Boycotts
01: Boycotts
against the Jews in Europe 1880-1939
Anti-Jewish boycotts since the 1880s - Polish-Jewish war since
1912 - German boycott day on 1 April 1933 stimulates new boycotts in
anti-Semitic Poland
from: Boycott, Anti-Jewish;
Boycott,
anti-Nazi; Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971, vol. 4
presentation by Michael Palomino (2007)
Anti-Jewish
boycott in Galicia since 1893 - emigration wave 1881-1910
(from: Galicia; In: Encyclopaedia Judaica (1971), vol. 16, col. 1330,
supplementary entries)
<In 1893 a Catholic convocation in Cracow proclaimed an economic
boycott
on Jews. From 1900 Poles and Ukrainians combined to exclude the Jews
from the merchandising of agricultural produce through the
establishment of a network of agricultural cooperatives and through
propaganda among the peasants not to boy from or sell to Jews, and the
various organizations of estate owners formed their own associations
for buying and selling.
In 1910 the Jews were forbidden to sell *alcoholic beverages: 15,000
Jewish families lost their source of livelihood. This occurred at a
time when the number of Jews had doubled in Galicia (between 1857 and
1910). [...]
The boycott and economic pressure impoverished the masses of Jews in
Galicia [[and it can be admitted this boycott movement was not only in
Galicia, and from this came the emigration wave from Eastern Europe,
see
Migration
]].
In 1908 there were 689 cooperative lending funds, most of which had
been established with the help of Jews abroad. Between 1881 and 1910 a
total of 236,000 Jews emigrated from Galicia.> (col. 1330)
[1904-1906:
Anti-Jewish boycott in Irland in Limerick]
(from: Irland; In: Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971, vol. 8)
<The most serious anti-Jewish agitation took place in Limerick in
1904,
when a Catholic priest attacked the local Jews from the pulpit. This
resulted in an economic boycott, which remained in force until 1906,
and led to the decline of the Jewish community there from 200 to less
than 40 people. The anti-Semitic campaign ceased only with the removal
of the priest. During World War I, Limerick had again a congregation of
about 40 families.> (col. 1465)
[Anti-Semitic
wave of Ku Klux Klan in the criminal racist "USA" with boycotts in the
1920s]
<The most significant expression of Amcerican nativism during the
1920s was the spectacular revival of the KuKlux Klan which, at its
height in 1924, counted over 4,000,000 member in all parts of the
country. Although its primary targets in the defense of "one hundred
percent Americanism" were Catholics and Negroes, Klan leaders in their
propaganda also included Jews as one of the chief obstacles to the
preservation of the "real America". Thus, the Klan of the 1920s was the
first substantial, organized mass movement in which anti-Semitism was
utilized. Politically ineffective except as an adjunct to the
immigration restriction movmeent, the Klan never proposed a specific
anti-Jewish program, but sporadic
boycotts of Jewish merchants and
similar harassments did occur before the collapse of Klan power in the
late 1920s [[by 1927]].> (col. 1653)
[P.K.]> (col. 1280)
| Sources |

Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971: Boycott, German, anti-Jewish, vol. 4, col.
1277-1278 |

Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971: Boycott, German,
anti-Jewish, vol. 4, col.
1279-1280
| 
Encyclopaedia Judaica (1971): Galicia, vol. 16, col. 1330, supplement
entries |
|
|
|
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