from Part I - American Power in the Modern Era
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 November 2021
In the spring of 1903 the front pages of newspapers across the United States featured three stories about Russia that sparked widespread discussion. From the Russian capital, St. Petersburg, came the stunning news that Tsar Nicholas II had issued an Edict of Toleration that would grant Russian subjects the freedom to worship according to their consciences. Although skeptics stressed the vagueness of the proclamation and doubted that it would alleviate discrimination against Jews, enthusiasts compared it to the freeing of Russian serfs by Alexander II forty years earlier and anticipated that it would open the way to a broad regeneration of Russia.
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