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- subject = Sophomore
- title = Difference Between Sephardic And Ashkenazi Jews in Modern times
- papers = "Difference between Sephardi and Ashkenazi Jews in Modern
- Jewish history"
-
- For the most part, modern Jewish history deals with the political,
- social and economic advancements achieved by the Ashkenazi communities
- in Europe, America, and later -- Palestine. Because of it's relatively
- small size and involvement in the affairs of "civilized" countries of
- Europe and America, the Sephardi branch of Judaism is rerely dealt with in
- the context of modern Jewish history. Their developement is however, though
- not as influential upon the flow of the "mainstream" history as that of the
- Ashkenazi jewry, is nevertheless an area of interest to anyone undertaking
- a serious study of Jewish history.
- The theological difference between the two movements, the Sefardi and
- the Ashekenazi, lies in the traditional laws more than in written ones.
- Both take an Orthodoxal approach to the written law of the Torah, and the
- differences in its interpretation are subtle enough to be dismissed.
- However the traditions aquired, and at times given the power of laws, in
- the course of the long centuries of diaspora differ considerably from one
- branch of Judaism to another. Just as the worldwide language of the
- Ashekenazim, Yiddish, is a mixture of Hebrew with German, the common
- language used by the Sephardim Ladino, still in use in some parts of the
- world, is a dialect formed by combining Hebrew with Spanish. The Sephardim
- who have historically been more involved into the lives of the gentile
- societies where they settled don't have as strict a set of observances as
- do the Ashkenazis who have been contained in closed ghettos up until two
- centuries ago. The official doctrine of the Sephardis does not for example
- prohibit polygomy, whereas it hasn't been allowed in the Ashkenazi law
- since Middle Ages.
- Although the Ashkenazi traditions are somewhat stricter than those
- of the Sephardim, a greater percentage of Ashkenazi Jews have over the past
- century and a half stopped observing these traditions, becoming either
- "secular Jews", atheists, like the American Freethinkers, or simply
- converting. An even greater part have chosen to follow only a part of the
- traditional, or "oral", laws, forming widely popular Reform and
- Conservative movements. This phenomenon, if present within the Sephardic
- community exists on such a small scale that it can be discounted. The
- reason for this difference in the adherence of the tradition is the way in
- which the tradition itself was first put into effect. In the case of the
- Ashkenazi Jews the traditions have been instated by the long centuries of
- enforced separation, and when the barriers were let down, the communities
- that were held together by pressure from the outside started to degenerate.
- With the walls of the ghetto gone, but full emancipation not yet granted,
- many believed that if they had integrated themselves into the gentile
- societies, they would gain acceptance. Secular education replaced religion,
- rather than complementing it. This however was not the case with
- Sephardim, whose less strict traditions were developed in the environment
- of toleration. While the Ashkenazi Jews were restricted to the ghettos of
- Europe, held at bay by the Catholic church, the Sephardim of Middle East,
- North Africa and Ottoman Empire were living as "dhimmies", or "people of
- the pact", and though not fully equal with their Muslim hosts, were to some
- extent intregrated into their societies. For this reason, the traditional
- laws of the Sephardim are less demanding, but more enduring.
- Unlike the Ashkenazi population that has over a century of
- immigration spread itself all over the world, The Sephardic communities
- tend to concentrate mostly around a few areas. Today most of the Sephardic
- Jews reside within Israel, amost other Middle-Eastern communities having
- been reduced to virtual nonexistance by the migration of Jews out of Arabic
- countries after the creation of Israel. A substantial community is still
- maintained in Turkey, where historically Jews have received good treatment.
- Of the Western countries, the only one where the population of Sephardic
- Jews is comparable to that of the Ashekenazis is France, where a
- considerable number of Jews have resided since the Middle Ages. While
- Sephardi Jews were the first people of Jewish faith to arrive in the US,
- and their number in this country is still quite large, they are but a drop
- in the bucket when compared to the overall number of Jews currently
- residing in America today.
- The Spehardic Jews have historically lived in the areas more or
- less tolerant of Judaism. They therefore had more of an opportunity to
- integrate themselves into the host societies than did their Ashkenazi
- counterparts living in the countries where Jewish communities were
- forcebly segregated from the rest. Thus they never really formed separate
- self-governed units, and the impact made upon the countries of their
- residence can be traced only through the outstanding Jewish personalities
- that had effect on the history of those states, and not actions taken by
- the community as a whole. Whereas in the history of American Jews one may
- encounter occurrences of political decisions being influenced by the
- pressure of Jews as a communal force, the history of Middle-Eastern
- countries is only able to offer examples of brilliant Jewish individuals,
- but rarely actions taken by the whole communities.
- The Sephardis (the word itself comes from a Hebrew word for Spain)
- first came to Europe in the early middle ages across the Straight of
- Gibraltar to the Iberian peninsula, following the wave of muslim
- conquerors, into whose society they were at the time well integrated.
- With the slow reconquest of the peninsula by the Christians a number of the
- Jews stayed on the land, at times serving as middlemen in the ongoing trade
- between the two sides of the conflict. Prospering from such lucrative
- practices, the Sephardic community of the newly created Spain grew and
- gained economic power. With the final expulsion of the external "heretics",
- the Spanish, devoted Catholics have turned within in their quest for the
- expulsion of the unfaithful, and around 1492 a decree had forced the Jews
- of Spain to convert or leave country.
- While some Jews of Spain have chosen to convert rather than face
- relocation and possibly relinquish their economic position, (though some of
- those continued practicing Judaism in secrecy) many of them have migrated
- to the Ottoman empire, where the Sultan Bayazid II offered them safe haven.
- In later years as the Ottoman rulers continued the policy of toleration,
- the Sephardic community of Turkey grew to considerable numbers.
- Other members of the Spanish Jewry migrated to nearby Portugal from
- where they were promptly expelled in 1496. From here, some people migrated
- North to France, where they were tolerated in the southern provinces, and
- Netherlands. Others went eastward to the Ottoman Empire and Middle East.
- The Sephardic community of France had maintained a realtively constant
- population, a fact that allowed it to exist in obscurity, and thus continue
- to be tolerated. The people who settled in the Netherlands, by this time a
- country of religious tolerance, had enjoyed for a period of time the equality
- unparalleled at this point anywhere in the Western world.
- The main flux of Sephardi immigrants took almost a century incoming to
- the Netherlands, finally reaching that country around 1590. When half a
- century later Netherlands began active trade with the South America, Jews
- were greatly involved because they could speak Dutch and were literate
- enough to keep records of the trade. They gained a great deal economically
- through this lucrartive practice, and it was by the way of this trade that
- first Sephardic Jews have arrived in the Americas.
- The Ottoman empire, which in its golden age spanned from North Africa
- to the Balcans, had attracted Jewish immigration from as early as the
- 1300's. The Sultans' sympathy to the Jews went so far that in 1556, Sultan
- Suleiman the Magnificent had requested from the Pope Paul IV the release of
- the Ancona Marranos which he declared Ottoman citizens. Over the years,
- Jews exiled from Hungary, France, Sicily and Bohemia came to the Ottoman
- empire in search of home, and they found it. A letter sent by Rabbi Yitzhak
- Sarfati (from Edirne) to Jewish communities in Europe "invited his
- coreligionists to leave the torments they were enduring in Christiandom and
- to seek safety and prosperity in Turkey." (1) Three centuries after the
- expulsion of Jews from Spain, the Ottoman cities of Istanbul, Izmud, Safed
- and Salonica became centers of Sephardic prosperity that was compairable to
- the period of muslim domination of Spain.
- While there aren't many records of Jews as a community taking
- historically important actions in the course of their stay in the Ottoman
- Empire, many individuals worthy of notice are encountered in history.
- The first printing press in the Empire was established in 1493 by David and
- Samuel ibn Nahmias, only a year after their exile from Spain. A number of
- Jews had been diplomats for the Sultan (one of them, Salamon ben Nathan
- Eskenazi had established first contact with the British Empire), court
- physicians and otherwise influential people.
- The Zionist movement was met with drastically different reactions
- by the two movements. Among the by now "enlightened" Ashkenazim, where
- many have come to consider their states objects of primary alligiance, the
- idea of a return to Palestine was met with suspicions. Some of the people
- were genuinely afraid that if they acted in support of a Jewish homeland,
- their loyalties to the countries of their residence would be questioned,
- and the progress made toward emancipation that had taken long centuries
- to achieve would be destroyed in a single blow. Among the Sephardim, the
- ideas of Zionism were met with much greater enthusiasm. (3) The Jews of Middle
- East, whose religious convictions were at that time much better preserved,
- had embraced the idea of return to the land of their forefathers. The
- traditions ran strong among them, and the young generations did not feel
- resentfull for being forced to obey laws that they felt were outdated.
- Modernization for European Jews meant catching up with the secular
- education studies of their hosts, this word hoever, took a totally
- different meaning when applied to the Jews of Middle-East and Asia, areas to
- which modernization came later, and which at that point were far behind the
- technological progress made in the countries of the West. Therefore, while
- the Jews of Europe had to battle for their equality in a society the
- education level of which was arguably supperior to that of their own, the
- Jews of Middle-East had to modernize together with their host nations, and
- sometimes even ahead of them. The speed of the progress of Middle-Eastern
- Jews was enhanced by their Western-European counterparts who have by this
- time established for themselves not only political equality, but also
- economic prosperity in their adopted homelands. These well-to-do Jews who
- have for the most part abandoned some or all of their traditions, and have
- justly considered themselves to be enlightened, wished to bring this
- enlightenment in the way of Europeanisation to the Jews living outside of
- the "civilized" world. (2)
- The educational institutions created by the Alliance Israelite
- Universelle have had such great impact on the education of the Jews of the
- then-decaying Ottoman Empire, that even today, a considerable part of older
- generation Turkish Jews think of French as their primary means of
- communication. In Israel the farming communities founded in the late 1800's
- with the funding of rich European Jewish families as a part of the project
- to re-settle Palestine, have now grown to become well established
- businesses.
- Currently the Israeli Jews represent the only substantial Jewish
- community left in the Middle East. The surrounding countries, where up
- until the 1940's many Jews coexisted with Muslim majorities, have over the
- course of the past half-century lost most of their Jewish population to
- immigration due to racial and ethnic tensions brought about by the
- Arab-Israeli conflicts. In fact, the governments of states such as Syria
- have after the creation of Israel considered the Jews living on their
- territories to be hostages in this confrontation, and have treated them
- accordingly. The immigrants from the Arab states being predominantly
- Sephardic, Israel, a once Ashekenazi dominated country, now has an about
- even division between the two movements. With their increasing number, the
- Sephardi influence is also growing in the Israeli legislature, and in the
- last few years a Sephardi party Sha'as has gained substantial power within
- the Knesset, Israel's governing body.
- The state of Israel is unique in that it is the first country in over
- two thousand years where Jews have been given the right of self-rule. This
- raises problems that the Jews in other times, and even the Jews outside of
- Israel today do not have to deal with. Throughout Israel's brief history, a
- debate as to the extent to which the secular laws should follow the
- religious doctrine of Judaism had been an ongoing one. Such debates are
- naturally meaningless in the rest of the world, where the Jews are to
- follow the laws of the land.
- The different historical background of the two movements of Judaism has
- created a noticable gap in their culture, their traditional laws and their
- adherence of those laws. It has shaped the manner of their developement and
- the final result of it. The history itself was shaped by the environment in
- which the exiled Jews found themselves, and the attitude of the people who
- surrounded them. This attitude was in turn based around their religious
- doctrine.
-
- (1) Bernard Lewis, "The Jews of Islam"
- (2) Harvey Goldberg, "Sephardi and Middle Eastern Jewries", introductoin
- p15
- (3) Norman Stillman, "Sephardi and Middle Eastern Jewries"
- Essay 1, "Middle-Eastern and North African Jewries"
- p67
-
- 1996, Lev Epshteyn, SUNY Binghamton.
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