Authors: Arie Morgenstern, Joel A. Linsider
ISBN-13: 9780195305784, ISBN-10: 0195305787
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Date Published: May 2006
Edition: (Non-applicable)
Arie Morgenstern served 20 years as an advisor for the teaching of History at the Ministry of Education in Israel. During this time, he received his Ph.D. in Modern Jewish History from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His research specialties include Messianic movements in the 18th and 19th centuries. He is the author of five books (in Hebrew) as well as many scholarly articles. He is a senior fellow at the Shalem Center in Jerusalem.
Accounts of the history of Zionism usually trace its origins to the late nineteenth century. In this groundbreaking book, Arie Morgenstern argues that its roots go back even further.
Morgenstern argues compellingly that the Jewish community in Israel may be traced back to a large-scale wave of immigration during the first half of the nineteenth century. Inspired by an expectation for the coming of the Messiah in the year 1840, thousands of Jews from throughout the Ottoman Empire, North Africa, and Eastern Europe relocated to Jerusalem. Morgenstern describes the messianic awakening in all these lands but focuses primarily on the concept of redemption through messianic activism that prevailed among the disciples of Rabbi Elijah, the Ga'on of Vilna. These immigrants believed that the Messiah's arrival would bring about the redemption of the Jews, but also that, in order for this redemption to come about, they needed to prepare the way for the Messiah by fulfilling the commandment to dwell in the land of Israel. Morgenstern offers a dramatic account of their relocation, their efforts to renew rabbinic ordination, their reestablishment of the Ashkenazi community, and the building of Jerusalem. He also explores the crisis of faith that followed the Messiah's failure to appear as expected, and its effects on the community.
Drawing on a wealth of previously untapped sources, Morgenstern sheds important new light on the history of messianic Judaism and on the ideological trends that preceded, and eventually gave birth to, modern political Zionism.
1 | Background of the early-nineteenth-century messianic awakening | 3 |
2 | Belief in 5600 (1840) as the year of redemption | 23 |
3 | Immigration to the land of Israel, 1808-1840 | 51 |
4 | Process of redemption envisioned by the Vilna Ga'on's disciples | 77 |
5 | Attempt to renew rabbinic ordination in Safed | 95 |
6 | "Raising the Shekhinah from the dust" by rebuilding Jerusalem | 111 |
7 | Expanding and solidifying Jewish settlement in the land of Israel | 135 |
8 | Crisis of faith in the wake of unfulfilled expectations | 165 |
9 | Retreat from the idea of "redemption through return to Zion" | 181 |
Epilogue : emergence of a Jewish majority in Jerusalem | 201 |