Online Encyclopedia

RITUAL MURDER

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V23, Page 373 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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RITUAL
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MURDER
  , a general
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term for human sacrifice in connexion with religious ceremonies . False accusations as to the practice of ritual
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murder by Jews and Christians have often been made . " The, Christians of the second and third centuries suffered severely under them " (Strack) . Justin Martyr . (150-160) in his Second Apology (ch . 12) vigorously defends the Christian community against this charge; Octavius, Minucius Felix, Tertullian, Origen and other Church Fathers all refer to the subject and indignantly repudiate the atrocious
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libel that the Eucharist involved human sacrifice . The myth was revived against the Montanists, and in the later
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middle ages against various sects of heretical . Christians . In
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recent years the accusation has been again levelled against " foreigners " during the disturbances in
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China . The chief sufferers, however, from the charge were the Jews . • The charge was never coherently defined, but a notion prevailed that at the
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Passover Christian
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blood was used in Jewish
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rites . For. this belief there is no foundation whatever, as is proved in the classical
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treatise' on the subject by Hermann L .

Strack, Regius

Professor of
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Theology at Berlin University . The first occasion on which the
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medieval Jews were accused of the murder of a Christian child was at Norwich in 1144 . In the following century other instances of the charge occurred on the Continent, and by this time (middle of the 13th century) the legend had grown into a belief that " the Jews of every province annually decide by lot " which congregation or
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town is to be the scene of the mythical murder . It is easy to understand how` in ages when the Jews were everywhere regarded with superstitious
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awe, such stories to their detriment would find ready credence, but the revival of the myth in recent times by the anti-Semite is a deplorable instance of degeneration . It is only necessary here to refer to the Lincoln case (1255), the Trent case (1475) and more recently the
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Damascus case (184o), the Tisza-Eszlar affair (1882), the Xanten charge (1891) and the Polna case (1899) . All of these charges—sometimes invented by malicious seceders from the Jewish fold—were followed by spoliation and tragic persecution of the Jews . On the other hand many Jewish proselytes to
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Christianity have strenuously defended the Jews from the charge, among them may be particularly named Prof . D . Chwolson (Blutanklage, 1901) . In 184o a protest against the charge was signed by 58 Jewish-Christians, the list being headed by M . S . Alexander,
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Anglican bishop at Jerusalem .

Further testimonies of a similar

kind are collected in Strack (op. cit. p . 239) . Many of the popes have issued bulls exonerating the Jews (cf . Strack, p . 250); similarly temporal princes have often taken a similar step (ibid. p . 26o) . Many Christian scholars and ecclesiastics have felt it their duty to utter protests in favour of the Jews . Among them have been the most eminent Christian students of Rabbinism of recent times, e.g . Professors Alexander McCaul, P . Lagarde, Franz Delitzsch, A . Merx, T . Noldeke, C .

Siegfried, A . Wunsche, G . H . Dalman and J. von Dellinger . A careful examination of the

evidence with a
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complete acquittal of the Jews) is contained in a notable
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work by a Catholic priest, F . Frank, Der Ritualmord vor den Gerichtshofen der Wahrheit and der Gerechtigkeit (1901, 1902) . The literature on the other side is entirely antisemitic and in no instance has it survived the ordeal of criticism . The most notorious exponent of the charge was A . Rohling, the worthlessness of whose writings on the subject is exposed by (among many others) Strack (op . Cit. pp . 155 seq.) . A list of some of the most important of the cases is given by J .

Jacob in the Jewish Encyclopedia, iii . 266-67 . (I .

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