Overview: Early Modern Jewish History
There is no agreed upon date or place for the beginning of
modern Jewish history. Modernity came to the Jews at different times in
different places. Recently, historians in their periodization of Jewish history
have come to refer to this gradual process as the "early modern"
period.
Most scholars agree that
modern times are signaled by the appearance of certain new characteristics of
individual and communal Jewish life. However, they have long debated which factors
specifically-- emancipation and liberalism? Zionism? Mass migration? Science?
Capitalism? Population increase? Improved Jewish-Christian relations?--were
determinative.
Scholar Gershom Scholem
offers the earliest date for the beginning of modern Jewish history: 1492.
Scholem argues that the expulsion of the Jews from Spain led to an increased
interest in kabbalistic redemption, an interest that provoked deviations from halacha
(traditional Jewish law and practice), including Sabbateanism, that
signaled the collapse of rabbinic authority.
According to Scholem,
Hasidism emerged in the 18th century as a movement which aimed to make this
mysticism accessible to the masses, thus providing an alternative community
with alternative authority, the Rebbe. The Rebbe--so called to
distinguish him from the traditional community rabbi, the Rav--was the local hasidic
religious leader, believed to have supernatural powers including a direct link
to the divine world.
Historian Jacob Katz agrees with Scholem's assessment of
Hasidism, but adds another ingredient he feels was crucial to the process of
modernization: the Haskalah, the Jewish Enlightenment. The Haskalah
offered a vision of the future that included educational, social and economic
change, and a neutral society in which people of all faiths and backgrounds
could freely mix.
Jonathan Israel argues that
mercantilism, an approach that advocates the deliberate pursuit of the economic
interests of the state, irrespective of claims of existing law, privilege,
tradition, and religion, signals the beginning of modernity
Mercantilism is epitomized
in the role of the Court Jew. The Age of the Court Jew is generally considered
to be from 1650‑1713. During this period, political upheaval required
warring kingdoms to be in constant search of resources. Jews had the kind of
resources that the kingdoms required as their role in gold, silver, metal and
diamond trades gave them access to liquid capital. In addition, the widespread
kinship ties of the Jews (especiallySephardim) allowed them to raise and move capital
across the western world and the Ottoman Empire.
Court Jews thus aided
European powers in militia purveying, providing them with munitions, food, and
fodder. In return for his aid, the Court Jew was able to negotiate certain
privileges. He frequently served multiple governments at the same time, and
typically lived outside of the realm of the courts that he served.
Zionist historian Ben Zion
Dinur selected 1700 as the beginning of the modern period in Jewish history. In
that year, Rabbi Judah the Pious led approximately 1000 Jews to Palestine.
Dinur argues that this event represents "a rebellion against the galut"
(exile) and the first evidence of a movement to return to the Land.
All of these theories have
their adherents and detractors. Those who criticize Scholem for granting
Hasidism a pivotal role in the making of modernity argue that modernity
inherently derived its spirit and strength from sources other than sacred
authority. Israel is accused of over‑emphasizing the roles of
mercantilism and the Court Jew, as these phenomena did not occur, for the most
part, in the large 18th-century centers of Jewish life in the Ottoman Empire. Dinur
is criticized for allowing ideology to cloud his analysis.
The causes and characteristics of modernity are complex.
Historian Michael Meyer sums up the debate: "[I]t is by no means resolved
whether the enlightenment and emancipation were the result of the rise of
capitalist methods, the need for a more efficient government, or a more
favorable social attitude emanating from a growing class of liberal
intellectuals." Each of these factors deserves a closer look.