Last night, in the third of his eight lectures on "The Jewish World 1880-1914", Rabbi Wein introduced us to the condition of the Jews in the days of the Russian Empire. This lecture was quite unlike its two predecessors. While Jews were moving into Western Europe and the Austro-Hungarian Empire, quite the opposite was happening in Russia where it was the Empire that was moving into areas that already contained Jews.
Much of this lecture was taken up by Rabbi Wein’s vivid
depiction of social, political and religious conditions in Russia which,
remarkably, had remained more or less unchanged since the 15th
century. Russia was a primitive, feudal country that was controlled by a powerful
aristocracy. The country was also dominated by the Russian Orthodox Church—a body
that cultivated deeply superstitious and sometimes pagan practices, and which
could not tolerate, within the borders of Russia, the presence of those who
worshipped any other religion. This was because, for the Russian Orthodox
Church, Russia was effectively The Holy Land.
For those who were not members of the aristocracy, life was hard. With an illiteracy rate of 95% there was no educated middle class to counter the power of the Church. Nor was there any trade of the sort that brought prosperity to the lands further to the West. The vast majority of the population consisted of serfs—effectively slaves—who worked the land in exchange for the food they ate. The serfs had no rights and could not leave the land to which they were born. Poverty was endemic but, because all were poor, being poor carried neither shame nor stigma.
Russian society was in effect frozen. The aristocracy wanted
no change since they lived comfortably off the labour of the serfs. The Church
likewise had no interest in change since it was only by keeping the masses ignorant,
illiterate and superstitious that they could retain their influence and, as
Rabbi Wein quipped, “The wonderful thing about a superstition is that you can
never prove it wrong”.
It was not until the Napoleonic wars that there was any
thought that change might occur. While the invading French army overreached
itself and had to retreat, Russians who encountered the French were shocked into
realising what a backward and primitive people they were, when compared with
their better educated and more sophisticated invaders.
From this point onwards, the stability of serf-bound Russia began to weaken. Moves were made to emancipate the serfs, which alienated the nobility and while leaving the serfs with nothing they could do with their freedom. Meanwhile anarchists began to spread their doctrine that man was basically good and that it was only government that was bad: destroy government and self-rule by the inherently good would follow.
What happened after that? Stay tuned to Rabbi Wein’s next lecture to find out!