German Jews were fully assimilated and secularized in the nineteenth
century--or so it is commonly assumed. In Jewish Scholarship and
Culture in the Nineteenth Century, Nils Roemer challenges this
assumption, finding that religious sentiments, concepts, and rhetoric
found expression through a newly emerging theological historicism at the
center of modern German Jewish culture.
Modern German Jewish identity developed during the struggle for
emancipation, debates about religious and cultural renewal, and battles
against anti-Semitism. A key component of this identity was historical
memory, which Jewish scholars had begun to infuse with theological
perspectives beginning in the 1850s. After German reunification in the
early 1870s, Jewish intellectuals reevaluated their enthusiastic embrace
of liberalism and secularism. Without abandoning the ideal of tolerance,
they asserted a right to cultural religious difference for
themselves--an ideal they held to even more tightly in the face of
growing anti-Semitism. This newly re-theologized Jewish history, Roemer
argues, helped German Jews fend off anti-Semitic attacks by
strengthening their own sense of their culture and tradition.