Bernard Lazare and the Jews of Romania
Bernard Lazare and the Jews of Romania
Author(s): Carol IancuSubject(s): Jewish studies
Published by: The Goldstein Goren Center for Hebrew Studies
Keywords: Romanian Jews; legal alienation of the Jews’ condition in Romania; exodus of Romanian Jews; Charles Peguy; Zionist movement;
Summary/Abstract: Professing a systematic state anti-Semitism, the liberal and conservative governments coming in office between the Berlin Congress (1878) and the beginning of the 20th century in keeping with the principle of “governmental rotation” banned the Jews’ access to magistrature, education and administration. Jews were excluded from public positions and from numerous businesses (notably those of pharmacists, sellers of toxic substances, salesmen, farmers, workers in state factories, in public works and even in certain private enterprises), but forced to attend the military service where, however, they could never reach the rank of officer. Their children were rarely admitted in schools, in exchange for higher tuition fees.
Journal: Studia Hebraica
- Issue Year: 2004
- Issue No: 4
- Page Range: 17-24
- Page Count: 8
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF