As we look back today, it was more than one hundred years ago that European Jewry also faced a trying time. A generation filled with human kindness sought to make good on crimes committed in past centuries against the Jewish people, and opened the gates of emancipation into European culture for our people -- which had abundantly clear consequences. Spokesmen for emancipation were leaders of the so-called Reform movement, resulting inevitably in total estrangement and mass baptism. God's eternal wisdom has always shown that assimilation would lead to a rekindling of anti-Semitism. Anti-Semitism led to the Zionist movement, which hung a different flag on assimilation and guided it on a no less ill-fated, completely un-Jewish direction.
R' Joseph Breuer, "At the End of the Year," A Unique Perspective, Rav Breuer's Essays, pp. 291-2, written 1940, New York City, translated from German.
When was that written?
ReplyDeletePre WWII?
Pre 1948?
Where?
In German?
Context is important for properly understanding things.
fair point, I added it
Deleteand yes written originally in german, while living in ny
Delete