Moses Mendelssohn symbolizes the exodus of Jews …

Years: 1780 - 1791

Moses Mendelssohn symbolizes the exodus of Jews from ghetto life with his German translation of the Torah (first five books of the Bible), even though the book is printed in Hebrew letters.

The revival of Hebrew writing is also given impetus with the publication in 1784 of the first modern Hebrew periodical, a significant attempt to recover a sense of “classical” Jewish civilization.

The Haskala (”Enlightenment”) movement of the late eighteenth century urges Jews to assimilate into Western secular culture, in contrast to the earlier back-to-Israel messianic movements.

The Haskala owes much of its inspiration and values to the European Enlightenment, but its roots, character, and development are distinctly Jewish.

Jews live mostly in pales of settlement and ghettos when the movement begins, following a form of life that has evolved after centuries of segregation and discriminatory legislation.

A relatively few “mobile Jews” (mainly merchants) and “court Jews” (agents of various rulers and princes), whose contact with European civilization has heightened their desire to become a part of society as a whole, initiate a move toward change.

One of the early centers of the movement is Berlin, ...

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