Please write a 3 page response consulting 2 sources outside of the textbook and think about and answer these questions.
1.
Who wrote the source? When was the source written? What type of document is it? What is the main storyline?
2.
Who is the intended audience? (One of the most important questions). Why was it written? What assumptions can be made about source and author?
3.
Can I believe this document? What can I learn about society/people who created document? How does source relate to its historical context?
4.
Why you think the writer chose to express him or herself in this way?
5.
What do you think is the lasting importance of the document you chose? Why is it important in the big picture that is Western History?
DOCUMENT: Leon Pinsker Calls for a Jewish State
In 1882, the Ukrainian physician Leon Pinsker published a pamphlet called
Auto-Emancipation
in which he analyzed the situation of the Jews in Europe. This pamphlet convinced some in Europe—most notably Theodor Herzl—that Jews could never be assimilated into European culture no matter how many dropped their religion in favor of Christian ways. This pamphlet ultimately led some Jews to migrate to Palestine, despite Pinsker’s own conviction that the Middle East was not necessarily the right place for creating a Jewish nation.
This is the kernel of the problem, as we see it:
the Jews comprise a distinctive element among the nations under which they dwell, and as such can neither assimilate nor be readily digested by any nation.
…
A fear of the Jewish ghost has passed down the generations and the centuries. First a breeder of prejudice, later … it culminated in Judeophobia. Judeophobia is a psychic aberration. As a psychic aberration it is hereditary, and as a disease transmitted for two thousand years it is incurable….
The Jews are aliens who can have no representatives, because they have no country. Because they have none, because their home has no boundaries within which they can be entrenched, their misery too is boundless….
… If we would have a secure home, give up our endless life of wandering and rise to the dignity of a nation in our own eyes and in the eyes of the world, we must, above all, not dream of restoring ancient Judaea. We must not attach ourselves to the place where our political life was once violently interrupted and destroyed. The goal of our present endeavors must be not the “Holy Land,” but a land of our own. We need nothing but a large tract of land for our poor brothers, which shall remain our property and from which no foreign power can expel us. There we shall take with us the most sacred possessions which we have saved from the shipwreck of our former country, the
God-idea
and the
Bible.
It is these alone which have made our old fatherland the Holy Land, and not Jerusalem or the Jordan. Perhaps the Holy Land will again become ours. If so, all the better, but
first of all,
we must determine—and this is the crucial point—what country i.
Please write a 3 page response consulting 2 sources outside of the t.docx
1. Please write a 3 page response consulting 2 sources outside of
the textbook and think about and answer these questions.
1.
Who wrote the source? When was the source written? What
type of document is it? What is the main storyline?
2.
Who is the intended audience? (One of the most important
questions). Why was it written? What assumptions can be
made about source and author?
3.
Can I believe this document? What can I learn about
society/people who created document? How does source relate
to its historical context?
4.
Why you think the writer chose to express him or herself in this
way?
5.
What do you think is the lasting importance of the document
you chose? Why is it important in the big picture that is
Western History?
DOCUMENT: Leon Pinsker Calls for a Jewish State
In 1882, the Ukrainian physician Leon Pinsker published a
pamphlet called
Auto-Emancipation
in which he analyzed the situation of the Jews in Europe. This
pamphlet convinced some in Europe—most notably Theodor
Herzl—that Jews could never be assimilated into European
culture no matter how many dropped their religion in favor of
Christian ways. This pamphlet ultimately led some Jews to
migrate to Palestine, despite Pinsker’s own conviction that the
Middle East was not necessarily the right place for creating a
2. Jewish nation.
This is the kernel of the problem, as we see it:
the Jews comprise a distinctive element among the nations
under which they dwell, and as such can neither assimilate nor
be readily digested by any nation.
…
A fear of the Jewish ghost has passed down the generations and
the centuries. First a breeder of prejudice, later … it culminated
in Judeophobia. Judeophobia is a psychic aberration. As a
psychic aberration it is hereditary, and as a disease transmitted
for two thousand years it is incurable….
The Jews are aliens who can have no representatives, because
they have no country. Because they have none, because their
home has no boundaries within which they can be entrenched,
their misery too is boundless….
… If we would have a secure home, give up our endless life of
wandering and rise to the dignity of a nation in our own eyes
and in the eyes of the world, we must, above all, not dream of
restoring ancient Judaea. We must not attach ourselves to the
place where our political life was once violently interrupted and
destroyed. The goal of our present endeavors must be not the
“Holy Land,” but a land of our own. We need nothing but a
large tract of land for our poor brothers, which shall remain our
property and from which no foreign power can expel us. There
we shall take with us the most sacred possessions which we
have saved from the shipwreck of our former country, the
God-idea
and the
Bible.
It is these alone which have made our old fatherland the Holy
Land, and not Jerusalem or the Jordan. Perhaps the Holy Land
will again become ours. If so, all the better, but
first of all,
we must determine—and this is the crucial point—what country
is accessible to us, and at the same time adapted to offer the
Jews of all lands who must leave their homes a secure and
3. indisputed refuge, capable of productivization.
Source:
Robert Chazan and Marc Lee Raphael, eds.,
Modern Jewish History: A Source Reader
(New York: Schocken Books, 1974), 161, 163, 165–66, 169–71,
171–74.
Question to Consider
▪ According to Pinsker, why must Jews find “a land of our
own”? What is most important in determining the appropriate
location for that homeland?
(Hunt 817)
Hunt, Lynn, Thomas Martin, Barbara Rosenwein, Bonnie Smith.
Making of the West, Volume II: Since 1500, 4th Edition
. Bedford/St. Martin's, 01/2012. VitalBook file.
The citation provided is a guideline. Please check each citation
for accuracy before use.