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Contemporary Jewish Demography
Contents:
- Introduction
Background
- Events In Russia At The End Of
The 19th Century
- The Holocaust
- Zionism And The Rise Of The State Of Israel
- The Fall Of Communism In Eastern And East-Central
Europe
- Economic Factors Causing Migration
- Assimilation And Intermarriage
- Summing Up The Issue: Suggestions For Meaning
Activities: Suggested Educational Exercises
- Making Sense Of Jewish Numbers
- Israel And Disapora: Defining The Balance
- Counting My Community
- The National Picture
Links
Links to more websites
1. Introduction
One of the most difficult series of questions in the contemporary
Jewish world concerns demography.
- How many Jews are there today?
- What is happening to the Jewish population in different parts
of the globe?
- What are the relative proportions of Israel and Diaspora
in the general population of world Jewry?
- Furthermore, as important as the numbers themselves are,
the really crucial questions lie beneath the surface.
- What is the meaning of these numbers?
- What is the nature of the changing balance of demographic
power between the State of Israel and the Diaspora?
- What trends do they suggest?
- What are the implications of today’s numbers for tomorrow’s
future?
- Perhaps the most difficult question of all, for those who
spend their lives counting Jews, is:
- who exactly do you count?
- In other words, for the purpose of demographic calculations,
In this paper, we will attempt to address all of these questions,
which come out of the contemporary Jewish world. In order to appreciate
them, however, they will be presented in a number of contexts:
of Jewish history as a whole; of modern Jewish history specifically,
and of contemporary Jewish sociology. This is the only way in
which it is possible to make sense of the meaning of the dry numbers
and statistics.
There are few, if any, peoples today for whom geographic mobility
has played such a large part in their story as the Jews. Traditionally
a wandering people over the last millennia – since the days
of the Biblical patriarchs – the latter have provided for
much of humanity the very archetype of the wanderer. Even a cursory
study of the Biblical books shows that, despite the idea that
the roots of the Jews are so inextricably tied up with the Land
of Israel, the Jews are extraordinary travelers. The Patriarchs
wandered, as did the various tribes; the nation was exiled. Furthermore,
despite the common misconception that it was only with the fall
of the Second Temple that the Jews left their land, well before
the end of that period (70 C.E.), more Jews lived in the Diaspora
than in the Land of Israel. At that time, around the turn of the
millennium, Jews could be found throughout the Roman Empire, Asia
and North Africa. The total Jewish population of the known
world at that point is estimated to have been between 4.5 and
7 million.
A great change occurred after the destruction of the Temple: within
a few generations, not only did the majority of Jews live outside
the Land of Israel, but the centers of gravity of the Jewish world
also started to move beyond its borders. After the writing of
the Mishnah in Eretz Yisrael (circa 200 C.E.), the old community
of Babylon increasingly rose to prominence. On the other hand,
the community of Judea went into a decline from which it would
only recover thousands of years later, in the 20th century. From
that point onward, Jewish life was predominantly focused in the
Diaspora, as different Jewish centers rose and fell, in relatively
swift succession.
In some generations, several great Jewish centers flourished simultaneously.
However, it was only for a brief generation or two – in
the 16th century – that any kind of a meaningful Jewish
center existed in Eretz Yisrael. The general picture, then, is
one of thousands of years of diverse, active Jewish centers in
the Diaspora lands. As Babylon declined, Spain and Ashkenaz (the
German lands) rose to prominence; as these in turn declined, North
Africa and Poland came into their own. Still later, Jews returned
to Northern and Western Europe, and the newly-discovered lands
of the Americas became a new direction in Jewish community history.
As we look at the Middle Ages, some general comments need to be
made. Firstly, there is no question that the size of the world
Jewish population declined substantially during this period. Around
the 15th century, for example, the global number of Jews is estimated
to have been approximately one million. Secondly, right
up to the early modern period, the majority of Jews lived in the
east. Out of the same one million Jews estimated to have been
living in the 15th century, only about 30% of them – some
300,000 – are thought to have lived in Europe. With the
beginning of the modern world, from the mid-18th century onwards,
things started to change in both of these respects. Absolute population
numbers increased, as did the proportion of European Jews. Thus
in 1800, of an estimated 2.5 million Jews world-wide, around 1.5
million lived in Europe.
The dynamic that laid the underpinnings of our present Jewish world,
however, developed in the late 19th century. This was the period
in which the great Jewish center of Eastern Europe began to discharge
its Jews to North (and, to a lesser extent, South) America, the
English speaking world as a whole and finally – and arguably
most significantly – to the old/new Land of Israel. This
is where the story must be examined a little more precisely.
Each of the following six historical phenomena helped to shape
the demography of the modern Jewish world:
- events in Russia at the end of the 19th century;
- the Holocaust;
- Zionism and the rise of the State of Israel;
- the fall of Communism in Eastern and East-Central Europe;
- economic factors causing migration, and
- assimilation and intermarriage.

2. Events In Russia At The End Of The 19th Century
1881 is a key date in modern Jewish history: in the wake of the
events of that year, enormous changes – both demographic
and ideological – began to develop that would alter the
Jewish world forever. Strong tremors began to ripple through the
Eastern European Jewish community centered in the ‘Pale
of Settlement’, the immense area in the west of Russia to
which the vast majority of its Jewish population was restricted.
The reason most commonly given for these changes is the 1881 pogroms
that occurred in the wake of the assassination of Tsar Alexander
the Second, which was largely blamed on the Jews. While it is
true that the pogroms provided the immediate catalyst for the
intense soul-searching that underlay the new winds beginning to
blow through the Jewish community, it is often not understood
that these events also stemmed from a significant demographic
cause.
The pogroms were aimed against a Jewish community that was in the
process of starving to death. Eastern Europe in general, and the
Pale of Settlement specifically, were among the most economically
-undeveloped regions of Europe, and the Jews were particularly
hard-hit. Restricted as they were by their inability to own land
in almost the entire area; forced into a number of marginal occupations
in which they were supposed to make a living, and generally discriminated
against by the regime, they would have been in trouble in any
circumstances. In addition to all these circumstances, however,
the 19th century witnessed a population explosion among the Eastern
European Jews that has never been completely explained.
The Jewish population had been expanding for many generations,
but the first eighty years of the century saw an extraordinary
increase in population. In these two generations their numbers
rose by over 500%: from around one million at the beginning
of the period to over five million in 1880. Their position
had been very difficult to start with. Predictably, in these new
circumstances, the material circumstances of the Jewish population
drastically deteriorated, resulting in widespread poverty and
starvation. The community and its institutions collapsed.
It was against this background that the pogroms struck the community.
Is it any wonder that the two expressions of the crisis in which
the community now found themselves were ideological and demographic?
The response was ideological, on the one hand, because it was
obvious to many of the youth, in particular, that there was no
future for them in Eastern Europe unless they started to take
fate into their own hands in some way. They had to change their
situation by their own efforts, rather than wait passively in
the blind hope that their situation would improve by itself. Increased
numbers started to enter the ranks of the socialist and revolutionary
camps, while others began to turn to what would soon become fully-fledged
Zionism. These responses were not long in coming. The demographic
response, however, was immediate.
The Eastern European Jews reacted to the new situation created
by the pogroms by deciding to leave Russia and Eastern Europe
altogether. Starting in the immediate wake of the pogroms, thousands,
then tens of thousands and, finally, hundreds of thousands and
millions of Jews left the region. They struck out for lands of
more promise in the modern world. Most of them wanted to settle
in America.
The Jews considered America to hold the greatest potential. This
was the ‘Goldene Medina,’ the golden
state where the very streets were said to be paved with gold,
and where immigrants would be able to improve their economic situation
and work their way upwards within a short time. It was this myth
of America, rather than the concrete reality, that attracted such
a stampede.
Although America was the goal of the majority of Jews leaving Eastern
Europe, many emigrants ended up in many entirely different parts
of the world. For a variety of reasons, including the unscrupulous
practices of ship agents, shortage of funds and the efforts of
certain philanthropists who had other plan for these Jews, some
never got to their desired destination. Many went to Western Europe,
especially to Britain; others went to South America. The vast
majority, however, did emigrate to the United States, where they
soon formed the numerically dominant stratum of local Jewish communities
there.
They were the third stratum of the American Jewish community, a
situation not dissimilar in many of the other communities in which
the new immigrants found themselves. The veterans were almost
all Sephardi (Spanish) Jews whose ancestors had escaped Spain
and Portugal in centuries past and had struck out for the New
World in the hope of escaping religious persecution. An additional
layer of Jewish immigrants had come mostly from Central Europe
in the mid-19th century, propelled by a host of economic, religious
and political motives. In the 1870s several thousands of East
European immigrants had made their way to the United States, but
this was only a prelude to the floods that came in the decades
following 1881. Altogether, over two million Jews made
their way to the new ‘Promised Land’ in subsequent
years.
Most of the immigrants encountered a very difficult – and
sometimes horrific – reality on their arrival there, startlingly
different from the dreams they had envisioned while still in Russia.
Brutal proletarianization was the lot of many in the sweatshops
of the big American cities such as New York, Philadelphia and
Chicago. Large Jewish ghettos, centers of sordid poverty and social
ills, developed in these and other cities (paralleled by similar
developments in cities in other countries. The Lower East Side
was in many ways only a larger version of London’s East
End).
It is important to remember that, despite the vast exodus from
Eastern Europe, the net effect was merely to drain off the ‘surplus’
population. The Jewish population of the Pale stayed fairly
stable, remaining at around five million on the eve of World War
I, despite the exit of some two-and-a-half million Jews
in the preceding thirty years. In these years, many of the remaining
Jews were pulled to the big cities that were developing as a result
of industrial investment and other economic forces. Cities such
as Odessa, Bialystok, Lodz, and particularly Warsaw, now developed
large Jewish proletariats. Warsaw became a giant – the largest
Jewish community in the world – before it was finally overtaken
by New York. The experience of urbanization and proletarianization
was thus not restricted in these years to the Jews who left Eastern
Europe for the cities of the New World: many of those who stayed
behind underwent the same experiences.
In the Jewish world it can generally be stated that – at
least among the Ashkenazi Jews (the vast majority of the total
Jewish population at this time) – these were years of great
difficulty but also of strong dynamism and change. In the cities
of the New World, the often brutal conditions encountered by the
immigrant generation would largely give way, within less than
a generation, to a much better economic and social reality. These
Jews were generally upwardly-mobile. In the large Jewish cities
of Eastern Europe, on the other hand, upward mobility was the
experience of only the minority. The vast majority stayed down
in the working classes, due to the limited economic growth of
the entire area and the equally limited opportunities for Jews,
in particular, to progress economically.

3. The Holocaust
For all the horror associated with the Holocaust, it is relatively
simple to sum up its demographic effects. The most obvious effect
was plainly the destruction of almost all of Central and Eastern
European Jewry. The two exceptions were Hungary – where
some 100,000 Jews are estimated to have survived because of specific
circumstances – and the interior of Russia – never
conquered by the Nazis, and thus a haven to hundreds of thousands
of Jews who fled to the east during the war years. The heart of
European Jewry was utterly destroyed and the map of the Jewish
world altered forever. The global Jewish population fell
from around 16.6 million in 1939 to around 11 million after the
war.
The number of Jewish survivors who wished to leave their land of
birth forever far exceeded the number of those who wanted to return
to their pre-war homes in Central and Eastern Europe. Another
factor influencing the potential emigrants was the pogroms that
broke out in the immediate post-war period in those areas to which
the Jews did return. It is difficult to quote precise numbers,
but hundreds of thousands now followed in the wake of previous
generations, turning either to Palestine/Israel on the one hand
or to the new centers of western Jewry in America (including South
America), Western Europe, Australia and South Africa. Some 150,000
are estimated to have arrived in Palestine/Israel in the post-war
years. The effect of the Holocaust survivors on all of the communities
in which they arrived was enormous, especially in the middle-to-long
term, as certain communities emerged with consciousness of the
Holocaust at the center of their Jewish identity.

4. Zionism And The Rise Of The State Of Israel
The rise of Zionism and the establishment of the State of Israel
have had an enormous impact on most aspects of Jewish life. Among
these, the demographic revolution wrought by Zionism is especially
noteworthy.
The emergence of an influential new Jewish center in the old/new
land of Palestine is far more than a significant demographic change
for the Jews: the demography itself is striking in a number of
different ways. In 1800, the total Jewish population of
Palestine was only a few thousand. This number had risen
to just over 25,000 before the beginning of the ‘Zionist’
Aliyah that followed the 1881 pogroms.
In contrast to the mass immigrations of millions to the west –
and especially to the United States – in the decades after
1881, the Zionist Aliyot (waves of immigration to the Land of
Israel) were small. By 1914, at the end of the second Aliyah,
a mere 65,000 are estimated to have joined the Jewish community
of Palestine and to have stayed. Numbers increased considerably
from the mid-1920s: at the end of the 1930s the Jewish
population was estimated at over 425,000. The next decade
brought slightly fewer than 200,000 Jews so that, on the
eve of independence, the Jewish population stood at over 600,000.
Equally important in the developing picture was the ethnic background
of the Jewish population. Before the waves of Zionist Aliyah started
to change the country, a large proportion of the Jewish population
consisted of Sephardim, many of whom traced their families back
for generations in the Land. With the exception of some significant
groups of Yemenite immigrants, however, the pre-State immigrants
were predominantly of European background.
This comes as no surprise as, ideologically, Zionism came out of
a Europe in the grip of fierce nationalist excitement throughout
the 19th century. The eastern world was less touched by these
factors, having fallen on fairly sleepy times centuries earlier;
it would only wake up to new ideas in the 20th century. As a result,
the new State of Israel was a creation, almost exclusively, of
Zionist Ashkenazi Jews who had largely revolted against their
native European way of life.
One of the first decisions of the new state was to reverse the
policy of the British, who had seriously restricted Jewish immigration
in the pre-war years. Consequently, new immigrants poured into
the country. In those years, immigration came mainly from two
sources: Jewish survivors of the Holocaust, many of whom had been
interned by the British in camps on Cyprus, and the masses of
Eastern Jews who – until that point – had played only
a marginal role in the Zionist narrative. These communities were
now on the move due to a mixture of Zionist propaganda, Messianic
enthusiasm and the anti-Zionist and anti-Jewish feelings that
had recently flared up in many Arab countries.
In the years following independence, the character of the Jewish
State as a European creation of ideological Zionism began to be
challenged with the immigration of hundreds of thousands of Jews
from Asia and Africa. The three largest migrations at
that time came from Iraq (by far the largest), Yemen and Morocco.
They joined the Jews arriving simultaneously from post-Holocaust
Europe, spearheaded by large groups from Rumania and Poland. As
Israel began to fill up, absorbing some 680,000 immigrants between
1948 and 1952, once-large Jewish centers in Eastern and East Central
Europe were being emptied of their Jews after centuries –
in some cases, millennia – of Jewish communal existence.
For example, the roots of the Iraqi (Babylonian) community and
the Yemenite community were some 2,500 years deep. These years
saw the beginning of the end for those communities, and their
relocation on their original soil, the Land of Israel.
The Jewish population of the young state more than doubled in the
years following its establishment, causing intense social tensions
and problems which continue to influence the country today. After
that, however, immigration settled down to more manageable proportions
for the next thirty years. Many Jews continued to arrive in the
1950s, especially from countries like Poland, Rumania and Morocco.
In the aftermath of the 1967 war, there was substantial immigration
from western countries, especially the English-speaking world
and Western Europe.
Soviet immigrants began to appear in the early 1970s as Russia,
under intense pressure from the western world, allowed Jews to
leave for Israel. By the end of the decade, some 140,000 had arrived
in Israel. This Aliyah, hailed as a triumph by Jews throughout
the world, included many prominent figures such as former ‘Prisoners
of Zion’ who had become famous in the years of their struggle.
Yet it caused much social tension in Israel, as resentment towards
the newcomers developed among many of the more disadvantaged population.
This was a prelude to the far larger Russian immigration that
occurred in the late 1980s in the aftermath of the fall of the
Soviet state. Peaking in 1990and 1991, immigration from the former
Soviet Union reached 375,000 by the end of the century.
Other noteworthy waves of Aliyah included those from Ethiopia,
principally in1984 (Operation Moses) and 1991 (Operation Solomon).
These brought an almost unknown new element into the State of
Israel and, indeed, to the consciousness of world Jewry. It was
simultaneously a source of great pride to Israel and a cause of
great frustration and difficulty due to the difficulties in absorption
that are still being felt in large parts of the community today.
Most recently the number of immigrants from the troubled communities
of Argentina and France increased significantly. Altogether,
millions of immigrants have come to Palestine/Israel, reinforcing
the perception of the last century as one of Jewish migration,
by far the greatest in Jewish history.
‘Push factors’ and ‘pull factors’
Why have all these people come to Israel? This subject is of
far wider relevance than just the Zionist context. In order
to understand why people move from place A to place B, two
sets of dynamics – ‘push factors’ and ‘pull
factors’ – need to be analyzed.
‘Push factors’ are the things
that make a person want to leave their home; ‘pull
factors’ are the things that attract them to
a specific new place. It is not enough to explain that a person
feels pushed out of place A. It is necessary to understand
why they have chosen place B rather than place C. Applying
these ideas to the question of the Olim (new immigrants) who
have come to Palestine/Israel, the complexity of the issues
involved becomes evident.
The early Zionist immigrants were mainly people who felt that
they could not continue to live in Eastern Europe and were
ideologically attracted to the idea of a Jewish society or
state. For many of them, the reasons for their unwillingness
to continue to live in Eastern Europe were connected with
their concept of what it meant to live a Jewish life, influenced
in turn by Zionism. There were others, however, who wanted
a geographical, rather than an ideological, change. Many of
these came to Eretz Yisrael in the same period as the Zionists,
but did not come for Zionist motives. Most of this last group
was attracted by the idea of a life in the Land of Israel,
but wanted no part of the Zionist idea of a Jewish society
or state.
All of these immigrants were drawn in some way to the idea
of living in Israel; however, there were many different concepts
as to what the country was to which they wanted to come. This
alone laid the basis for many conflicts in subsequent years.
Even after the establishment of the State of Israel, there
were Jews who immigrated not because of the State but rather
despite it.
Many came to Palestine/Israel because they were pushed out
of their native lands and had no other viable option. This
is true for many of the Central European Jews who came to
Palestine as refugees from Nazism and Fascism in the mid-1930s.
Most of them did not come as active Zionists. They would far
rather have stayed in their native communities and would indeed
have done so had they not been forced out. They came to Palestine
because there were very few options open to them. Furthermore,
Palestine was more accessible than other places until the
British severely limited Jewish immigration.
When these people arrived in Palestine, however, and encountered
the reality of the country in those times, many of them became
strongly Zionistic. In this way, the ‘pull factors’
acted on them largely after they had already moved. Some groups
– e.g., Yemenites in the early years of the 20th century
and Ethiopians at the end of the century – came to Palestine/Israel
knowing very little about the reality of life here, but attracted
by Messianic dreams harbored for thousands of years.
Many moved to Palestine/Israel for economic reasons, e.g. from
Poland in the early 1920s; from the F.S.U. in the 1990s and,
most recently, from Argentina. Large numbers of these immigrants
were transformed once they got to Israel, while others moved
on when better economic chances subsequently opened up.
A compelling aspect of this part of the Zionist narrative is
the interaction between the different groups that came to
constitute Israeli society. Given both the multiplicity of
different groups who immigrated and the diversity of their
reasons for doing so, it is not surprising that the relations
between these groups has been anything but smooth. There more
reasons for this than can be discussed here. Suffice it to
say, however, that one of the most interesting and important
results of this was the reinforcement of separate group identity
among many of these sectors of the population long after their
immigration to Israel.
The founding fathers of the Zionist state tried to establish a
melting pot into which each citizen would jettison their separate
group identity, subsuming it in the common one of the new Jewish
nation. However, the diverse aims of members of different groups,
and the antagonism aroused by the troubled interaction between
them, had the opposite result. This was particularly true for
those groups who felt that the establishment disparaged their
identity in some way. Their response was often to preserve their
group identity along with an aggressive resentment against those
in the mainstream whom they perceived as purveyors of the idea
of a uniform culture.
Thus, while the fascinating phenomenon of a Jewish Diaspora has
largely vanished in many regions, the specific identities of many
members of those cultures have been preserved to some extent –
albeit in much altered form – in Israel. Unquestionably,
one of the most important questions that Israel is dealing with
internally is to what extent these separate cultural identities
will be meaningful in another generation. It is too early to tell.
Balance between the Jewish community of Israel and the rest
of the Jewish world.
One of the critical issues in modern Jewish demography is the
balance between the Jewish community of Israel and the rest
of the Jewish world. As mentioned earlier, around the end
of the Second Temple period the Jews became a Diaspora-based
people. This process occurred in three stages. The majority
of Jews had already established themselves in the Diaspora
before the destruction of the Temple. Nevertheless, in terms
of influence and direction, the center of the Jewish world
was still in Judea. The events of 70 C.E. drastically changed
the balance of these two elements, although the rabbinic leadership
that then began to emerge still provided a center around which
Jewish life was organized.
At some point in the third century C.E., after the Mishnah
was written down, Diaspora Jewry finally began to assume more
centrality. With the help of scholars who had left Eretz Yisrael,
the great community of Babylon – already existing quietly
for many centuries – finally began to gather strength.
The Land of Israel became an emotional and theological –
rather than a living – center, remaining as such until
the beginning of the Zionist movement.
At that point, the balance began – slowly, but surely
– to change again. From the 1880s onward, increasing
numbers of Diaspora Jews began to relocate in Palestine/Israel.
As more and more Diaspora communities began to empty out,
the Jewish population in ‘Zion’ rose. The picture
is clearly reflected in the following statistics, which are
based on developments since the late 1930s. While some of
the statistics for the world Jewish population are disputed,
we have taken those that seem most acceptable.
Year |
World Jewish Population |
Israel Number |
| 1800 |
2,500,000 |
6,000 |
| 1880 |
7,750,000 |
25,000 |
| 1939 |
16,620,000 |
445,000 |
| 1945 |
11,000,000 |
565,000 |
| 1948 |
11,530,000 |
650,000 |
| 1950 |
11,373,000 |
1,203,000 |
| 1955 |
11,800,000 |
1,591,000 |
| 1975 |
12,742,000 |
2,959,000 |
| 1985 |
12,871,000 |
3,517,000 |
| 1990 |
12,869,000 |
3,947,000 |
| 1993 |
12,963,000 |
4,335,000 |
| 1995 |
13,000,000 |
4,550,000 |
| 2001 |
13,254,000 |
4,952,000 |
| 2002 |
Exact numbers not available |
5,292,000 |
What do these numbers imply for the general balance of the
entire Jewish world? Given that the transition from the hegemony
of the Eretz Yisrael community to the dominance of the Diaspora
was accomplished gradually over several centuries, it would
be unwise to rush to conclusions.
Dry statistics do not convey the whole picture. Eretz Yisrael
still exercised leadership and centrality in the Jewish world
when the Diaspora communities were already a majority. Perhaps
the present situation can be viewed as the same process in
reverse. The Jewish population of Israel now stands at a little
over 5,250,000 out of a total population of some 6,500,000.
According to the statistics, it will still be a number of
generations before Israel has numerical superiority over the
whole of the Diaspora. Israel is expected in the near future
to surpass the largest Diaspora community, that of the United
States. However, in most significant aspects, it can certainly
be argued that practical leadership passed to Israel at some
undefined moment in the past. It remains to be seen to what
extent these trends continue; it seems clear, however, that
unless there is a turnaround due to some dramatic development,
the ‘diasporization’ process that began thousands
of years ago is currently being reversed.

5. The Fall Of Communism In Eastern And East-Central
Europe
As mentioned earlier, the Holocaust all but wiped out Jewish life
in Central, East-Central and Eastern Europe. Substantial communities
continued to exist potentially only in Hungary (essentially Budapest)
and in the central and more easterly parts of the Soviet Union.
The word “potentially” is used to stress the problematic
nature of Jewish existence in the lands that remained under Communist
control until the late 1980s.
Communism made any kind of meaningful Jewish life untenable. Jewish
culture was recognized only in the most limited way. Furthermore,
members of the Jewish communities of Communist Europe always felt
themselves under suspicion by the various regimes and society
in general. For all but the hardiest and most determined of Jews,
survival as human beings in these countries was felt to be threatened
by openly living a Jewish life.
This feeling was certainly reinforced by the awareness that millions
of Jews had died recently because regimes had viewed them as inimical.
In such circumstances, hiding one’s Jewish origins was less
an act of paranoia than of prudence. Consequently, in many places,
Jewish life either went underground or simply ceased to exist,
as parents found themselves unable or unwilling to pass on to
their children anything positive about Jewish life. For many,
Jewish identity became a stigma. Many consciously worked to dissociated
themselves from any suspicion of being Jewish.
The results were inevitable: an almost complete attrition of Jewish
life in the communities living under Communist regimes. A few
older people, too old to change, kept up some vestigial connection.
Regimes saw them as essentially harmless and, in some cases, actually
co-opted and used them. These people could not provide any model
for the younger generations, however. As a result, Jewish life
essentially came to a standstill all over Central and Eastern
Europe, as much in places where there was still a Jewish population
as in those where the population had been wiped out by the Holocaust.
There were some exceptions to this trend, however. This was particularly
true in areas of the Soviet Union where – in the late 1960s
– Jewish and Zionist identity became connected in some aspects
with dissident opposition to the current regime. Some young, brave
Jews set up underground circles in which Jewish culture and language
were studied. These were noteworthy but, by their very nature,
minority creations: there was no way in which they could surface
as large-scale manifestations of Jewish identity.
When the Iron Curtain finally fell, it was unclear what would happen
with the Jewish population in that region. No-one knew how many
people would be prepared to define themselves as Jews. Even after
the fall of the various Communist regimes, people were unsure
whether it would be either wise or beneficial to reveal their
identity in a society where Jews would not necessarily be much
more accepted than before.
One thing that did change, however, was the ability of western
organizations to operate in the new vacuum that had been created.
Some – such as the American Joint Distribution Committee
– had quietly been operating underground for many years.
They were now able to emerge and start working more openly and
efficiently. Other organizations that had not been active in the
communities could now publicly set to work as well.
It is difficult to know what exactly would have happened had there
been no attempt by world Jewish organizations to galvanize dormant
communities. The result – largely through the these organizations’
activities – was clear, however: with the use of hefty sums
to stimulate Jewish life by the provision of welfare activities
and cultural/religious services, communities began to revive.
With time, increasing numbers of people – including many
who had never acknowledged their roots before – began to
emerge and connect themselves in some way with the Jewish community.
Predictably, the main arenas of activity were in Hungary and the
former Soviet Union. Other smaller communities, however –
including Poland, the Baltic states and the new states that came
out of the former Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia – also showed
stalwart renewal of activity for their size.
Estimates of the size of the Jewish communities today are still
very speculative. No-one is sure, even now, how many Jews there
are in these countries because some are still emerging. There
is also a serious dilemma regarding the definition of Jewish identity.
Nevertheless, informed people offer the following rounded statistics:
- 550,000 Jews in Russia
- 400,000 in the Ukraine
- 80,000 in Hungary
- 60,000 in Belarus
- 35,000 in Uzbekistan
- 30,000 in Azerbaijan
- 30,000 in Moldova
- 17,000 in Georgia
- 15,000 in Kazakhstan
- 15,000 in Latvia
- 14,000 in Rumania
- 8,000 in Poland
- 6,000 in the Czech Republic
- 6,000 in Lithuania
- 6,000 in Slovakia
- and some six more countries each with a Jewish
population of 1,000-1,500 Jews.
There is the distinct possibility that – in the next generation
at least – these regions are going to provide unique examples
of an expanding Diaspora population. This is because schools and
informal educational/ cultural networks are working to change
the negative image of Jewish identity that became so entrenched
in people’s minds just a few decades ago. Large amounts
of money will continue to be spent in these places in the foreseeable
future, which could well cause increasing numbers to reveal their
identity. However, these populations may decide to migrate at
some time in the future.
As mentioned earlier, hundreds of thousands of those who identify
themselves as Jews, or who can prove some marginal connection
with Jewish blood, have made Aliyah to Israel. Equal numbers have
moved to the West, a phenomenon that will now be examined here.
It remains to be seen whether the demography of these communities
will stabilize as their community life develops. Perhaps the main
issue here is the economic prospects of each community.

6. Economic Factors Causing Migration
In analyzing the reasons for migration throughout Jewish history,
two main reasons for community spread and the movement of Jews
to different areas in the world can be noted: the desires to escape
persecution and improve one’s economic prospects. These
factors have both operated constantly to re-arrange the Jewish
map of the world, often with considerable interdependence.
Where Jews were needed for economic reasons, there was less likelihood
of their being actively persecuted. Jews inevitably gravitated
to such places. Examples of this trend can be seen in their migration
into Ashkenaz (the German lands) around the early 9th century,
the eastwards push of that community into the Polish lands from
the 13th century onwards, and then into the Ukrainian lands in
the late 16th century.
This does not mean, however, that safety and prosperity at any
given period can be defined by looking at a map of Jewish communities.
Some communities lived in marginal economic situations and remained
very vulnerable; few, however, had alternatives. Fifty years after
the terrible mid-17th-century pogroms in the Ukraine – which
decimated the Jewish community of the area, causing tens of thousands
of deaths and causing most of the community to flee – the
Ukraine was full of Jews once again.
Nevertheless, economic factors have been among the main causes
of many large-scale Jewish migrations, including those that have
occurred in modern times. Sometimes these factors are the sole
motive for a move; more usually, however, they combine with other
causes to dictate both the timing and the new destination. Some
examples of this have already been mentioned here. A significant
factor in the stampede at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries
to the United States – and to a lesser extent to Western
Europe and South America – was the concept of the ‘Goldene
Medina’ whose streets were said to be paved with gold. Similarly,
groups have been noted among the new immigrants to Palestine/Israel
whose motivation was primarily economic. For instance, immigrants
from Poland in the 1920s and those from the former Soviet Union
in more recent years moved because of a combination of economic
troubles and the necessity of leaving a harsh social and political
reality.
In other cases, however, economic considerations have been central.
This phenomenon can be demonstrated through the stories of four
different communities. These are meant to be representative rather
than exhaustive. When discussing the North African’s move
to France, the Russians’ move to Germany, or the South Africans’
move to Australia, the fact that many Jews moved to Canada, the
United States or England is not being ignored. However, each of
these stories is meaningful because it is indicative of general
trends.
A. The North African migration to France.
When most North African Jews moved to Israel in the 1950s, an estimated
200,000 moved to France instead. They had identical reasons for
leaving North Africa, but had drawn different conclusions. Being
familiar with the French language and culture from the colonial
dominance of France in their region, they elected to move to a
place where they could better their standard of living. These
pragmatic, rather than ideological, considerations certainly proved
themselves. An tremendous influx of energy transformed the tired
post-war Jewish community in France; the new immigrants themselves
demonstrated the classic immigrant model of rising fortunes through
the generations.
This contrasted starkly with the North African immigrants to Israel.
Bereft of the community leadership that had mainly moved to France,
and at a disadvantage in the Hebrew-speaking, spartan environment
of the early Zionist state, they continued to struggle through
most of the second and third generations.
B. The Russian Jewish migration to Germany.
A similar phenomenon has occurred with regard to the tens of thousands
of former Soviet Jews who have moved to Germany in the last decade
or so. In this case, also, practical economic considerations were
the first priority. This narrative is a little different, however,
because those who moved to Israel generally did not do so for
ideological reasons: most were searching for a new start in a
different land. For many, Israel was simply the easiest place
in which to be accepted. Nevertheless, there is still a considerable
stigma attached to the idea of Jews’ living in Germany.
Only those determined to ignore all but purely practical considerations
could settle there so soon after the Holocaust. Of the 60,000-odd
Jews living in Germany today, the vast majority are former Russians
whose presence, in recent years, has begun to transform the community.
C. The Israeli move to Germany.
Here a stratum of the German Jewish population needs to be discussed
that represents another side of the same phenomenon: many thousands
of Israelis left Israel for Germany in the 1970s and 1980s. In
those decades large numbers of Jews left Israel, seeking a better
economic and social reality in the western world. Most moved to
the main cities of the English-speaking world, but the presence
of a considerable community in Germany highlights the Jews’
motives precisely because of the stigma associated with living
in Germany.
Israelis live in the one Jewish community
that perceives moving to it or away from it in ideological terms.
The mere choice of the words Aliyah (‘going up’) to
denote the act of Jews who immigrate and Yerida (‘going
down’) to describe the act of those who leave, implies clear
moral judgments: those who come are good and those who leave are
bad This demonstrates the attitude that there is a right or a
wrong place for Jews to be. This Zionist interpretation of the
old theological category of Galut (‘exile’, i.e. the
wrong place) to denote all places outside of the Land of Israel,
made it difficult for many years for people to leave. Today, there
is much more tolerance; in the 1970s and 1980s, however, when
hundreds of thousands eventually left the country, the stigma
attached to such an act was enormous.
Those who moved to Germany, then, were doubly stigmatized. Many
of them were clearly sufficiently highly motivated personally,
and prepared to ignore all ideological considerations. On a symbolic
level, therefore, their move to Germany represents the wider act
of Israeli Yerida in its starkest and most problematic form.

D. The South African move to Australia.
A fourth group of Jews who have left their native country largely,
although not completely, for pragmatic economic and socio-political
reasons are the Jews of South Africa. For the last twenty years,
they have mainly been settling into the English speaking world,
and Australia in particular.
Socially and politically, they felt increasingly uneasy in a society
being revolutionized by the native Africans’ accession to
power. Many Jews were uncertain about the future of both the country
and their own families. Furthermore, the rising wave of crime
that swept through most of South Africa, victimizing the middle
class – of which the Jews are a prominent part – left
them feeling particularly vulnerable. Additional economic considerations
connected with the devaluation of the South African rand caused
many to decide to get out before it became financially impossible.
These Jews are totally different from the smaller group of South
African Jews who left the country in the previous generation because
of their unwillingness to live under apartheid. Many of the latter
made their way to Israel, backing one ideological decision with
another.
Largely because of the difficulties of submerging themselves in
the Afrikaners’ world, South African Jews have tended to
develop a very strong Jewish and Zionist identity. Many have been
prepared to work to improve and influence whichever community
in which they have found themselves. The recent emigrants from
South Africa have thus made a strong impact on the Australian
community, transforming its institutions and injecting considerable
talent and energy into its leadership.
These four examples indicate an important factor in modern Jewish
demography: in an increasingly mobile world, there is a growing
awareness of the potential for transforming one’s economic
and social circumstances by changing domicile. This idea has not
been lost on the Jews. As a direct result, entire new communities
are being formed on the basis of migration, and old communities
are being transformed.

7. Assimilation And Intermarriage
Contrary to popular belief, neither assimilation nor intermarriage
are new phenomena among the Jewish people. 2,500 years ago, returning
to Jerusalem to lead the community of Jewish returnees to Eretz
Yisrael, Ezra was shocked by the amount of intermarriage among
the local Jews and forced them to divorce their non-Jewish partners.
Nevertheless, we have comparatively little information concerning
the phenomenon in the pre-modern period. It is clear that it occurred
in some places and times, although we can only assume that religious
taboos and social isolation would have restricted its frequency.
The situation changed, however, with the modern age, one in which
the traditional boundaries that had separated Jews and non-Jews
started to crumble in the Christian lands of the west. At this
time, there was a perceptible weakening of traditional religious
belief among many Jews, who were encountering the ideas and realities
of the outside world. The temptation to convert to another religion
grew strong. In the 19th century, in particular, hundreds of thousands
of Jews converted and married ‘out’.
In earlier generations, there was a small number of Jews who married
‘out’ but wished to maintain a Jewish life. However,
Jews were increasingly being accepted outside their communities,
and laws limiting their participation in general society were
slowly being eliminated. The temptation to convert weakened, as
a result, while the number of intermarriages started to increase.
Already by the mid-19th century, some of the leaders of Reform
Judaism were rethinking the traditional ban on intermarriage and
beginning to accept the idea of marriage to non-Jews as long as
any children were raised as Jews. The early decades of the 20th
century saw intermarriage soaring in most parts of Western and
Central Europe, causing it to become a very serious global issue
for Jews and their leaders.
It is possible that the decimation of European Jewry amid the massive
rise of anti-Jewish hatred throughout the western world (including
the situation in England in the 1930s and in America in the 1940s)
slowed down the rate of intermarriage. Many moralists have tried
to draw the following lesson from the Holocaust: that Jews who
assimilate and intermarry can never avoid being considered and
judged as Jews.
Despite this, many believe that the current situation is different.
The last generation has seen a return to the pre-war situation
of widespread, continually increasing rates of intermarriage.
The main reasons for this phenomenon are easily identifiable:
a relaxation of communal prohibitions and sanctions; the irrelevance
of Jewish religious theology to many contemporary Jews; ignorance
of tradition and history, and a belief in romance, which upholds
emotional connection as the sole criterion for a relationship.
The Conservative movement has followed Reform in consciously deciding
to accept non-Jewish spouses into their congregations. Their main
argument is that it is preferable to try to win new adherents
for Judaism and the Jewish people from among the circle of the
intermarried. Encouraging them to re-enter the community and to
find their place there is likely to create for some the basis
for a strong, meaningful Jewish life. They contend that this is
a productive way of dealing with the problem. Pushing such people
out of the community will eventually weaken world Jewry.
It needs to be stated clearly that there no Jewish movement actually
encourages intermarriage. The question that they are all being
forced to deal with, however, is how to respond to the present
reality. Thus in the non-Orthodox world, this stance – with
its important practical implications – has tended to replace
the response of outrage and collective shunning that was usual
until fairly recently in the more traditional circles. One could
state that outrage has given way to outreach. The Orthodox world,
on the other hand, has generally maintained traditional attitudes
and sanctions in this regard. The issue remains controversial
for most of the Jewish world.
Intermarriage and assimilation are clearly of great significance
to Jewish demographers. Apart from the theological considerations
of their effect on Judaism and the sociological considerations
of their consequences within the Jewish community, demographers
need to define the criteria for counting Jews in places where
these phenomena are rife.
At one time, it could be safely assumed that there was –
more or less – a complete overlap between the number of
Jews living in a particular area, and the number of those actually
involved in the community. This is no longer the case. Only a
certain percentage of Jews actively participate in some way in
the community, however the community’s institutional lines
are drawn. This raises a series of new – and very contentious
– questions that have no really ‘right’ or ‘wrong’
answers:
- How do you relate to children of mixed families if they are
not raised as Jews?
- Do you make decisions based on halachic criteria of matrilineal
descent, even if some communities have embraced patrilineal
descent as an equally valid criterion?
- Are people who do not consider themselves Jews, despite their
family antecedents, to be counted ‘in’ or ‘out’?
- Should subjective considerations be the main criteria for
demographic counting?
- Should more objective criteria such as synagogue attendance
or involvement in cultural and social activities to be the
deciding factors?
Despite the development of increasingly sophisticated survey techniques,
the demographers’ job is becoming ever more difficult due
to serious difficulties in making ‘correct’ decisions
on such complex issues. Statistics are important mainly insofar
as they support the evidence for trends within the specific community
being examined.
For example, a debate has developed around the recently published
figures for American Jewry. According to the National Jewish Population
survey, taken once a decade as the main official study of this
demographic sector, the current size of the Jewish population
of the United States is 5.2 million. However, the San Francisco-based
Institute for Jewish and Community Research has published recent
estimates that reach 6.7 million. The difference results less
from differences in surveying techniques and more from the criteria
that have been used to determine “Who is a Jew?”.
Furthermore, the latter study reported that there are another
2.5 million Americans who are ‘socially or psychologically’
connected with Judaism. This includes people who practice Judaism
together with another religion; who were raised Jewish but who
now practice another religion, or who have a Jewish partner or
spouse.
This issue is by no means restricted to the west, however: it is
just as pertinent in the communities of East Central and Eastern
Europe, discussed earlier in this paper. For example, the Jewish
community in Hungary is generally estimated at 80,000. However,
a number of contemporary surveys of Hungarian Jewry reveal astonishing
discrepancies: the numbers quoted vary between 50,000 and 200,000.
Some of the difference can be explained by the specific reality
of the community in which people have hidden their identity and
are not necessarily hurrying to reclaim it through open connection
with the community. A significant part of the discrepancy, however,
is due to the question of defining a Jew. The question is relevant
for almost every Jewish community around the world.

8. Summing Up The Issue: Suggestions For Meaning
Jews are not
disappearing, they are transforming |
A recent magazine article (Jerusalem Report 21.10.2002) quoted the
demographer responsible for the above-mentioned San Francisco report
as saying that “Jews are not disappearing, they are transforming…
The kinds of language we used to describe populations in the past
are useless and self defeating… We have to be more open to the
idea that the Jewish community is broader and probably disconnected
from Jewish life. I think that the potential for a larger and even
more vibrant Jewish community, is huge”.
This opinion has been quoted here because of its far-reaching implications
for the way in which see the Jewish community is perceived today.
Among other things, it raises the question of the meaning behind
the raw figures:
- What are the implications of a Jewish population, a large
part of which is alienated and “disconnected from Jewish
community life”?
- Can there be any meaning to the definition of Jews who live
outside of a Jewish community? Judaism and the meaning of
Jewish life have always been based around community and the
individual Jew’s interaction with it.
When demographers and statisticians begin to speak of large numbers
of Jews disconnected from any community as being a meaningful
part of world Jewry, it is time to go back to the beginning again,
and to ask basic questions about the meaning of being a Jew today.
It is not enough to talk about numbers: demography must also be
able to discuss the meaning of those numbers for a living Jewish
community. This paper has surveyed the forces that have created
the present Jewish world; analyzed the meaning of the main demographic
trends, and attempted to define the contours of the Jewish world
today.
The official statistic for the global Jewish population stands
at a little over 13,000,000. Some say that, in providing these
figures, the demographers have completed their task. In effect,
however, their work has only just begun: assessing the meaning
of the figures for the Jewish present and, thus, for its future.

9. Suggested Educational Exercises
A. Making Sense Of Jewish Numbers
• Ask each person in the group to write down what he/she
thinks is the global Jewish population statistic today. They should
also write down the number of Jews that they think currently live
in Israel.
• Ask each person for the numbers they have given and write
them all in two lists on the blackboard. Explain the difficulty
of achieving accuracy, but circle the numbers nearest to the statistics
that are currently accepted. If some of the numbers are way off-target,
pause to discuss the implications of the suggested numbers. Are
there more Jews – or fewer – than most people expected?
How do they understand that?
• Tell the group that they are demographers who have been
asked to make a report to the next World Conference of Jewish
Statisticians. Give out the following table of statistics (taken
from above):
Year |
World Jewish Population |
Israel Number |
| 1800 |
2,500,000 |
6,000 |
| 1880 |
7,750,000 |
25,000 |
| 1939 |
16,620,000 |
445,000 |
| 1945 |
11,000,000 |
565,000 |
| 1948 |
11,530,000 |
650,000 |
| 1950 |
11,373,000 |
1,203,000 |
| 1955 |
11,800,000 |
1,591,000 |
| 1975 |
12,742,000 |
2,959,000 |
| 1985 |
12,871,000 |
3,517,000 |
| 1990 |
12,869,000 |
3,947,000 |
| 1993 |
12,963,000 |
4,335,000 |
| 1995 |
13,000,000 |
4,550,000 |
| 2001 |
13,254,000 |
4,952,000 |
| 2002 |
Exact numbers not available |
5,292,000 |
• Divide them up into pairs or small groups. Without providing
any extra instructions, tell them that they have approximately
fifteen minutes in which to read the statistics and suggest three
trends or phenomena that seem to be significant. They must prepare
a presentation of these facts, preferably backing up their presentations
with visual aids that they should prepare.
• Get the first groups to make their presentations to the
class. Discuss each presentation as it is completed. Does the
rest of the class agree with the presentations? After a couple
of presentations, ask the other groups whether they have any new
trends that have not yet been mentioned. List on the board all
the trends that they mention.
• Each group should prepare a letter to the local Jewish
newspaper explaining how they see the significance of what is
happening to the world Jewish population. They should also suggest
policies that they think should be followed, or initiatives that
should be taken by the leadership of the Jewish community in your
country.
B. Israel And Disapora: Defining The Balance
• In this exercise, return to the previous statistical table.
Ask the students, divided into pairs, to choose four significant
dates from the table. They must try to draw approximate pie charts
that show the portion of world Jewry living in Palestine/Israel
on those four dates.
• Compare the charts and discuss the trends.
• Prepare a debate on the following question:
IT IS GOOD FOR THE JEWISH WORLD THAT THE PERCENTAGE OF JEWS LIVING
IN ISRAEL IS CONSTANTLY INCREASING.
• Half of the class should prepare reasons for the motion
and half should prepare reasons against it.
• Run the debate, perhaps switching the speakers for and
against as the debate continues. During the debate, the group
must stick to the ‘for’ or ‘against’ position
that they have been assigned.
• Finally, ask the students to vote ‘out of character’
and then lead a concluding discussion on the subject.
• Ask everyone to summarize their ideas in writing.
C. Country my community
• Ask three people from the community – preferably
from different backgrounds – to visit the class or group,
and talk about their own family stories. If there are recent immigrants
from different countries, try to invite representatives to tell
their stories. Where do their families come from? When did they
first come to the country/community? Why? What are the most significant
things that have changed in the family stories in the last generations?
• If members of the group or class have not done this in
the framework of a roots project, ask them to find out their family
stories from parents or grandparents, stressing the same questions
that they asked the guests. If they have already done this, ask
them to share with the class or group the material that they accumulated.
• Ask a community leader to visit the group. They should
give a general picture of the development of the community, concentrating
on its main sub-group and their reasons for coming to the community
when they did.
• After the representative has gone, discuss how the individual
stories of the members of the group fit into the wider community
story.
• Discuss the changes that the community has gone through.
Prepare a list of questions the answers to which would tell the
group about the ‘Jewish health’ of the community.
What information should be collected in order to determine the
trends within the community today?
• Either go out to pre-arranged meetings with community ‘experts’
or invite a panel of experts to talk to the group.
• After the meeting(s), divide the members of the group into
pairs, each of whom should write a report on the state of the
community based on what they have discovered. What is their bottom
line? What recommendations would they make to improve the situation?
D. The National picture
• Through the Internet or community publications, the group
should investigate the details of the national Jewish community
(U.S., Canada, Britain, Australia etc) of which their community
is a part.
• Prepare an exhibition on the situation of your community
and the way in which it fits into the national picture.
• Invite parents and families to a community night in which
the exhibit will be presented. After the presentation, the group
should present to the parents their conclusions from the previous
exercise, representing their assessment of the community in which
they live and a list of suggestions for improving the situation.
Discuss the students’ conclusions with the parents.
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