In the sixth of his eight-part lecture series, Rabbi Wein tackled the gradual disintegration of the Turkish-based Ottoman Empire and its impact on the many Jews who lived within its sprawling borders. This empire spread all the way from Balkans and the Mediterranean to the Middle East, Egypt, Libya and much of North Africa. Starting from the 15th and 16th centuries, this militantly Moslem even reached the gates of Vienna.
Because of its vast geographical spread, this empire began to decline. At the root of its failure was endemic internal corruption which was the consequence of its Caliph, based in the Topkapi Palace in Istanbul (right), farming out governorships to different tribes, clans and families. Local autonomy was the norm, which meant that no two areas were governed in the same way. Eastern Sephardim were the main Jewish culture, and they lived within the Ottoman Empire as a self-contained society. Local rulers were less harsh on the Jews than were Western rulers, but in many communities they had no rights. Notably, however, there were no pogroms before 1948.
Israel, Rabbi Wein explained, was a sparsely populated
wasteland with a tiny Jewish and mainly Sephardic population. The country had
no effective economy. During the early 1800s, there was a small trickle of Eastern
European Jewish immigration; these migrants came for purely religious reasons
and had no expressed intention of founding a state. Safed, Tiveria, Yerushalayim
and Chevron were the main centres of Jewish life. When Mark Twain visited the
land in the late 1890s, he recorded that he had never seen a more desolate place.
Incidentally, there was no real connection between the Sephardi and Ashkenazi
communities, especially since the former had had no real exposure to mussar
or chassidut.
The Turks had a large Christian population within their
borders, particularly in Armenia and Syria. Moslems viewed them, rather than
the Jews, as their enemy. This, said Rabbi Wein, had the paradoxical effect of
making the local Christian churches more antisemitic than their Western
counterparts. During the 1800s, as the West started eroding portions of the
Ottoman Empire, Jerusalem grew in significance: it was no longer just a place
but had become an ideal, a vindication. Colonies were founded there by the Germans,
Russians, French and others—and the Ottomans were helpless to stop this. Many consulates based in Jerusalem claimed
they were justified in being there to protect claims of locals living in these
colonies. Curiously, at this time there was also a nascent movement among
evangelical Christians who believed that Jewish settlement was needed as a
precursor of the Christian Messiah.
Rabbi Wein then focused on the activities of Sir Moses Montefiore (left), who devoted his life to the cause of the Jewish people and intervened in the notorious1840 blood libel in Damascus. Montefiore visited Israel a total of seven times and generously donated money—but within the Jewish community there was no organisational infrastructure that could put it to good use. In short the Jews as a community were not ready for monetary support, but even private donations such as those of Montefiore would have the effect of weakening the Ottoman Empire first and, when the First Aliyah came, the Turks proved to be incapable of resisting it.
Within the crumbling Caliphate, the force of inertia was
becoming impossible to overcome. Theodore Herzl had originally tried to buy
Israel for the princely sum of 15 million British pounds, hoping to get this
sum from the Rothschild family. The Turks however did not want to sell. In the 1890s,
Greece broke away from Turkish rule (this assertion of freedom was romanticised
by Lord Byron). Next, Serbia broke free from both Ottoman and Austro-Hungarian
control. Cracks also appeared at the very core of the Empire, as hostilities
increased between the Sunni Moslem majority and Shi’ite minority. Happily, the
Jews were not caught in the crosshairs of their disputes.
Returning to Herzl and Zionism, Rabbi Wein showed that the
Ottomans saw Jewish nationalism as a direct threat: it was not only European in
origin, and therefore alien, but also featured secular Jews—something that the Ottomans
regarded as a direct threat to an empire was founded on religion. Following
Herzl’s unsuccessful bid to purchase the land of Israel, the JNF set out to buy
land on a piecemeal basis and had far more success. In this way the Zionist
movement succeeded in implanting itself in the Galilee during the First Aliyah
through the establishment of kibbutzim and moshavim. How odd, commented Rabbi
Wein, that the land of Israel should be built by the non-religious.
With Jewish settlement came Jewish disputes, largely between Sephardim and Ashkenazim. The Turks gave kashrut rights to the Sephardim, which the Ashkenazim said they couldn’t accept. Disputes amongst Jews were always referred to the Turkish authorities and, since those authorities were corrupt, the arguments put before them were corrupt too. Also, the 0od Yishuv refused to recognise the new Yishuv, finding the newcomers to be so rebellious and condescending towards traditional Jews that there was no dialogue.