Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Acknowledgements
- Contents
- List of Maps
- List of Tables
- Note on Transliteration
- Note on Place Names
- Maps
- Introduction
- 1 The Position of the Jews in the Tsarist Empire, 1881–1905
- 2 Revolution and Reaction, 1904–1914
- 3 The Kingdom of Poland, 1881–1914
- 4 Galicia in the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century
- 5 Prussian Poland, 1848–1914
- 6 Jewish Spaces: Shtetls and Towns in the Nineteenth Century
- 7 Modern Jewish Literature in the Tsarist Empire and Galicia
- 8 Jewish Religious Life from the Mid-Eighteenth Century to 1914
- 9 Women in Jewish Eastern Europe
- 10 The Rise of Jewish Mass Culture: Press, Literature, Theatre
- Conclusion
- Glossary
- Bibliography
- Index
3 - The Kingdom of Poland, 1881–1914
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Acknowledgements
- Contents
- List of Maps
- List of Tables
- Note on Transliteration
- Note on Place Names
- Maps
- Introduction
- 1 The Position of the Jews in the Tsarist Empire, 1881–1905
- 2 Revolution and Reaction, 1904–1914
- 3 The Kingdom of Poland, 1881–1914
- 4 Galicia in the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century
- 5 Prussian Poland, 1848–1914
- 6 Jewish Spaces: Shtetls and Towns in the Nineteenth Century
- 7 Modern Jewish Literature in the Tsarist Empire and Galicia
- 8 Jewish Religious Life from the Mid-Eighteenth Century to 1914
- 9 Women in Jewish Eastern Europe
- 10 The Rise of Jewish Mass Culture: Press, Literature, Theatre
- Conclusion
- Glossary
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Dear nobleman … There is … no place in [the] culture which you have created with foreign ideologies and laws for those who feel and act in a human (menshlekh) and not in an aristocratic (pritsish) way. I know, too, that in the Poland that is coming, there will be a place for the humanist, for the peasant, and for me.
ISAAC LEIB PERETZ, 1911THE UNDERMINING OF THE POSITION OF THE ‘POSITIVISTS’
THE REVOLUTIONARY CRISIS in the tsarist empire and the abandonment of the policy of ‘transforming’ the Jews into useful subjects seriously undermined the authority of those who favoured integrationist politics. While integrationist views were still widely held within the Jewish elite, politics emphasizing Jewish peoplehood now gained strength. So too did socialist ideas, whether expressed in universal or in Jewish terms. Attempts to organize Orthodox Jews to participate in political life were also a feature of the period.
This new politics was, above all, a response to antisemitism. But it also stimulated further hostility to the Jews, reviving old fears that the Jews constituted a ‘state within a state’. The new Jewish politics was not able to establish a hegemonic position even in tsarist Russia, where it first emerged. It faced even more opposition elsewhere in the Jewish world, and the years between 1880 and 1939 were marked by bitter ideological conflict.
In the Kingdom of Poland (see Map 2) the undermining of the position of the Polish integrationists, the Positivists, the exponents on Polish soil of a variant of Western liberalism, and the Jews who were associated with them took place more slowly than did the parallel process in the tsarist empire. The wave of pogroms of 1881 at first provoked relatively little response in the Kingdom of Poland. For this reason the anti-Jewish violence which broke out in December 1881 in Warsaw engendered widespread shock both in positivist circles and among the prointegrationist Jews.
The pogrom began in Holy Cross Church in central Warsaw on Christmas Day. A panic in the church resulted in a stampede which caused the deaths of around twenty people. When a member of the crowd shouted that the rush had been caused by a Jewish pickpocket, anti-Jewish violence erupted. Two Jews were killed and a great deal of property was destroyed, the damage amounting to over a million roubles.
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- The Jews in Poland and RussiaVolume II: 1881 to 1914, pp. 87 - 112Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2010