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Enlightenment and Prophecy: The Jews and Neo-Hellenic Nationalism.

Authors :
Drosos, Dionysis G.
Kavala, Maria
Source :
European Legacy. Nov/Dec2020, Vol. 25 Issue 7/8, p760-775. 16p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Even before the rise of nationalism and its counterpart anti-Semitism sensu stricto, anti-Judaic prejudices and stereotypes were widespread in the Christian Orthodox communities of the Ottoman Empire. These attitudes arose mainly from the commercial antagonism between the Christian and Jewish communities during the crisis that beset the empire from the seventeenth century onward. To examine these attitudes more closely, this article first focuses on the extreme anti-Judaic discourse in the sermons of eighteenth-century Father Cosmas Aitolos (Cosmas of Aetolia; d. 1779), an itinerant monk, who was canonized in 1961. It then turns to Rhigas Velestinlis's enlightened vision of a tolerant multi-ethnic, multi-religious republic, which gradually replaced the Sultan's oriental despotism, in which Jews, Muslims, and Christians were to be equal citizens. But this vision sank into oblivion, as the aspiration to national independence and to ethnical homogeneity prevailed in Greece, as well as everywhere in the Balkans. Although the early advocates of enlightened Greek nationalism embraced the language of citizenship and emancipation, they excluded from it the proviso of multi-ethnicity. Accordingly, they perceived the "Jewish Question" as one of gradually integrating a "foreign" religious minority into the Greek nation by "re-educating them in the values of Hellenism," in the words of Adamandios Korais (1748–1833), and according them full citizenship only in the generations to come. All three distinctive attitudes towards the Jews are traceable in subsequent ideological trends and conflicts in Modern Greece. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10848770
Volume :
25
Issue :
7/8
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
European Legacy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
146011184
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/10848770.2020.1774168