Where Did Jews Continued Their Practices During the Exile of Babylon

Shapira Chanukah Sermon

1 of 14 Collections in

Jewish Perspectives on the Holocaust


Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust

What roles did religion play in the lives of Jewish people during the Holocaust? Less than half of European Jews actively practiced a form of Judaism at the outbreak of World War II, and religious Jews expressed piety and faith in a variety of different ways. This collection of primary sources explores a wide range of responses—communal, personal, and spiritual—to escalating persecution under Nazi rule.

On the eve of World War II, there was a range of important differences among Jewish people throughout Europe. Jewish people had many different regional histories, different experiences of oppression and freedom, different economic and social opportunities—and different cultural, linguistic, and religious traditions. Some Jewish people observed distinct religious and cultural traditions, while many were not religious at all. Others shared the same national cultures, languages, and self-identities as their non-Jewish neighbors.

Since the late 18th century, Jewish intellectuals and religious leaders had debated the impact that modern life in Europe was having on Jewish traditions. By the time the Nazi Party rose to power in Germany in 1933, Jewish religious and political groups had developed many different approaches to these questions.1 There was a vast spectrum of positions between those who believed in the strict preservation of Jewish traditions and those who believed that Jewish religious practices needed to be adaptable to modern life.2

Read More

Jewish religous groups also varied politically. They included a wide range that included conservatives, liberals, and radicals. Many Jewish people were members of Zionist—and anti-Zionist—movements. Although there were many important differences among them, Jewish religious groups also shared some common characteristics because they shared the realities of discrimination and persecution.3

The growth and spread of antisemitism in Europe in the years between World War I and World War II—and especially the Nazi regime's state-sponsored persecution of Jews—posed fundamental challenges to Jewish life. Anti-Jewish laws in Germany directly affected Jewish individuals, families, organizations, and businesses in multiple ways. The Nuremberg Race Laws and other official policies legalized anti-Jewish discrimination and persecution. Jewish religious practices, synagogues, and emblems of faith often became targets of anti-Jewish discrimination and acts of violence.

Persecution and genocide affected Jewish religious practices in a variety of different ways. Circumstances changed over time as Nazi anti-Jewish policies became more severe and deadly, and conditions faced by Jewish people throughout Europe were often very different. When the Nazi regime and its collaborators applied greater pressure, Jewish people had fewer opportunities to maintain and observe religious traditions. Nazi ideology identified and targeted Jewish people primarily based on ideas about race rather than religion. Many people who had converted to a Christian faith and assimilated were still labeled as Jewish based on Nazi definitions of race. But many Nazi leaders, German officials, and collaborators also held antisemitic views whose roots sprang from traditional anti-Jewish prejudices based on religious bigotry. Because of this, much anti-Jewish discrimination and violence tended to focus on rabbis, religious institutions, and ritual articles as targets.

The efforts of religious Jews to observe religious commandments during this period of persecution often ran into difficulties that non-observant Jews did not face. Religious Jews and their leaders were confronted with unprecedented situations and dilemmas. Topics raised in this collection address the place of religious concerns in daily life, as well as the complex situations facing Jews during the Holocaust.What needs could religion serve under these conditions?

Because of the relative scarcity of sources, attempts to answer some questions—such as how many Jews belonged to each religious movement, how many people prayed in the camps, which Jewish holidays were observed, how many Jews followed the laws of Kashrut—inevitably fall short.4 Most Jews—especially those within the Nazi camp system—did not participate in traditional forms of religious activity during the Holocaust. Camp authorities banned Jewish religious practices, and any observances had to be done secretly. Since religious activities required effort and access to specific items, many religious Jews were unable to follow Judaic laws and traditions. Religious Jews were actually a minority among Jewish people in Europe on the eve of World War II, and non-observant Jews did not attempt to follow Judaic traditions.

Nevertheless, materials presented in this collection spotlight some of the ways in which Jewish people managed to overcome obstacles to religious worship during the Holocaust. A Passover prayer from the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp shows how scriptural laws were adapted to address shortages of ritual foods. Similarly, the widowhood release of Golda Leitman points to postwar efforts to cope with everyday problems created by the destruction of Jewish communities. Other sources underscore individual responses to catastrophe. For example, the memoir of a Jewish policeman captures one man's struggle with the moral and spiritual contradictions that he tried to navigate.

Religious Jews—whether living in hiding places, ghettos, or camps—tried to continue the patterns that defined their lives before the war while coping with the radically different circumstances forced upon them. For many Jewish people facing persecution under Nazi rule, the practice of religion played an important role in their struggle to survive.

All 18 Items in the Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust Collection

  • On the danger of conversion

    Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust

  • On Religious Life

    Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust

  • Gurs Haggadah

    Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust

  • US Army Talmud

    Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust

  • Först, Samson pamphlet 1947

    Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust

  • Weiss, Golda Leitman, rabbinic certificate of widowhood 1946

    Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust

  • Passover Prayer from Bergen Belsen

    Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust

  • New-Kosher!

    Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust

  • Lodz Ghetto Chronicle

    Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust

  • Shapira Chanukah Sermon

    Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust

  • Unzer veg purim photos 1945

    Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust

  • Memoir of Calel Perechodnik

    Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust

  • Pinkusevits, Rivke Horvits newspaper article The Jewish World 1946

    Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust

  • Prayers for victory

    Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust

  • About the Seder, Vienna Jüdisches Nachrichtenblatt, newspaper article 1939

    Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust

  • Tefillin worn by Alexander Kuechel during his time in a Nazi camp.

    Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust

  • A silver cup made from an explosive shell in a labor camp.

    Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust

  • Calendar from Łódź ghetto, disributed by the ghettos Jewish council.

    Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust

ciprianiquisging.blogspot.com

Source: https://perspectives.ushmm.org/collection/jewish-religious-life-and-the-holocaust

0 Response to "Where Did Jews Continued Their Practices During the Exile of Babylon"

إرسال تعليق

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel