History of the Jews in Russia and Poland. Volume II eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 435 pages of information about History of the Jews in Russia and Poland. Volume II.

History of the Jews in Russia and Poland. Volume II eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 435 pages of information about History of the Jews in Russia and Poland. Volume II.

It was with preconceived notions of this kind that Alexander III. ascended the throne of Russia, a sovereign with unlimited power but with a very limited political horizon.  Being a Russian of the old-fashioned type and a zealous champion of the Greek-Orthodox Church, he shared the anti-Jewish prejudices of his environment.  Already as crown prince he ordered that a monetary reward be given to the notorious Lutostanski, who had presented him with his libellous pamphlet “Concerning the Use of Christian Blood by the Jews.” [1] During the Russo-Turkish war of 1877, when as heir-apparent he was in command of one of the Balkan armies, he allowed himself to be persuaded that the abuses in the Russian commissariat were due to the “Jewish” purveyors who supplied the army. [2] This was all that was known about Judaism in the circles from which the ruler of five million Jews derived his information.

[Footnote 1:  See p. 203.]

[Footnote 2:  The business firm in question was that of Greger, Horvitz, and Kohan, of whom the first was a Greek, and the second a converted Jew.  See above, p. 202, n. 1.]

In March and April, 1881, the destinies of Russia were being decided at secret conferences, which were held between the Tzar and the highest dignitaries of state in the palace of the quiet little town of Gatchina, whither Alexander III. had withdrawn after the death of his father.  Two parties and two programs were struggling for mastery at these conferences.  The party of the liberal Minister Loris-Melikov, championing a program of moderate reforms, pleaded primarily for the establishment of an advisory commission to be composed of the deputies deputies of the rural and urban administrations for the purpose of considering all legal projects prior to their submission to the Council of State.  This plan of a paltry popular representation, which had obtained the approval of Alexander II. during the last days of his life, assumed in the eyes of the reactionary party the proportions of a dangerous “constitution,” and was execrated by it as an encroachment upon the sacred prerogatives of autocracy.  The head of this party was the procurator-general of the Holy Synod, Constantine Petrovich Pobyedonostzev, a former professor at the University of Moscow, who had been Alexander III.’s tutor in the political sciences when the latter was crown prince.  As the exponent of an ecclesiastical police state, Pobyedonostzev contended that enlightenment and political freedom were harmful to Russia, that the people must be held in a state of patriarchal submission to the authority of the Church and of the temporal powers, and that the Greek-Orthodox masses must be shielded against the influence of alien religions and races, which should accordingly occupy in the Russian monarchy a position subordinate to that of the dominant nation.  The ideas of this fanatic reactionary, who was dubbed “The Grand Inquisitor” and whose name was popularly changed into Byedonostzev [1] carried the day at the Gatchina conferences.  The deliberations culminated in the decision to refrain from making any concessions to the revolutionary element by granting reforms, however however modest in character, and to maintain at all cost the regime of a police state as a counterbalance to the idea of a legal state prevalent in the “rotten West.”

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History of the Jews in Russia and Poland. Volume II from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.