Orthodox Jews and slavery in antebellum America

School of Arts & Sciences undergraduate Samuel Strickberger investigates how 19th century Jewish migrants to the U.S. squared assimilation with the existence of slavery.

Between 1848 and the end of the Civil War, the population of Jewish people in the United States grew from 50,000 to 150,000. What did these migrants, with their own history of enslavement, think of the slavery in their new country? Samuel Strickberger, set out to answer that question in his history honors thesis, “Theological Crisis: The Jewish Orthodox Race-Based Slavery Debates, 1848-1861.”

Samuel Strickberger.
Samuel Strickberger is a senior in the School of Arts & Sciences. (Image: OMNIA)

1848 marked the beginning of a wave of migration to the United States from European countries like Germany, which had recently experienced failed revolutions. This wave included 100,000 Jews, and Strickberger says it meant “a huge reorganizing of Jewish life in America.”

The migrants arrived in a nation embroiled in debates about the enslavement of millions of Black people, the era’s most pressing moral issue. The Jewish community was also facing a looming religious crisis. The European Enlightenment and the Haskalah, Jewish Enlightenment, facilitated a 19th-century schism in which the Orthodox and Reform movements emerged. The Haskalah was an intellectual movement that “sought to integrate the ideas and values of the Enlightenment, principally increased reliance on reason and adaptation to modernity, into Judaism’s fabric,” Strickberger explains. Beyond all this, the new migrants were simply trying to assimilate and be accepted into America’s broader society. “How do religious leaders deal with all these competing interests?” asks Strickberger. “How do certain theologies motivate people to value or focus on one at the expense of others? Or to focus on all of them concurrently?”

Although being in America gave Jews more political freedom, they were still a new immigrant community. “The Jewish community was in a precarious situation,” says Strickberger. “They were trying to assimilate and stay below the radar. Silence was a much easier option than advocacy.” Other German immigrant communities, he says, also tried to remain silent about the issue of slavery: “Most individuals were trying to fit in and become American.”

As the Civil War grew closer, clergymen of all faiths were pressed more on the issue.

“There are many lessons from Jewish texts—like ‘Justice, justice, you shall pursue’—and Jewish history that remind us of the importance of standing up and what happens when people do not,” says Strickberger. “It is not always easy to witness a history where individuals who share aspects of my religious worldview also advanced a position so obviously wrong. As a Jewish person and a religious person, I wanted to see much more advocacy within the Orthodox community, despite the real and complex obstacles, such as being part of an immigrant community and dealing with fundamental shifts in religious life.”

Strickberger is a Wolf Humanities Center Undergraduate Fellow in a year when the center is focusing on migration. The research was funded by a Wolf Humanities Center Undergraduate Research Fellowship, a Philip E. Goldfein Scholarship in Jewish Studies, and a College Alumni Society Undergraduate Research Grant.

Read more at OMNIA.