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4 - Antisemitism, conspiracy culture, Christianity, and Islam: the history and contemporary religious significance of the Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

Christopher Partridge
Affiliation:
Professor of Religion Lancaster University; Co-director of the Research Centre for Religion and Popular Culture
Ron Geaves
Affiliation:
Professor of Religious Studies University of Chester
James R. Lewis
Affiliation:
University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Olav Hammer
Affiliation:
University of Southern Denmark
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Summary

“One of the most important forgeries of modern times.” In 1939 the French scholar of antisemitism, Henri Rollin, concluded that the Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion was probably the most widely distributed book in the world after the Bible. Indeed, there are few languages, including Hebrew, into which it has not been translated. Moreover, “its distribution was accompanied by a mountain of secondary literature comprising well more than one thousand titles.” The Protocols is, as Norman Cohn has argued, “the supreme expression and vehicle of the myth of the Jewish world-conspiracy.” Pretending to be lectures, or notes of lectures, taken during twenty-four sessions of a congress held by representatives of “the twelve tribes of Israel,” the Elders of Zion, led by a Grand Rabbi – whom a later edition claimed to be the founder of modern Zionism, Theodore Herzl – it sets out a plot to take over the world and to subjugate gentiles. While not easy to summarize, the standard version of the Protocols expounds three principal themes: a critique of liberalism, an exposition of the methods by which Jews intend to take over the world, and an overview of the world government that the Elders of Zion intend to establish.

The work is “a slapdash patchwork composed of several earlier, unrelated writings” constructed as the Protocols by the Okhrana (the czarist secret police) and published in Russian newspapers during 1903 in order to strengthen the position of Nicholas II. However, while one might have expected such an obvious and ludicrous forgery to have quickly lost credibility, its combination of the twin motifs of conspiracy and anti-semitism quickly found eager believers and translators.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2007

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