Posted By  richards on September 5, 2015    
				
				The    Origins of Sephardim and Ashkenazim            
      Two Sephardic Jews with an Ashkenazi in Jerusalem, 1895    
    The two main pillars on which all of Jewish scholarship rests    are Rashi and    the    Rambam (a/k/a Maimonides). They differed not only on issues    of philosophy but in overall style and approach. Part of the    reason for this is that Rashi was Ashkenazi and the Rambam was    Sephardi. Each was a product of a distinct tradition.  
    Generally speaking, the Sephardic commentators looked at the    broad picture of Judaism, the forest and not the trees. The    Ashkenazim, on the other hand, focused more on the trees than    the forest. They concentrated on words, nuances, and the    nitty-gritty of the Talmudic give-and-take. Therefore, the    Rambams writings are quintessentially intellectual and    philosophical, whereas Rashis greatness is his ability to take    you through the Torah and Talmud detail by detail, word by    word.  
    These differences did not grow in a vacuum. They developed from    specific historical forces. In terms of time, the Sephardic and    Ashkenazic communities developed simultaneously, but in terms    of experience, they lived in two completely different worlds.    In order for us to really get a handle on them, we have to look    at each one separately.  
    After the Jews were sent into exile in 70 CE, the main Jewish    community in the Diaspora was Babylonia. It was the only place    in the world where Christianity did not take over, and    therefore, the Jews thrived there. They built their own    yeshivas and lived autonomously. Thus, they were free to engage    in the centuries of scholarship that produced the Talmud.  
    In the 9th century, the Jewish    community in Babylonia began to decline, so many Jews went to    North Africa, which was populated by two Moslem tribes: the    Berbers and the Moors. The Berbers were fierce warriors, while    the Moors were artisans, mathematicians, and merchants  the    cutting edge of civilization. Together, they became a    tremendous force in the world.  
    The Jews saw they had opportunity with them, particularly with    the Moors, who were less religious and therefore, more    tolerant. In other Moslem countries where the Jews lived, they    had to accept the status of dhimmi, second-rate    citizen. Their synagogues had to be unobtrusive, and they had    to keep a low profile. All that changed with the Moors. Their    alliance with the Jews lasted almost 400 years, and by the time    the Moors were emigrating from North Africa into Spain, they    brought along the Jews not as dhimmis, but as equals.  
    Thus, the Sephardic Jews lived in an open and intellectually    advanced society. The study of philosophy abounded, so    Sephardic Jewish scholarship became philosophical. The Jews    also rose in public life, becoming government ministers.    Maimonides was court physician to the Sultan of Egypt.    Individual Jews sometimes suffered assaults from their Moslem    neighbors, but there were no Crusades, no pogroms per    se, no Holocaust.  
      Ashkenazi communities in Rashi's times    
    The Ashkenazic Jew, on the other hand, never had a good day. He    lived in a primitive world full of constant danger. Western    Europe had sunk into the Dark Ages; less than 1% of the    population was literate. Even the great king Charlemagne, the    first to invite the Jews to Europe, could not sign his own    name.  
    Charlemagne extended his invitation to the Jews with the offer    of land, equal rights, and imperial protection. A small group    of Jews left Babylonia and settled in the German Rhineland,    mostly in the cities of Worms, Speyers, and Mainz. But because    the Church converted the native pagans, Christianity became a    religion full of superstition and brutality. This, in part,    gave rise to the Crusades and the pogroms of the Black Death.    Its mind-boggling that Ashkenazic Jewry survived those early    centuries, but not only did it survive, it grew.  
    So, while the Sephardim viewed their Moslem neighbors as    equals, the Ashkenazim looked at their illiterate Christian    neighbors with disdain. They led an insular existence, and    their sole intellectual pursuits were Torah and Talmud. And    this is what accounts for the different traditions and    characteristics of Sephardim and Ashkenazim.  
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The Origins of Sephardim and Ashkenazim - Jewish History
				
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