As early as 1840, when the
blood accusation was revived with regard to the
Damascus affair, and Jewish matters were for the first time treated on an international basis, the Jews of England took by far the most prominent position in the general protest of the European Jewries against the charge. Not only was the
Board of Deputies at London the sole Jewish body in Europe to hold public meetings, but owing to their influence
a meeting of protest was held by eminent Christians at the
Mansion House, London (3 July 1840), which formed a precedent for subsequent distinguished gatherings.
Sir Moses Montefiore, after aiding the Damascus Jews by obtaining, in an interview with the
Sultan at
Constantinople, a
firman repudiating the blood accusation, visited Russia in 1846 to intercede for his coreligionists there. In 1860 he went to Rome in connection with the
Mortara affair; and in 1863 he led a mission to
Morocco on behalf of Jews of that country. Action was likewise taken by the chief English Jews in behalf of the unfortunate
Hebrews of the
Danubian principalities.
Francis Goldsmid made an interpellation in the House of Commons with regard to the Jews of
Serbia (29 March 1867), and started a debate in that assembly (19 April 1872) on the subject of the persecutions of the Jews in
Romania. As a consequence a Romanian committee was formed, which watched the activities of the illiberal government of that country. ==Pogroms in Russia== When in 1881 the
outburst of violence in Russia brought the position of the Russian Jews prominently before the world, it was their coreligionists in England who took the lead in organising measures for their relief. Articles in
The Times of 11 and 13 January 1882, drew the attention of the whole world to the extent of the persecutions, and
a meeting of the most prominent citizens of London was held at the Mansion House on 1 February 1882 (see Mansion House Meeting). As a consequence a fund was raised amounting to more than £108,000, and a complete scheme of distributing in the United States the Russian
refugees from Brody was organised by the committee of the
Mansion House Fund. Similarly, when a revival of the persecutions took place in 1891, another meeting was held at the
Guildhall, and a further sum of over £100,000 was collected and devoted to facilitating the westward movement of the Russian exodus. An attempt was made this time to obtain access directly to the czar by the delivery of a petition from the lord mayor and citizens of London; but this was contemptuously rejected, and the
Russo-Jewish committee which carried out the work of the Mansion House Fund was obliged to confine its activity to measures outside Russia. When
Maurice de Hirsch formed his elaborate scheme for the amelioration of the condition of the persecuted Jews, headquarters were established by him in London, though the administration was practically directed from Paris. The
immigrants being excluded from most of the cities of the Continent, the burden of receiving most of the Russian refugees moving westward fell on England, as well as America.
Result of the Russian exodus The advent of such a large number of Jews, unprovided with capital, and often without a definite occupation, brought with it difficulties. It was only natural that the newcomers should arouse a certain amount of prejudice by their foreign habits, by the economic pressure they brought to bear upon certain trades, especially on that of clothing, and by their overcrowding in certain localities. While
the Continent had seen the rise of strong
anti-Semitic feeling, England had been comparatively free from any exhibition of this kind. During Lord Beaconsfield's ministry, a few murmurs had been heard from the more advanced Liberals against the "Semitic" tendencies of the prime minister and his brethren in the race, but as a rule social had followed political emancipation almost automatically. The Russian influx threatened to disturb this natural process, and soon after 1891 protests began to be heard against the alien immigrants. Bills were even introduced into Parliament to check their entry into England. Nothing came of these protests, however, till the year 1902, when the question had reached such a point that it was deemed desirable to appoint a royal commission to inquire into the whole subject. The commission heard evidence both from those favouring and from those opposed to restricted immigration. Reports were made to the House of Commons that the arrival, in the
East End of London, of Eastern European Jews, had brought
smallpox and
scarlet fever. The evidence, however, does not appear to have supported these accusations. ==See also==