Book contents
- Germany through Jewish Eyes
- Germany through Jewish Eyes
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: A Jewish Gaze – Plural and Unique
- Part I Learning to Know Germany: 1780–1840
- Part II Liberty, Unity, Equality: 1840–1870
- Part III Living in Germany: 1870–1930
- 7 Achievements and Unacknowledged Dangers
- 8 Joined and Disjoint in War
- 9 Hopes Shattered
- Part IV A Lost Homeland: 1930–2000
- Epilogue: Berlin is not Weimar
- Index
8 - Joined and Disjoint in War
from Part III - Living in Germany: 1870–1930
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 November 2024
- Germany through Jewish Eyes
- Germany through Jewish Eyes
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: A Jewish Gaze – Plural and Unique
- Part I Learning to Know Germany: 1780–1840
- Part II Liberty, Unity, Equality: 1840–1870
- Part III Living in Germany: 1870–1930
- 7 Achievements and Unacknowledged Dangers
- 8 Joined and Disjoint in War
- 9 Hopes Shattered
- Part IV A Lost Homeland: 1930–2000
- Epilogue: Berlin is not Weimar
- Index
Summary
The war seemed to have destroyed all false hopes. From the very beginning, Jews felt joined with other Germans in the war efforts and uplifted by the promise of total brotherhood, as announced by Kaiser Wilhelm II in the streets of Berlin. But later on, as the war became a rather hopeless trench war, little remained of this sense of togetherness. The Jews felt the atmospheric change in the return of antisemitism. Individuals experienced it directly in their various army units and the community as a whole was finally shocked and irritated by the decision to collect “Jewish Statistics,” measuring their presumably real part in defending the Fatherland, , in October 1916. Later on, Jews were overwhelmed, together with others, by more threatening dangers. After briefly telling the life-story of Albert Ballin, the great ship-owner from Hamburg, a “Kaiser-Jew,” and the way he experienced the lost war, the end of the empire, and the approaching revolution, the chapter moves on to tell of the great hopes entertained by other, less prosperous Jews, who experienced the end of the old order and the imminent establishment of a new republic in a far more positive light.
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- Germany through Jewish EyesA History from the Eighteenth Century to the Present, pp. 131 - 146Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024