A OVERVIEW OF 2000 YEARS OF
JEWISH PERSECUTION
Quotations:
- "Nazi anti-Judaism was the work of godless, anti-Christian
criminals. But it would not have been possible without the almost two thousand years'
pre-history of 'Christian' anti-Judaism..." Hans Küng
- "The Jews are a nervous people. Nineteen centuries of Christian
love have taken a toll." Benjamin Disraeli
- "Only
in our remembrance and open discussion is there a chance, a hope, that
another Holocaust will never happen." Louis Weber, publisher
of "The Holocaust Chronicle"
Persecution of Jews by Roman Pagans
- 70: The Roman Army destroyed Jerusalem, killed over
1 million Jews and took about 100,000 into slavery and captivity.
- 113: Jews in Cyprus, Cyrene, Egypt and Mesopotamia
revolted against the Roman Empire. This caused "the death of several hundreds of thousands of Romans
and Jews." Judaism was no longer recognized as a legal
religion.
- 132: Bar Kochba led a hopeless three-year revolt
against the Roman Empire. Many Jews had accepted him as the Messiah.
About a half-million Jews were killed; thousands were sold into
slavery or taken into captivity. The rest were exiled from
Palestine and scattered throughout the known world in what is called
the "Diaspora."
- 135: Serious Roman persecution of the Jews began.
They were forbidden, upon pain of death, from practicing circumcision,
reading the Torah, eating unleavened bread at Passover, etc. A temple
dedicated to the Roman pagan god Jupiter was erected on temple
mountain in Jerusalem. A temple of Venus was built on Golgotha, just
outside the city.
- 200: Roman Emperor Severus forbade religious
conversions to Judaism.
Anti-Judaism: Persecution of Followers of the Jewish Religion:
Initial persecution of Jews was along religious lines. Persecution would cease if the
person converted to Christianity.
- 306: The church Synod of Elvira banned
marriages, sexual intercourse and community contacts between
Christians and Jews.
- 315: Constantine published the Edict of Milan
which extended religious tolerance to Christians. Jews lost many
rights with this edict. They were no longer permitted to live in
Jerusalem, or to proselytize.
- 325: The Council of Nicea decided to
separate the celebration of Easter from the Jewish Passover. They
stated: "For it is unbecoming beyond
measure that on this holiest of festivals we should follow the customs of the Jews.
Henceforth let us have nothing in common with this odious people..."
- 337: Christian Emperor Constantius created a law
which made the marriage of a Jewish man to a Christian punishable by
death.
- 339: Converting to Judaism became a criminal
offense.
- 367 - 376: St. Hilary of Poitiers referred to Jews
as a perverse people who God has cursed forever. St. Ephroem refers to
synagogues as brothels.
- 379-395: Emperor Theodosius the Great permitted the
destruction of synagogues if it served a religious purpose.
Christianity became the state religion of the Roman Empire at this
time.
- 380: The bishop of Milan was responsible for the
burning of a synagogue; he referred to it as "an act pleasing to God."
- 415: The Bishop of Alexandria, St. Cyril, expelled
the Jews from that Egyptian city.
- 415: St. Augustine wrote "The true image of the Hebrew is
Judas Iscariot, who sells the Lord for silver. The Jew can never understand the Scriptures
and forever will bear the guilt for the death of Jesus."
- 418: St. Jerome, who created the Vulgate
translation of the Bible wrote of a synagogue: "If you call it a brothel, a den of vice, the Devil's refuge,
Satan's fortress, a place to deprave the soul, an abyss of every conceivable disaster or
whatever you will, you are still saying less than it deserves."
- 489 - 519: Christian mobs destroyed the synagogues
in Antioch, Daphne (near Antioch) and Ravenna.
- 528: Emperor Justinian (527-564) passed the
Justinian Code. It prohibited Jews from building synagogues, reading
the Bible in Hebrew, assemble in public, celebrate Passover before
Easter, and testify against Christians in court.
- 535: The "Synod of Claremont decreed that Jews could not hold
public office or have authority over Christians."
- 538: The 3rd and 4th Councils of Orleans
prohibited Jews from appearing in public during the Easter season.
Prohibited marriages between Christians and Jews. Prohibited
Christians from converting to Judaism.
- 561: The bishop of Uzes expelled Jews from his
diocese in France.
- 612: Jews were not allowed to own land, to be
farmers or enter certain trades.
- 613: Very serious persecution begain in Spain. Jews were
given the options of either leaving Spain or converting to
Christianity. Jewish children over 6 years of age were taken from
their parents and given a Christian education
- 694: The 17th Church Council of Toledo,
Spain defined Jews as the serfs of the prince. This was based, in
part, on the beliefs by Chrysostom, Origen, Jerome, and other Church
Fathers that God punished the Jews with perpetual slavery because of
their responsibility for the execution of Jesus.
- 722: Leo III outlawed Judaism. Jews were baptized
against their will.
- 855: Jews were exiled from Italy
- 1050: The Synod of Narbonne prohibited
Christians from living in the homes of Jews.
- 1078: "Pope Gregory VII decreed that Jews could not hold
office or be superiors to Christians."
- 1078: The Synod of Gerona forced Jews to pay
church taxes
- 1096: The First Crusade was launched in
this year. Although the prime goal of the crusades was to liberate
Jerusalem from the Muslims, Jews were a second target. As the soldiers
passed through Europe on the way to the Holy Land, large numbers of
Jews were challenged: "Christ-killers, embrace the Cross or die!"
12,000 Jews in the Rhine Valley alone were killed in the first
Crusade. This behavior continued for 8 additional crusades until the
9th in 1272.
- 1099: The Crusaders forced all of the Jews of Jerusalem into
a central synagogue and set it on fire. Those who tried to escape were
forced back into the burning building.
- 1121: Jews were exiled from Flanders (now part of
present-day Belgium)
- 1130: Some Jews in London allegedly killed a sick man. The
Jewish people in the city were required to pay 1 million marks as
compensation.
- 1146: The Second Crusade began. A French
Monk, Rudolf, called for the destruction of the Jews.
- 1179: Canon 24 of the Third Lateran Council
stated: "Jews
should be slaves to Christians and at the same time treated kindly due of humanitarian
considerations." Canon 26 stated that "the testimony of Christians
against Jews is to be preferred in all causes where they use their own witnesses against
Christians." (4)
- 1180: The French King of France, Philip Augustus,
arbitrarily seized all Jewish property and expelled the Jews from the
country. There was no legal justification for this action. They were
allowed to sell all movable possessions, but their land and houses
were stolen by the king.
- 1189: Jews were persecuted in England. The Crown
claimed all Jewish possessions. Most of their houses were burned.
- 1205: Pope Innocent III wrote to the archbishops of
Sens and Paris that "the Jews, by their own guilt, are consigned to perpetual servitude because they
crucified the Lord...As slaves rejected by God, in whose death they wickedly conspire,
they shall by the effect of this very action, recognize themselves as the slaves of those
whom Christ's death set free..."
- 1215: The Fourth Lateran Council approved
canon laws requiring that "Jews and Muslims shall wear a special dress."
They also had to wear a badge in the form of a ring. This was to
enable them to be easily distinguished from Christians. This practice
later spread to other countries.
- 1227: The Synod of Narbonne
required Jews to wear an oval badge. This requirement was reinstalled
during the 1930's by Hitler, who changed the oval badge to a Star of
David.
- 1229: The Spanish inquisition starts. Later, in
1252, Pope Innocent IV authorizes the use of torture by the
Inquisitors.
- 1261: Duke Henry III of Brabant, Belgium, stated in
his will that "Jews...must be expelled from Brabant and totally annihilated so that not a single
one remains, except those who are willing to trade, like all other tradesmen, without
money-lending and usury."
- 1267: The Synod of Vienna ordered Jews to
wear horned hats. Thomas Aquinas said that Jews should live in
perpetual servitude.
- 1290: Jews are exiled from England. About 16,000
left the country.
- 1298: Jews were persecuted in Austria, Bavaria and
Franconia. 140 Jewish communities were destroyed; more than 100,000
Jews were killed over a 6 month period.
- 1306: 100,000 Jews are exiled from France. They
left with only the clothes on their backs, and food for only one day.
- 1320: 40,000 French shepherds went to Palestine on the
Shepherd Crusade. On the way, 140 Jewish communities were destroyed.
- 1321: In Guienne, France, Jews were accused of
having incited criminals to poison wells. 5,000 Jews were burned
alive, at the stake.
- 1347 +: Ships from the Far East carried rats into
Mediterranean ports. The rats carried the Black Death. At first, fleas
spread the disease from the rats to humans. As the plague worsened,
the germs spread from human to human. In five years, the death toll
had reached 25 million. England took 2 centuries for its population
levels to recover from the plague. People looked around for someone to
blame. They noted that a smaller percentage of Jews than Christians
caught the disease. This was undoubtedly due to the Jewish sanitary
and dietary laws, which had been preserved from Old Testament times.
Rumors circulated that Satan was protecting the Jews and that they
were paying back the Devil by poisoning wells used by Christians. The
solution was to torture, murder and burn the Jews. "In Bavaria...12,000 Jews...perished; in the small town of
Erfurt...3,000; Rue Brulée...2,000 Jews; near Tours, an immense trench was dug, filled
with blazing wood and in a single day 160 Jews were burned."
In Strausberg 2,000 Jews were burned. In Maintz 6,000 were killed...;
in Worms 400..."
- 1354: 12,000 Jews were executed in Toledo.
- 1374: An epidemic of possession
broke out in the lower Rhine region of what is now Germany. People
were seen "dancing, jumping and
[engaging in] wild raving." This was triggered by enthusiastic
revels on St. John's Day - an Christianized version of an ancient
Pagan seasonal day of celebration which was still observed by the
populace. The epidemic spread throughout the Rhine and in much of the
Netherlands and Germany. Crowds of 500 or more dancers would be
overcome together. Exorcisms were tried, but failed. Pilgrimages to
the shrine of St. Vitus were tried, but this only seemed to exacerbate
the problem. Finally, the rumor spread that God was angry because
Christians had been excessively tolerant towards the Jews. God had
cursed Europe as He did Saul when he showed mercy towards God's
enemies in the Old Testament. Jews "were plundered, tortured and murdered by tens of thousands."
The epidemic finally burned itself out two centuries later, in the
late 16th century.
- 1391 : Jewish persecutions begin in Seville and in
70 other Jewish communities throughout Spain.
- 1394 : Jews were exiled, for the second time, from
France.
- 1431 +: The Council of Basel "forbade Jews to go to
universities, prohibited them from acting as agents in the conclusion of contracts between
Christians, and required that they attend church sermons."
- 1453 : The Franciscan monk, Capistrano, persuaded
the King of Poland to terminate all Jewish civil rights.
- 1478: Spanish Jews had been heavily persecuted from
the 14th century. Many had converted to Christianity. The Spanish
Inquisition was set up by the Church in order to detect insincere
conversions. Laws were passed that prohibited the descendants of Jews
or Muslims from attending university, joining religious orders,
holding public office, or entering any of a long list of professions.
- 1492 : Jews were given the choice of being
baptized as Christians or be banished from Spain. 300,000 left Spain
penniless. Many migrated to Turkey, where they found tolerance among
the Muslims. Others converted to Christianity but often continued to
practice Judaism in secret.
- 1492 (Jan) 100,00 Jews expelled and 3000 killed in Sicily (a Spanish
province since 1411). 1400 years of Jewish history disappears almost overnight.
- 1497: Jews were banished from Portugal. 20,000
left the country rather than be baptized as Christians.
- 1516: The Governor of the Republic of Venice
decided that Jews would be permitted to live only in one area of the
city. It was located in the South Girolamo parish and was called the
"Ghetto Novo." This was the first ghetto in Europe.
Hitler made use of the concept in the 1930's.
- 1517: The Venice Ghetto was established.
- 1523: Martin Luther distributed his essay "That Jesus Was Born a Jew.
" He hoped that large numbers of Jews would convert to
Christianity. They didn't, and he began to write and preach hatred
against them. Luther has been condemned in recent years for being
extremely antisemitic. The charge has some merit; however he was
probably typical of most Christians during his era.
- 1540 : Jews were exiled from Naples.
- 1543 : Martin Luther, distressed by the reluctance
of Jews to convert to Christianity wrote "On the Jews and their lies, On Shem Hamphoras"
:
"What then shall we Christians do with this damned, rejected race of Jews?
- First, their synagogues or churches should be set on fire,...
- Secondly, their homes should likewise be broken down and destroyed... They ought to
be put under one roof or in a stable, like Gypsies.
- Thirdly, they should be deprived of their prayer books and Talmuds in which such
idolatry, lies, cursing and blasphemy are taught.
- Fourthly, their rabbis must be forbidden under threat of death to teach any more...
- Fifthly, passport and traveling privileges should be absolutely forbidden to the
Jews...
- Sixthly, they ought to be stopped from usury. All their cash and valuables of silver
and gold ought to be taken from them and put aside for safe keeping...
- Seventhly, let the young and strong Jews and Jewesses be given the flail, the axe,
the hoe, the spade, the distaff, and spindle and let them earn their bread by the sweat of
their noses as in enjoined upon Adam's children...
To sum up, dear princes and nobles who have Jews in your domains, if this advice of
mine does not suit you, then find a better one so that you and we may all be free of this
insufferable devilish burden - the Jews."
- 1550: Jews were exiled from Genoa and Venice.
- 1555-JUL-12: A Roman Catholic Papal bull, "Cum nimis absurdum,"
required Jews to wear badges, and live in ghettos. They were not
allowed to own property outside the ghetto. Living conditions were
dreadful: over 3,000 people were forced to live in about 8 acres of
land. Women had to wear a yellow veil or scarf; men had to wear a
piece of yellow cloth on their hat.
- 1582: Jews were expelled from Holland
Antisemitism: Persecution of Jews along Racial Lines:
Previous persecution was directed at believers in Judaism. Jews could escape
oppression by converting to Christianity. Subsequent attacks against
Jews were racially motivated; the Jewish people were viewed as a separate race.
- 1806: A French Jesuit Priest, Abbe Barruel, had
written a treatise blaming the Masonic Order for the French
Revolution. He later issued a letter alleging that Jews, not the
Masons were the guilty party. This triggered a belief in an
international Jewish conspiracy in Germany, Poland and some other
European countries later in the 19th century.
- 1846 - 1878: Pope Pius IX restored all of the previous
restrictions against the Jews within the Vatican state. All Jews under
Papal control were confined to Rome's ghetto - the last one in Europe
until the Nazi era. On 2000-SEP-3, Pope John Paul II beautified Pius
IX; this is the last step before sainthood. He explained: "Beatifying
a son of the church does not celebrate particular historic choices
that he has made, but rather points him out for imitation and for
veneration for his virtue."
- 1858: Edgardo Mortara was kidnapped, at the age of six, from
his Jewish family by Roman Catholic officials after they found out
that a maid had secretly baptized him. He was not returned to his
family but was raised a Catholic. He eventually became a priest.
- 1873: The term "antisemitism" is
first used in a pamphlet by Wilhelm Marr called "Jewry's Victory over Teutonism."
- 1881: Alexander II of Russia was assassinated by
radicals. The Jews were blamed. About 200 individual pogroms against
the Jews followed. ("Pogrom" is a Russian word
meaning "devastation" or "riot."
In Russia, a pogrom was typically a mob riot against Jewish
individuals, shops, homes or businesses. They were often supported and
even organized by the government.) Thousands of Jews became homeless
and impoverished. The few who were charged with offenses generally
received very light sentences.
- 1893: "...anti-Semitic parties won sixteen seats in the German
Reichstag."
- 1894: Captain Alfred Dreyfus, an officer on the
French general staff, was convicted of treason. The evidence against
him consisted of a piece of paper from his wastebasket with another
person's handwriting, and papers forged by antisemitic officers. He
received a life sentence on Devil's Island, off the coast of South
America. The French government was aware that a Major Esterhazy was
actually guilty. (The church, government and army united to
suppress the truth. Writer Emile Zola and politician Jean Jaurès
fought for justice and human rights. After 10 years, the French
government fell and Drefus was declared totally innocent. The Dreyfus
Affair was world-wide news for years. It motivated Journalist Theodor
Herzl to write a book in 1896: "The Jewish
State: A Modern Solution to the Jewish Question." The book led to
the founding of the Zionist movement which fought for a Jewish
Homeland. A half century later, the state of Israel was born.
- 1903: At Easter, government agents organized an
anti-Jewish pogrom in Kishinev, Moldova, Russia. The local newspaper
published a series of inflammatory articles. A Christian child was
discovered murdered and a young Christian woman at the Jewish Hospital
committed suicide. Jews were blamed for the deaths. Violence ensured.
The 5,000 soldiers in the town did nothing. When the smoke cleared, 49
Jews had been killed, 500 were injured; 700 homes looted and
destroyed, 600 businesses and shops looted, 2000 families left
homeless. Later, it was discovered that the child had been murdered by
its relatives and the suicide was unrelated to the Jews.
- 1905: The Okhrana, the Russian secret police in the
reign of Czar Nicholas II, converted an earlier antisemitic novel into
a document called the "Protocols
of the Elders of Zion." It was published privately in 1897. A
Russian Orthodox priest, Sergius Nilus, published them publicly in 1905. It is promoted as the record of "secret rabbinical conferences whose aim was to subjugate and exterminate the
Christians." The Protocols were used by the Okhrana in
a propaganda campaign that was associated with massacres of the Jews.
These were the Czarist Pogroms of 1905.
- 1915: 600,000 Jews were forcibly moved from the
western borders of Russia towards the interior. About 100,000 died of
exposure or starvation.
- 1917: "In the civil war following the Bolshevik Revolution of
1917, the reactionary White Armies made extensive use of the Protocols to incite
widespread slaughters of Jews." 200,000 Jews were
murdered in the Ukraine.
- 1920: The Protocols reach England and the
United States. They are exposed as a forgery, but are widely
circulated. Henry Ford sponsored a study of international activities
of Jews. This led to a series of antisemitic articles in the Dearborn
Independent, which were published in a book, "The International Jew."
- 1920: The defeat of Germany in World War I and the
continuing economic difficulties were blamed in that country on the
"Jewish influence." One antisemitic poster has been
preserved from that era. It shows a German, presumably Christian
woman, a male Jew with distorted facial features, a coffin and the
word "Deutschland" (Germany)
- 1920's, 1930's: Hitler wrote in Mein Kampf:
"Today I
believe that I am acting in accordance with the will of the Almighty Creator: by defending
myself against the Jew, I am fighting for the work of the Lord."
The Protocols
are used by the Nazis to whip up public hatred of the Jews
in the 1930's. Widespread pogroms occur in Greece, Hungary, Mexico,
Poland, Rumania, and the USSR. Radio programs by many conservative
American clergy, both Roman Catholic and Protestant, frequently
attacked Jews. Reverend Fr. Charles E Coughlin was one of the best
known. "In the 1930's, radio audiences heard him rail against the threat of Jews to
America's economy and defend Hitler's treatment of Jews as justified in the fight against
communism." Other conservative Christian leaders, such as
Frank Norris and John Straton supported the Jews.
Discrimination against Jews in North America is
widespread. Many universities set limits on the maximum number of Jewish students that
they would accept. Harvard accepted all students on the basis of merit until after World
War I when the percentage of Jewish students approached 15%. At that time they installed
an informal quota system. In 1941, Princeton had fewer than 2% Jews in their student body.
Jews were routinely barred from country clubs, prestigious neighborhoods, etc.
- 1933: Hitler took power in Germany. Jews "were barred from
civil service, legal professions and universities, were not allowed to teach in schools
and could not be editors of newspapers." (3) Two years later, Jews
were no longer considered citizens.
- 1934: Various laws were enacted in Germany to force Jews out
of schools and professions.
- 1935: The Nazis passed the Nuremberg Laws restricting
citizenship to those of "German or related blood."
Jews became stateless.
- 1936: Cardinal Hloud of Poland urged Catholics to
boycott Jewish businesses.
- 1938: On NOV-9, the Nazi government in Germany sent
storm troopers, the SS and the Hitler Youth on a pogrom that killed 91
Jews, injured hundreds, burned 177 synagogues and looted 7,500 Jewish
stores. Broken glass could be seen everywhere; the glass gave this
event its name of Kristallnacht, the Night of Broken Glass.
- 1938: Hitler brought back century-old church law,
ordering all Jews to wear a yellow Star of David as identification. A
few hundred thousand Jews are allowed to leave Germany after they give
all of their assets to the government.
- 1939: The Holocaust, the systematic extermination
of Jews in Germany begins. The process only ended in 1945 with the
conclusion of World War II. Approximately 6 million Jews (1.5 million
of them children), 400 thousand Roma (Gypsies) and others were
slaughtered. Some were killed by death squads; others were slowly
killed in trucks with carbon monoxide; others were gassed in large
groups in Auschwitz, Dacau, Sobibor, Treblinka and other extermination
camps. Officially, the holocaust was described by the Nazis as
subjecting Jews "to special treatment" or as a
"solution of the Jewish question." Gold taken from
the teeth of the victims was recycled; hair was used in the
manufacture of mattresses. In the Buchenwald extermination camp,
lampshades were made out of human skin; however, this appears to be an
isolated incident. A rumor spread that Jewish corpses were routinely
converted into soap. However, the story appears to be false.
- 1940: The Vichy government of France collaborated with Nazi
Germany by freezing about 80,000 Jewish bank accounts. During the next
four years, they deported about 76,000 Jews to Nazi death camps; only
about 2,500 survived. It was only in 1995 that a French president,
Jacques Chirac, "was able to admit that the state bore a heavy
share of responsibility in the mass round-ups and deportations of
Jews, as well as in the property and asset seizures that were carried
out with the active help of the Vichy regime."
- 1941: The Holocaust Museum in Washington DC
estimates that 13,000 Jews died on 1941-JUN-19 during a pogrom in
Bucharest, Romania. It was ordered by the pro-Nazi Romanian regime of
Marshal Ion Antonescu. The current government has admitted that this
atrocity happened, but most Romanians continue to deny that the Jews
were killed on orders from their government.
- 1942: From JUL-28 to 31, almost 18,000 inhabitants
of the Minsk ghetto in what is now Belarus were exterminated. This was
in addition to 5,000 to 15,000 who had been massacred in earlier
pogroms in that city. This was just one of many such pogroms during
World War II.
- 1946: Even though World War II ended the year before,
antisemitic pogroms continued, particularly in Poland.
Persecution of Jewish Physicians by the Church
Medicine in Europe during the Middle Ages found itself restricted by the Christian
Church. The church taught that it was irreligious to seek a natural cure from a physician
when one could obtain supernatural help from a priest. Some church leaders criticized
medical schools because they taught that diseases and disorders came from natural means
and not from the evil efforts of Satan.
With medicine in such ill repute among Christians, much of the leadership by the 10th
century was provided by Jews and Muslim scholars. Jews were largely responsible for
founding the medical Schools at Salerno and Montpellier in the 10th century.
Pope Eugene IV, Nicholas V and Calixtus III forbade Christians from using the services
of a Jewish physician. The Trullanean Council in the 8th century; Béziers
Council & Alby Council in the 13th century; Avignon council & Salamanca
Council in the 14th century, the Synod of Bamberg in the 15th century;
the Council of Avignon in the 16th century, etc. also ordered Christians to not
seek healing from Jewish physicians and surgeons. This continued even into the 17th
century when the city of Hall in Würtemberg (in what is now Germany) granted some
privileges to a Jewish physician "on account of his admirable experience and
skill." The clergy of Hall complained that "it were better to die with
Christ than to be cured by a Jew doctor aided by the devil." (17)
Copyright © 1997 to 2001 incl., by Ontario Consultants on
Religious Tolerance
Latest update: 2001-JAN-11
Author: B.A. Robinson