe, the Western pattern of Jewish assimilati­on was repeated. To Western European Jews this process was too slow: they feared that their East European brethren would trigger antisemiti­sm directed against them.

Rabbinic warnings, which had seemed benighted to maskilim, were not without justificat­ion. For assimilate­d Jews – including Jewish students seeking secular learning in schools and universiti­es - became targets of antisemiti­c attacks.

The hopes of East European Haskalah ended in 1881, when a wave of pogroms broke out in southern Russia. In the so-called ‘May Laws’ of May 1882, the Jews were officially blamed for provoking the pogroms.

Educationa­l quotas were added to the hundreds of antisemiti­c laws by which Jews were persecuted.

Late-19th and early 20th century Jewish literature, particular­ly in Hebrew and Yiddish, reflected a sea change toward Orthodoxy and Hasidism in particular.

A major genre of 19th century Haskalah literature was satire, directed chiefly against Hasidism; but post1881 Jewish literature was increasing­ly sympatheti­c to Chasidism.

In the writings of Feierberg, Peretz, Ansky, Sholom Aleichem, Bialik, Agnon, and many others, Chasidism was no longer seen as a morass of superstiti­on but, rather, a repository of profound wisdom. The traditiona­l Jewish school, denounced by the Haskalah, was extolled as ‘the creative workshop for the soul of the nation’ (Bialik).

Secular Jewish nationalis­ts such as Theodor Herzl, founder of political

Zionism, began to see the Orthodox East European Jews as an essential part of the Nation, even as bearers of a great tradition, with the power to inspire and to be renewed in the modern world.

The Orthodox Jews were mostly opposed to the idea of a modern Jewish state but they were loyal to fellow Jews in need, to the observance of Judaism and the study of its sacred texts, the memory of Zion, and to Hebrew as leshon ha-kodesh (the Holy Tongue). The rabbinic tradition, however outmoded it appeared to be, had after all enabled the Jews to survive two millennia of exile and persecutio­n. Secularise­d young Germanspea­king Jews with university degrees, such as Franz Kafka and Gershom Scholem, began to view Chasidim with new interest, for they seemed to have a richness of spiritual culture their Western brethren had lost.

Their discovery of modern Hebrew and Yiddish literature, of Jewish history and theology, as well as Hasidic lore and mysticism, inspired them.

In his German novel, Job (1930), Joseph Roth gives a moving depiction of a woman in a late-19th century shtetl who, cursed with a deformed child, takes him to her wonder rebbe, who gives her hope: “Pain will make him wise, ugliness kind, bitterness gentle, and illness strong.” A later operation in a modern hospital which cures the child does not change the image of the rebbe as miracle-worker and faith-healer.

And indeed, the sense of unity of highly diverse communitie­s scattered in the Jewish world was given a final stamp by their collective fate, for they were hunted and murdered as one people; and the State of Israel, establishe­d three years after the Holocaust, accepted its role as a place where all Jews might live, free of the nightmare of the past.

Jews tended to avoid classical studies until the 19th century’

David Aberbach is author of Nationalis­m, War and Jewish Education. He is currently a visiting scholar at the Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies.

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 ?? PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES, WIKIPEDIA ?? Theodor Herzl (left) and Moses Mendelsson
PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES, WIKIPEDIA Theodor Herzl (left) and Moses Mendelsson
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