History of the
“Protocols of the Elders of Zion”
Mirrored from
The Jewish Virtual Library
The "Protocols of the Elders of Zion,"
the most notorious and most successful work of modern
anti-Semitism, draws on popular anti-Semitic notions
which have their roots in medieval Europe from the time of
the
Crusades. The
libels that the Jews used blood of Christian children
for the
Feast of Passover, poisoned the wells and spread the
plague were pretexts for the wholesale destruction of Jewish
communities throughout
Europe. Tales were circulated among the masses of secret
rabbinical conferences whose aim was to subjugate and
exterminate the Christians, and motifs like these are found
in early antisemitic literature.
The conceptual inspiration for the
Protocols can be traced back to the time of the
French Revolution at the end of the 18th century. At
that time, a French Jesuit named Abbe Barruel, representing
reactionary elements opposed to the revolution, published in
1797 a treatise blaming the Revolution on a secret
conspiracy operating through the Order of Freemasons.
Barruel's idea was nonsense, since the French nobility at
the time was heavily Masonic, but he was influenced by a
Scottish mathematician named Robison who was opposed to the
Masons. In his treatise, Barruel did not himself blame the
Jews, who were emancipated as a result of the Revolution.
However, in 1806, Barruel circulated a forged letter,
probably sent to him by members of the state police opposed
to Napoleon Bonaparte's liberal policy toward the Jews,
calling attention to the alleged part of the Jews in the
conspiracy he had earlier attributed to the Masons. This
myth of an international Jewish conspiracy reappeared later
on in 19th century
Europe in places such as
Germany and
Poland.
The direct predecessor of the Protocols
can be found in the pamphlet "Dialogues in Hell Between
Machiavelli and Montesquieu," published by the nonJewish
French satirist Maurice Joly in 1864. In his "Dialogues,"
which make no mention of the Jews, Joly attacked the
political ambitions of the emperor Napoleon III using the
imagery of a diabolical plot in Hell. The "Dialogues" were
caught by the French authorities soon after their
publication and Joly was tried and sentenced to prison for
his pamphlet.
Joly's "Dialogues," while intended as a
political satire, soon fell into the hands of a German
anti-Semite named Hermann Goedsche writing under the name of
Sir John Retcliffe. Goedsche was a postal clerk and a spy
for the Prussian secret police. He had been forced to leave
the postal work due to his part in forging evidence in the
prosecution against the Democratic leader Benedict Waldeck
in 1849. Goedsche adapted Joly's "Dialogues" into a mythical
tale of a Jewish conspiracy as part of a series of novels
entitled "Biarritz," which appeared in 1868. In a chapter
called "The Jewish Cemetery in
Prague and the Council of Representatives of the Twelve
Tribes of Israel," he spins the fantasy of a secret
centennial rabbinical conference which meets at midnight and
whose purpose is to review the past hundred years and to
make plans for the next century.
Goedsche's plagiary of Joly's "Dialogues"
soon found its way to
Russia. It was translated into Russian in 1872, and a
consolidation of the "council of representatives" under the
name "Rabbi's Speech" appeared in Russian in 1891. These
works no doubt furnished the Russian secret police (Okhrana)
with a means with which to strengthen the position of the
weak
Czar Nicholas II and discredit the reforms of the
liberals who sympathized with the Jews. During the
Dreyfus case of 1893—1895, agents of the Okhrana in
Paris redacted the earlier works of Joly and Goedsche into a
new edition which they called the "Protocols of the Elders
of Zion." The manuscript of the Protocols was brought to
Russia in 1895 and was printed privately in 1897.
The Protocols did not become public until
1905, when Russia's defeat in the Russo-Japanese War was
followed by the Revolution in the same year, leading to the
promulgation of a constitution and institution of the Duma.
In the wake of these events, the reactionary "Union of the
Russian Nation" or Black Hundreds organization sought to
incite popular feeling against the Jews, who they blamed for
the Revolution and the Constitution. To this end they used
the Protocols, which was first published in a public edition
by the mystic priest Sergius Nilus in 1905. The Protocols
were part of a propaganda campaign that accompanied the
pogroms of 1905 inspired by the Okhrana. A variant text of
the Protocols was published by George Butmi in 1906 and
again in 1907. The edition of 1906 was found among the
Czar's collection, even though he had already recognized the
work as a forgery. In his later editions, Nilus claimed that
the Protocols had been read secretly at the
First Zionist Congress at
Basle in 1897, while Butmi, in his edition, wrote that
they had no connection with the new
Zionist movement, but, rather, were part of the Masonic
conspiracy.
In the civil war following the Bolshevik
Revolution of 1917, the reactionary White Armies made
extensive use of the Protocols to incite widespread
slaughters of Jews. At the same time, Russian emigrants
brought the Protocols to western Europe, where the Nilus
edition served as the basis for many translations, starting
in 1920. Just after its appearance in
London in 1920, Lucien Wolf exposed the Protocols as a
plagiary of the earlier work of Joly and Goedsche, in a
pamphlet of the Jewish Board of Deputies. The following
year, in 1921, the story of the forgery was published in a
series of articles in the London Times by Philip
Grave, the paper's correspondent in Constantinople.
A whole book documenting the forgery was
also published in the same year in the
United States by Herman Bernstein (The Truth About
"The Protocols of Zion." Reprinted with an introduction
by Norman Cohn. NY: Ktav Publishing House, 1971).
Nevertheless, the Protocols continued to circulate widely.
They were even sponsored by
Henry Ford in the
United States until 1927, and formed an important part
of the Nazis' justification of genocide of the Jews in the
Holocaust.
Sources:
The Nizkor
Project:

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