- History of the Jews in Slovenia
The small
Jew ish community ofSlovenia ( _sl. Judovska skupnost Slovenije) is estimated at 400 to 600 members Fact|date=May 2007, with most living in the capital,Ljubljana . The Jewish community was devastated by theShoah , and has never fully recovered. Until2003 ,Ljubljana was the onlyEurope an capital city without a Jewish place of worship [ [http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/vjw/slovenia.html Jewish Virtual Library - Slovenia] ] .History of the community
Ancient community
The Jewish community of
Slovenia pre-dates the6th century Slavic migration to theSlovene Lands [Jews of Yugoslavia 1941-1945 Victims of Genocide and Freedom Fighters, Jasa Romano] , [Slovenia ] . The first Jews arrived inSlovenia in Roman times, with archaeological evidence of Jews found inMaribor andŠkocjan . InŠkocjan , an engraved menorah dating from the5th century AD was found in a graveyard. [ [http://www.centropa.org/reports.asp?rep=HR&ID=5960&TypeID=36658 Excerpts from Jews in Yugoslavia - Part I] ]In the
12th century , Jews arrived in theSlovene Lands fleeing poverty inItaly andcentral Europe . Even though they were forced to live inghetto s, many Jews prospered. Relations between Jews and Slovenes were generally peaceful. InMaribor , Jews were successful bankers, winegrowers and millers. Several "Jewish Courts" ("judovsko sodišče") existed in Styria, though not inCarniola or Carinthia, settling disputes between Jews and Christians.Israel Isserlein , who authored several essays on medieval Jewish life in Slovenia, was the most important rabbi at the time, having lived in Maribor. [ V. Travner, Mariborski ghetto, Kronika 2, 1935, pp. 154-150. ] In 1397, Jewish ghettos inRadgona andPtuj were set ablaze by a secret society called "Ungenannte Judenhauer ". [ Enciklopedija Slovenije, 4. Zvezek, 1990, p. 315. ] (The name, translated from German, means "Anonymous Jew-beaters")The first synagogue in Ljubljana is mentioned in
1213 . Issued with a "Privilegium", Jews were able to settle an area of Ljubljana located on the left bank of theLjubljanica River. The streets "Židovska ulica" (“Jewish Street”) and "Židovska steza" (“Jewish Lane”), which now occupy the area, are still reminiscent of that period. The wealth of the Jews bred resentment among the rulers and nobility of theSlovenian Lands , with many refusing to repay Jewish money-lenders. Individual regions began expelling their Jews already in the16th century , with the last Jews expelled by1718 . [ [http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/vjw/slovenia.html Jewish Virtual Library - Slovenia] ]The modern era
In
1709 Charles VI, Emperor of theHoly Roman Empire (and ruler of theSlovenian Lands ), issued a decree allowing Jews to return to theSlovenian Lands . Nevertheless, Jews in that time settled almost exlusively in the commercial city ofTrieste and, to a much smaller extent, in the town of Gorica, which are now both part ofItaly . The decree was overturned in1817 by Francis I, and Jews were granted full civil and political right only with theAustro-Hungarian constitution of1867 . Nevertheless, the Slovenian Lands remained virtually without a consistent Jewish population, with the exception of Gorizia, Trieste, the region ofPrekmurje and some smaller towns in the western part of theCounty of Gorizia and Gradisca (Gradisca ,Cervignano ), which were inhabited mostly by aFriulian -speaking population. According to the census of1910 , only 146 Jews lived in the territory of modernSlovenia , excluding thePrekmurje region. [ [http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/vjw/slovenia.html Jewish Virtual Library - Slovenia] ]Rampant
anti-Semitism was among the causes why few Jews decided to settle in the area, maintaining the overall Jewish population at a very low level. In the1920s , After the formation of theKingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (Yugoslavia ), the local Jewish community merged with the Jewish community ofZagreb ,Croatia . [ [http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/vjw/slovenia.html Jewish Virtual Library - Slovenia] ]According to the
1931 census, there were about 900 Jews in theDrava Banovina , mostly concentrated inPrekmurje , which used to be part of theKingdom of Hungary until1919 . This was the reason why in the mid1930s Murska Sobota became the seat of the Jewish Community of Slovenia. During that period, the Jewish population was reinvigorated by many immigrants fleeing from neighouringAustria andNazi Germany to a more tolerantKingdom of Yugoslavia . Nevertheless, the anti-Jewish legislation, adopted byMilan Stojadinović 's pro-German regime and the anti-semitic discourse ofAnton Korošec 's Slovenian People's Party, made Slovenia a less desirable destination.The number of Jews prior to the Axis
invasion of Yugoslavia in April1941 is estimated to around 2,500.The Holocaust
The Jewish community, very small even before
World War II and theShoah , was further reduced by the Nazis occupation between 1941 and1945 .Post-war community
Under
Communism in Yugoslavia, the Jewish community in Socialist Slovenia numbered fewer than 100 members. In1953 , thesynagogue ofMurska Sobota , the only remaining after the Shoah, was demolished by the local Communist authorities. Many Jews were expelled from Yugoslavia as "Germans " and most of Jewish property was confiscated. The "Judovska Občina v Ljubljani" (Jewish Community ofLjubljana ) was officially reformed following World War II; its first president was Artur Kon, followed byAleksandar Švarc in1957 , followed by Roza Fertig-Švarc in 1988. In1969 , it numbered only 84 members and its membership was declining due to emigration and age.Berta Bojetu ,Miriam Steiner ("Vojak z zlatimi gumbi") andZlate Medic-Vokač ("Marpurgi") were Jewish authors who wrote in Slovene. [ Enciklopedija Slovenije ]Today
The Jewish community today is estimated at 400-600 members [ [http://www.jewishcommunity.si/ENG-jss.asp Jewish Community of Slovenia - Demographic Overview] ] , although there are only 130 members of the Jewish Community of Slovenia. The community is mixed Ashkenazi and Sephardi descent. In
1999 , the first ever Chief Rabbi for Slovenia was appointed after 1941. Before religious service was provided with help from community of Zagreb. The present chief rabbi for Slovenia, Ariel Haddad, resides inTrieste and is a member of the Lubavitcher Hassidic school. [ [http://www.jewishcommunity.si/jss/SLO-rabin.asp The Jewish Community of Slovenia] ] The current president of the Jewish Community of Slovenia isAndrej Kožar Beck .Famous Jews from Slovenia
*
Mišo Alkalaj , Computer scientist, writer and journalist
*Katja Boh , Sociologist and politician
*Berta Bojetu , Writer and poet
*Israel Isserlin , Medieval rabbi fromMaribor
*Klemen Jeninčič Boeta , Anthropologist, philologist, translator
*Ana Jud , Journalist
*Pavle Kornhauser , Pediatrician
*Lev Kreft , Philosopher and politician
*Paul Parin , Psychoanalist
*Hannah Starman , Scholar
*Dušan Šarotar , Writer
*Mladen Aleksander Švarc , Philosopher, Journalist and political activistSee also
*
Jewish Community of Trieste Notes and references
* [http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/vjw/slovenia.html Jewish Virtual Library - Slovenia, Stephanie Persin]
* [http://www.isjm.org/jhr/IInos1-2/slovenia.htm Jewish Monuments in Slovenia]
* [http://www.centropa.org/reports.asp?rep=HR&ID=5960&TypeID=36658 Excerpts from Jews in Yugoslavia - Part I]
* [http://www.jewishcommunity.si/ENG-jss.asp Demographic Overview, Jewish Community of Slovenia]External links
* sl icon [http://www.jewishcommunity.si/ Jewish Community of Slovenia]
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