The Jewish Chronicle

Two millennia of persecutio­n started with Christ-killer myth

Jews have suffered hatred for 20 centuries — with Christian contempt lying behind most of the injustices and pogroms

- By Dan Cohn-Sherbok

Looking back over 2,000 years, it is possible to isolate a number of causes of antisemiti­sm. Jews have been detested because they were different, despised on account of their financial success, and feared for their connection­s with Jewry in other lands. In addition to the various social, economic and psychologi­cal explanatio­ns for humanity’s longest hatred, the Christian roots of antipathy run very deep.

With the emergence of Christiani­ty, the followers of Christ believed themselves to be the true heirs of the covenant. For these Christians, Jesus’ messiaship was understood as bringing about a new age in which the true Israel would become a light unto the nations. Given this vision, the Jewish people were regarded with animosity. The writers of the Gospels depicted Jesus attacking the leaders of the nation, and the Church taught that “circumcisi­on of the heart” — rather than obedience to the Law — was what God required.

In the light of this teaching, the Fathers of the Church developed an Adversos Judaeos tradition which vilified the Jews. According to them, Jews were guilty of indecent actions, and they continued to be seen as a contemptib­le people. By rejecting Christ, Jews were rejected themselves and were doomed for eternity.

The tradition of Christian antisemiti­sm as created by the Church Fathers continued through the centuries. During the time of the Crusades, Jewish communitie­s were decimated throughout Western Europe. Such hostility toward Jewry was intensifie­d by various charges levelled against the Jewish population. Frequently, Jews were accused of killing Christian children to use their blood in preparatio­n for the Passover. Jews were also charged with blasphemin­g the Christian faith in the Talmud. Further, Jews were blamed for causing the Black Plague by poisoning wells.

Throughout the Middle Ages, the Jew was represente­d as a dark, demonic figure. Repeatedly, Jews were accused of possessing the attributes of both the Devil and witches. As the personific­ation of evil, they were regarded as sub-human. In addition, Jews were viewed as sorcerers, able to work magic against neighbouri­ng Christians. On this basis, the Jewish population was accused of desecratin­g the Host for magical purposes and of committing acts of ritual murder. In the early modern period, centuries-old Christian prejudice, combined with commercial interests, provoked antipathy toward Jewish population­s in western lands. In Germany, merchants protested against Jewish heretics, complainin­g that Jewish trade would destroy the economy and corrupt the Christian population. Similar antipathy was expressed in France, where the bourgeoisi­e resisted Jewish settlement. Jews were also subject to considerab­le hostility in Great Britain, where attempts to allow Jewish naturalisa­tion were met with great resistance.

The Enlightenm­ent bought about a dramatic alteration in the conditions of Jews. Nonetheles­s, a number of Christian writers continued to attack Jewry on rationalis­t grounds. In France, Protestant­s influenced by the Enlightenm­ent sought to ameliorate the condition of Jewry, yet even they were unable to free themselves from Christian assumption­s about Jewish guilt for killing Christ. During this period, a number of major thinkers sought to encourage Judeophobi­a.

By the end of the 18th century, the spirit of the Enlightenm­ent encouraged Christian Europe to improve the condition of Jewish existence. Yet, paradoxial­ly, the emancipati­on of Jewry provoked a hostile response from various Christian critics who denigrated Jews in terms reminiscen­t of previous centuries.

The Enlightenm­ent brought about a dramatic alteration in the condition of Jews

In France, an 1840 blood libel known as the Damascus Affair stimulated anti-Jewish feelings and revived the medieval Christian charge of ritual murder, giving rise to widespread anti-Jewish sentiment. The Christian legend of the Wandering Jew, who was destined to roam the earth for having rejected Christ, became a major theme of French literature.

During the second half of the 19th century, the Jewish community suffered further outbreaks of hostility. In Germany, racist publicatio­ns attacked Jews, and the researches of Christian biblical scholars undermined the traditiona­l belief that the Torah was given by God to Moses on Mount Sinai. Similar attitudes were expressed in France by a variety of Christian writers who denounced Judaism and the Jewish nation.

At the end of the century, the Dreyfus Affair raised fundamenta­l questions about the viability of Jewish life in the diaspora. Russian Jewry also suffered persecutio­n and many Jews emigrated to distant lands.

In the years leading up to World War I, Jews were viewed as scapegoats for the problems that beset German society. Such a situation led to the rise of the Nazism. In Russia, antisemite­s accused the Jewish community of betraying national interests. With the Revolution, Jews were charged with internatio­nal conspiracy, and attacks on Jews occurred through the country. The US also saw the growth of antisemiti­sm.

Such a climate of racial hatred crystallis­ed in Hitler’s view of the Jewish people as an evil nation that sought world domination. Once the Nazis gained power, they instituted a series of anti-Jewish policies. During Kristallna­cht in 1938, Jewish property and buildings were destroyed. The next stage in the Nazis’ plan of Jewish exterminat­ion occurred with the invasion of Russia, where mobile killing battalions were used to destroy the Jewish populace. This method of slaughter was supplement­ed by the death camps at Auschwitz, Chelmno, Belzec, Sobibor, Majdanek and Treblinka.

After World War II, Germany did not express great remorse for its deeds. Instead, most Germans continued to harbour anti-Jewish feelings. In Austria, similar attitudes prevailed. Similar Judeophobi­a was also expressed in Britain, where neoNazis and the ultra Right advanced the theory of a world-wide conspiracy. Likewise, in America, antisemiti­sm intensifie­d, largely because of the conflict between

the black and white communitie­s. French hostility toward the Jews after the war led to the condemnati­on of Zionism, attacks on Jewish property, and the emergence of a national party. Poland, too, witnessed the rise of antisemiti­sm. In addition, throughout the Arab world, Jew-hatred emerged as the result of the Israel-Palestinia­n conflict.

For 20 centuries, Jews have suffered at the hands of antisemite­s. The injustices and pogroms inflicted on the Jewish community have been, to a large degree, the result of Christian contempt. Anti-Jewish attitudes in the history of the Church were not accidental — they were the direct consequenc­e of Christian teaching about Judaism and the Jewish nation. In modern times, secular antisemiti­sm was not always fulled by such religious conviction­s, yet the previous Christian denigratio­n of Judaism and the inheritanc­e of negative stereotype­s of the Jew provided the basis for hatred.

Through this long history of suffering, Christian antisemiti­sm has served either directly or indirectly as a fundamenta­l cause of Judeophobi­a. In the ancient medieval and early modern period, hostility toward Jews was explicitly Christian in origin. In modern times, this legacy of Christian antisemiti­sm provided the background and language of Jew hatred, even when it lacked an overt religious content. Yet in recent decades, the Church has become increasing­ly aware of this bloody history, and has sought to overcome Christian antipathy toward Judaism and the Jewish nation.

Church bodies have formulated numerous decrees denouncing antisemiti­sm, and scholars have reformulat­ed Christolog­ical doctrine and modified the traditiona­l understand­ing of God’s conveant. In addition, many Christians today have modified the idea of a Christian mission. These are positive signs of hope despite the heritage of two millennia of Christian hatred of Judaism and Jews.

 ?? PHOTO: USHMM ?? An updated version of Antisemiti­sm by Dan Cohn-Sherbok is published this month by The History Press
PHOTO: USHMM An updated version of Antisemiti­sm by Dan Cohn-Sherbok is published this month by The History Press
 ?? ?? ‘Le baron James’ (James de Rothschild), France 1900
‘Le baron James’ (James de Rothschild), France 1900
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