What Is It About The Jews?
The Edge Of Extinction
Talking and
writing about Jews is always touchy. Jews are immediately on their guard,
conditioned into sensitivity by the experiences they have had in their lives.
Many are worried that something will be said or implied that will raise
negative perception regarding their background. Conditions are very different
from what they were when I was growing up some eighty years ago, with quotas
applied to Jewish students educational options, and no-go areas for
house-buying or renting, even outright bans in hiring in some areas of work.
And then we had the Holocaust, aiming to eliminate Jews from existence.
So now it is
considered impolite to be anti-Semitic, and some words referring to Jews are
banned in public. But all over the world anti-Semitism has had a resurgence and
being anti-Israel is considered a populist icon. And we know, even though it is
under-reported, Jews are being aggressed against every day around the world. So,
yes, Jewish people get nervous when we begin to talk about Jews. And how
embarrassing is it when the criticisms are being raised by people who call
themselves Jews.
But I have
to talk about Jews because I am trying to unravel why it is that Jews, being
such a small proportion of the world’s population, have made such an out-sized
impact on the world in so many places, over such a long time, and in so many
areas of human activity. Even more pertinent, why is it that the breed has
survived? That puzzle is even more intriguing as an historical conundrum.
I know it
makes many Jews nervous, (and many non-Jews angry, (one acquaintance insists it
is mere happenstance,) about the invidious comparison,) but I have to ask how and
why. And these days we are seeing how the remarkable developments we are
witnessing coming from Jews in Israel, underline the point I am making.
It is
generally accepted, I think, that actions by others in rejecting and isolating
Jews from among the general population, fostered their entry into fields, left
open, which ultimately found success.
Jews were banned
from owning land so they were forced into the cities and individual
enterprises. They became peddlers, they became cattle buyers. They went out to
find business servicing the underserved in the rural areas. This was the time,
expansion of cities, was becoming the prime economic growth source.
Christians
were banned from lending because it was usury, so Jews became money-lenders. Jews
found it difficult to find jobs with gentile employers. Jews adopted personal enterprise
roles and found new and better ways to do things that benefitted the consumer,
so, eventually, the Jewish way became the only way. In America, those peddlers
became sellers on the installment plan, successful agricultural product
intermediaries, then shopkeepers, and eventually supermarketeers and department
store magnates. In America, the borscht-belt entertainers of Jews banned from
gentile resorts, graduated, inventing Broadway and Hollywood and the television
revolution programming.
It is
interesting to note that it is two economists* who are explaining the
performance of Jews in the diaspora in an entirely different way. They are
ascribing this phenomenon to events which occurred as a consequence of the
destruction of the Jewish nation state by the Romans back in 70 C.E.
In Biblical
practice, religion was the province of the Priesthood. Judea’s was an agrarian
society, and its people were essentially illiterate. The teachings of Jesus, indeed,
protested this centralization and advocated a democratization of religious
practice. With the destruction of the state apparatus, and the elimination of
the Temple, the rabbis and teachers maintaining Judaism in the Galilee,
fostered individual practice. Education of all in religious practice and study
of the elements of Judaism, including a focus on educating children from a
young age, was their solution to the
disappearance of the Temple regime. As the Diaspora drew its Rabbis and
teachers from this source, it was this model that became common in the Diaspora
where Judaism survived. Jewish communities were a literate island in an ocean
of illiteracy, one where education was highly valued.
The cost of
this focus, diverting time and effort from agricultural labor, to religious practice and study, the
authors argue, rather than persecution, resulted in many conversions to other
religions, primarily Christianity. They calculate that Jewish numbers fell from
about 5.5 million to only 1.5 million, in the time period studied. Historically,
just dispersing a people, as occurred so often in history was enough to ensure
its eradication. Jews experienced a double whammy with the destruction of the
religious apparatus that defined it at the same time.
It is these
“chosen few” who perpetuated Judaism. The mystery to me, lies in that the change that proved to
be so costly in discouraging adhesion turned out to be a crucial factor in
equipping the survivors to succeed in the very world that sought their extinction.
This focus on education, which has continued to be a characteristic of the Jewish
culture, the one to which they ascribe the outperformance of Jews within the
general society where the educated were a tiny few, enhanced their ability to
survive and prosper. Every Jew of our generation remembers the family focus on education
for the young, if not necessarily solely religious education.
One may
argue that the above finding by the authors may not explain the continued
outperformance in an era when universal education is generally practiced. We
know from our own community experience, however, that the values attributed to
education in our own homes, were not necessarily evident among many of the
non-Jewish schoolmates with whom we shared our school time.
It is a fact
that in Israel the proportion of the national budget committed to research and
development is close to the highest in the world. This tiny country is accruing
the benefits of a continuing study of the questions that urgently need answers
in our world. How and where we set our priorities has to be a part of the
equation that speaks to what we value and these resulting attitudes can dictate
outcomes.
Outperformance
also has its costs. It is not easily tolerated by those who resent the
invidious distinction, the comparison with
their own performance. We have seen it before and we are seeing it now. Now,
less than two-tenths of the world’s population, Jewish existence is a
statistical irrelevancy except for our continuing impact on world realities. It
is fostered by more than almost two thousand years of breeding our survivors to
not only survive but to thrive. We have come back before, and we will come back
again. That is simply what fate has equipped us to do.
We are still
drinking from the magic potion that explains the outcomes we have seen, and are
seeing even today.
*The
Chosen Few, Botticini and Eckstein. Princeton University Press, 2012
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