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The Many Deaths of Jew S眉ss: The Notorious Trial and Execution of an Eighteenth-Century Court Jew, by Yair Mintzker

Book of the week: Bryan Cheyette straddles truth and fiction in observer accounts of anti-Semitic persecution

Published on
August 24, 2017
Last updated
August 30, 2017
The execution of Joseph Oppenheimer

Some trials define an epoch. The decade-long 鈥渁ffair鈥 generated by the trial of Alfred Dreyfus (1894-1906) exposed the deep fissures in post-revolutionary France; the 1953 trial of a prominent group of Jewish doctors in Moscow (accused of conspiring to assassinate the Soviet leadership) highlighted the excesses of Stalinism; and the imprisonment of Nelson Mandela in 1964, after the Rivonia Trial, came to characterise the inequities of apartheid South Africa 鈥 which ended when Mandela was released in 1990. Each of these trials exposed the limits of law when racism and anti-Semitism shaped the political sphere.

The deformation of law by prejudice has a particularly long history. In Germany, the trial and execution of Joseph S眉ss Oppenheimer in 1737 has the same symbolic resonance as Dreyfus, Rivonia and the 鈥渄octors鈥 plot鈥 has in France, South Africa and Russia. For Yair Mintzker, the trial of 鈥淛ew S眉ss鈥 is 鈥渢o the German collective imagination what Shakespeare鈥檚 Shylock is to the English-speaking world鈥. The trial of Shylock in The Merchant of Venice (1597) was inspired by the 1594 trial and execution of the Portuguese-Jewish physician to Queen Elizabeth, Rodrigo Lopez, who was accused of poisoning her. But it is Shylock and not Lopez who has entered English culture, just as it is 鈥淛ew S眉ss鈥 and not Oppenheimer (fabrication and not reality) who is part of German culture.

Oppenheimer was the principal financial adviser to Duke Carl Alexander of the small German state of W眉rttemberg. He was the master of the mint and was given extensive trading privileges as a result of this elevated position. Although he was one of hundreds of 鈥渃ourt Jews鈥 dotted throughout the Holy Roman Empire, whose cosmopolitan trading networks and upward mobility were valued and resented in equal measure, Oppenheimer seems to have been particularly wealthy and influential. His supposed power, however, proved illusory and, when the duke died suddenly in 1737, he was immediately arrested and gradually transformed into the fictive 鈥淛ew S眉ss鈥. He was accused of 鈥渄amnable maltreatments of prince and country鈥, vague charges that were later specified to include treason, embezzlement, adultery and debasement of the coinage. He was tortured for information to reinforce the indictment, his many properties were confiscated to pay for the inquisition, and he was executed 11 months later. This treatment was rightly described as 鈥渏udicial murder鈥 by Carl Alexander鈥檚 son, Duke Carl Eugen, a few years later. As many as 20,000 people, from far and wide, witnessed Oppenheimer鈥檚 execution on a bright red gallows. After the hanging, his deformed body was placed on permanent display in a bespoke iron gibbet.

鈥淛ew S眉ss鈥 is remembered today mainly because of the repugnant 1940 Nazi propaganda film, commissioned by Joseph Goebbels, purportedly about Oppenheimer鈥檚 life but in reality about the financial and sexual rapacity of German Jewry. The film, directed by Veit Harlan, was a response to a 1934 British film that highlighted the persecution of German Jewry as Hitler came to power. The British film, directed by Lothar Mendes, was in turn based on a 1925 best-selling novel by Lion Feuchtwanger, translated into English in 1926. All of the films and novels were called Jew S眉ss. Oppenheimer鈥檚 meteoric rise and stupendous fall, in other words, has become an abiding allegory for the fate of German Jewry.

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Rather than the post-history of Oppenheimer, Mintzker shows that his 鈥渕any deaths鈥 cannot be separated from the diverse ways in which he was imagined by his contemporaries. To this end, he focuses on four figures: Philipp Friedrich J盲ger, the judge-inquisitor; Christoph David Bernard, a converted Jew who saw Oppenheimer on the eve of his execution; Mordecai Schloss, a fellow 鈥渃ourt Jew鈥 in W眉rttemberg; and David Fassmann, a popular writer of courtly intrigues. All of these figures wrote first-hand accounts of Oppenheimer or produced court documents (interviews, translations, contributions to the inquisitorial process). These documents are interpreted with consummate skill and weighed for their veracity, since 鈥渘ot all historical sources are created equal鈥. Despite an archive made up of thousands of documents (along with dozens of memoirs and interpretive accounts), there is no 鈥渁ctual鈥 person whom the historian can retrieve. Oppenheimer, in Mintzker鈥檚 words, was 鈥渢wice removed from the truth鈥; he could not speak for himself during his trial, and was relatively anonymous before his arrest. Instead, the documents produced by 鈥渢he judge鈥, 鈥渢he convert鈥, 鈥渢he Jew鈥 and 鈥渢he writer鈥 are contextualised and humanised to show the complex ways in which Oppenheimer was represented according to widely differing social, religious and political ends.

J盲ger wrote the narrative of Oppenheimer鈥檚 alleged crimes that led to the death sentence, and he undoubtedly drew his 鈥渇acts鈥 from 鈥渁 predetermined conclusion鈥 (not least his prurient interest in Oppenheimer鈥檚 alleged sexual conquests). But the competing social and political spheres in which J盲ger and Oppenheimer operated, rather than any innate prejudice, determined why J盲ger pursued his quarry with such fanatical energy. J盲ger was a prominent member of the mainly Lutheran Ehrbarkeit (鈥渢he honourables鈥), a large network of the haute bourgeoisie who populated W眉rttemberg with bureaucrats and professionals and were independent of the duke鈥檚 authority. It was in this context that Oppenheimer became the antithesis of the Ehrbarkeit, a 鈥渟hadowy agent, the real cause of J盲ger鈥檚 own stalling career鈥. W眉rttemberg was fragmented, a Lutheran duchy ruled by a Catholic duke. This explains why Oppenheimer, in one incarnation, was deemed to be 鈥渁 creature of the unholy matrimony between Jews and papish princes鈥. Such is the anti-Catholic dimension to Oppenheimer鈥檚 persecution.

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J盲ger鈥檚 legal testimony is fittingly described as a mixture of 鈥渞umours, gossip, outright lies and (at best) half-truths鈥. Bernard and Schloss, on the other hand, viewed Oppenheimer through the prism of the biblical stories of, respectively, King David and Joseph. They were in competition with Oppenheimer, Bernard as a relatively impoverished Jewish convert, and Schloss as a fellow 鈥渃ourt Jew鈥, which meant that both had particular axes to grind in their desire to harm Oppenheimer. Only Fassmann, who imagined a dead Oppenheimer in the underworld, wrote a series of three unalloyed fictions, which changed according to the mood of the times. What is clear from Mintzker鈥檚 inspired readings is that Oppenheimer became a cipher for much larger issues that had little to do with his actions. But it remains a mystery why 鈥淛ew S眉ss鈥, and no other 鈥渃ourt Jew鈥 in the Holy Roman Empire, was singled out for persecution.

The gulf between the actual Oppenheimer and the fictive 鈥淛ew S眉ss鈥 is unbridgeable, which turns the subject of the book into a 鈥渟tructuring absence鈥 or Jewish 鈥淕odot鈥. Mintzker鈥檚 response to this impasse is to write a 鈥減olyphonic history鈥 that places four radically varied narratives in a fruitful dialogue. The main fault of this brilliant account is that the author is all too aware how clever it is. This is, alas, reinforced at the end of each chapter with 鈥渃onversations鈥 between 鈥淢intzker鈥 and a critical reader. Is it really necessary to hear how 鈥渋ntriguing鈥 the argument is, that a chapter 鈥渨orked quite well鈥 or that the book as a whole has a 鈥済ospel structure鈥? Yet it can鈥檛 be denied that Mintzker has a great deal to be pleased about and he is right to hope that his 鈥減olyphonic鈥 challenge to mainstream historiography will be successful.

Bryan Cheyette is professor of modern literature and culture at the University of Reading. He is currently working on a short book about The Ghetto for Oxford University Press.


The Many Deaths of Jew S眉ss: The Notorious Trial and Execution of an Eighteenth-Century Court Jew
By Yair Mintzker
Princeton University Press, 344pp, 拢27.95
ISBN 9780691172323
Published 7 June 2017


Yair Mintzker

The author

Yair Mintzker, associate professor of history at Princeton University, was born in Jerusalem, which he describes as 鈥渁 tough, complicated and often violent city, which is also fascinating and indeed beautiful and profound. Even now, many years after leaving the city of my birth, my early experiences there continue to shape the way that I think about the world.鈥

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He studied at Tel Aviv University and LMU Munich, although he found the experience 鈥渜uite chaotic. I took classes in philosophy, literature, sociology, physics and even maths before difficult personal circumstances forced me to interrupt my studies. When I resumed my education, I homed in on history 鈥 a discipline that I thought would be flexible enough to satisfy my many conflicting interests. It was a decision that I never regretted.鈥

Already the author of The Defortification of the German City, 1689-1866 (2012), Mintzker believes that it is 鈥渋n [his] intellectual DNA to look at cultural phenomena from different angles and to search for more than one answer to the question 鈥榃hy?鈥 Coming across the case of 鈥楯ew S眉ss鈥 was a godsend in that respect. I was drawn to the many uncertainties and contradictions in the case; that any attempt to reduce it to one plot line was bound to misrepresent it. Inspired among others by Japanese film director Akira Kurosawa鈥檚 Rashomon and Orhan Pamuk鈥檚 masterful novel My Name is Red, I decided to write four parallel accounts of the trial.鈥

Yet Mintzker also sees the story as 鈥渁 powerful parable about the modern world. This is why 鈥楯ew S眉ss鈥 continues to star in so many novels, films and plays, but also history books such as mine. Many contemporary politicians 鈥 including US president Donald Trump鈥檚 son-in-law Jared Kushner 鈥 are often compared with 鈥楯ew S眉ss鈥. This is a sign that the trial, although it was concluded almost three centuries ago, is not quite over yet.鈥

Matthew Reisz

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline:聽When prejudice deforms the law

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Reader's comments (1)

I saw the 1940 Nazi propaganda film Jud S眉ss several years ago. The really weird thing about it to me, was that while it certainly appeared that it is trying to be anti-Semitic, S眉ss was, in fact, the most sympathetic character in the film. The early part of the film shows him as a victim of pervasive anti-Semitism, presumably so that the audience will see how he became so purportedly despicable. The thing is, while many Germans in the later 30s and early 40s may not, in general, have found anything offensive in that anti-Semitism, I think most modern viewers would. It was pretty terrible. I found myself sympathizing with S眉ss. I'm sure that wasn't Veit Harlan's intention, but my guess is that I am not alone in that reaction. I think modern audiences would, in general, have a very different reaction to the film than did audiences in Hitler's Germany. I hope they would, anyway.

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