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Fear No Pharaoh
A01=Richard Kreitner
abolition
Abraham Lincoln
antisemitism
assimilation
August Bondi
Author_Richard Kreitner
Category=NH
Category=NHK
Category=NHTS
Civil War
Confederacy
David Einhorn
Emancipation Proclamation
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Ernestine Rose
Exodus
immigration
Isaac Mayer Wise
Judah P. Benjamin
Judaism
Morris Raphall
Rabbis
Reconstruction
Slavery
Southern Jews
Torah
Ulysses S. Grant
Product details
- ISBN 9780374608453
- Weight: 300g
- Dimensions: 160 x 35mm
- Publication Date: 19 May 2025
- Publisher: Farrar, Straus & Giroux Inc
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
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Since ancient times, the Jewish people have recalled the story of Exodus and reflected on the implications of having been slaves. Did the tradition teach that Jews should act against slavery everywhere, or act cautiously to protect themselves in a hostile world, or both?
In Fear No Pharaoh, the journalist and historian Richard Kreitner sets this question at the heart of the Civil War era. Using original sources, he tells the intertwined stories of six American Jews who helped to shape a tumultuous time, including Judah P. Benjamin, the slavery skeptic who became Jefferson Davis’s trusted confidante; Morris Raphall, a Swedish-born rabbi who defended the practice of slavery as biblically justified; and Raphall's rival rabbis - the celebrated Isaac Mayer Wise, who urged Jews to stay out of the slavery controversy to avoid attracting attention, and David Einhorn, whose fiery abolitionism led a pro-slavery mob to threaten his life. We also meet August Bondi, a Yiddish-speaking veteran of Europe’s 1848 revolutions, who fought with John Brown in “bleeding Kansas,” and the Polish émigré Ernestine Rose, a brilliant feminist, atheist, and abolitionist who championed “emancipation of all kinds.”
As he tracks these characters, Kreitner illuminates the shifting dynamics of Jewish life in America - and the debates about religion, morality, and politics that endure to this day.
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