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The Butcher's Tale

Page 28

by Helmut Walser Smith


  Mystery of Blood among the Jews of All Times (Desportes), 118

  Munich, 97, 98, 105, 108

  Nagorra, Karl, 147 48, 153

  National Liberal Party, 248n

  Nazis, 162, 165 66, 167, 215

  Neighbors (Gross), 166

  Neuenhoven, 113 14

  Neumann (county official), 81

  Neuss, 151, 176

  Neustettin, 35, 120, 168

  Nietzsche, Friedrich, 21

  Niewolinski, Klara, 148

  Nirenberg, David, 172

  No Blood (Efes Damim) (Levinsohn), 116

  Nossek, David, 183, 201

  Nuremberg, 99, 101, 103, 175

  Nuremberg Chronicle, 102 3

  Oberwesel, 97 98

  Orcuta, 110

  Orda, Paul, 79

  Osiander, Andreas, 104

  Osiander, Arnold, 243n

  Ostdeutsche Zeitung, 182

  Oxner, Andreas, 107, 109, 233n

  Paetzold, Friedrich, 181

  Pans, 98

  Pascal, Mrs. (shopkeeper), 125

  Passau, 103

  passion plays, 172

  Pastor Bonus, 235n

  Patterson, Orlando, 179

  Pawlikowski, Constantin Ritter Cholewa von, 117 18

  pederasty, 189 90

  Peterborough Abbey, 92

  Peter Lombard, 93

  Petras, Paul, 181, 182

  Pforzheim, 97, 98

  Pikarski, August, 193, 194

  plague, bubonic, 101

  Planck, Max, 55

  Plath, Otto, 64, 189 90, 198, 199, 201, 212

  Plath, Rudolf, 189

  Plato, 96

  Pobedonostsev, Konstantin, 119

  Poetry and Truth (Dichtung und Wahrheit) (Goethe), 106

  Poland, 101, 109 11

  anti-Semitic violence in, 119, 105 66

  Konitz and, 214 17

  Poles:

  anti-Semitism and, 168

  in Germany, 38, 58, 59, 168, 248n

  after World War I, 214

  Polish Party, 182 83, 243n, 248n

  Polna, 39, 40 41, 56, 188

  Pomerellen, 57 58, 59

  Posen (Poznan), 110, 111

  Posidonius, 230n

  Posing, 104

  Poznan (Posen), 110, 111

  Praetorius, Ignaz, 181, 184, 203

  Prague, 97, 98, 105

  Prechlau, 53

  Preussisch-Friedland, 33

  Preußische Jahrbücher, 37

  printing press, 102

  Prinz, “Dumb” Alex, 82–33, 132, 152, 183

  Prinz, Rosalie, 83

  “Prioress’s Tale, The” (Chaucer), 89

  Protestantism, 104, 106, 115

  Prussian army, 18

  anti-Semitic riots and, 48, 49 50, 52

  Przeworski (barmaid), 152

  psychiatric patients, 215

  Pulkau, 98, 108, 172 73, 175

  Puppe, Dr., 188

  Pythagoras, 96

  Rader, Matthew, 109

  Radtke, Margarete, 141 42, 156

  Rahmel, Willi, 144

  Ravensburg, 100, 132

  Reading for the Plot (Brooks). 87

  Reformation, Catholic, 109

  Reformation, Protestant, 103 4, 112

  Regensburg, 103, 105, 132

  Reichart of Mospach, 132

  Reimann, Mrs. (widow), 121 22

  Reutlingen, 100

  Reymann (pastor), 62

  Rheinbaben, Baron von, 52, 201

  Rhode, Auguste, 170, 196, 97

  Rhode, Heinrich, 170, 196, 199

  Rinn, 107, 109, 233n

  Rintfleisch, 99, 118, 120, 172

  ritual-murder charges, 18, 39, 40, 45, 84, 90, 98, 161, 176

  books about, 106, 113, 114 18

  Catholic hierarchy’s denunciation of, 111, 117

  Catholic hierarchy’s sanction of, 107, 113

  Christian maids in, 124 25, 140 42

  in failure of investigation, 201

  history of, 91 133, 230n

  Holy Week violence and, 172

  in Hungary, 120 21

  infanticide, child abuse and, 126

  Kracht’s interest in, 200

  officials’ denunciation of, 114

  plays about, 109

  Reformation in decline of, 103 5

  sexual murder and, 126 27

  Roberts, Lord, 57

  Roehl, Friednch, 47

  Roehl, Martha Caspari, 47

  Roelen, Selma, 128

  Rohling, August, 110, 117 18

  Roman Catholic Church, 169

  Reformation and, 103 4, 109

  ritual-murder charges and, 93, 94, 103, 107 8, 111, 112, 113, 115, 117

  transubstantiation and, 96

  Romania, 125

  ritual-murder charges in, 123

  Rosenthal, Josef, 86, 141 42

  Ross, Anna, 65, 137

  accusations of, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72 74, 85, 158

  arrest of, 50, 51

  background of, 71, 140

  1904 theory and, 211, 212, 213

  perjury trial of, 75 77, 170

  Rothenburg ob der Tauber, 99

  Rottingen, 98, 172

  Rummelsburg, 35, 169, 247n

  Russ, Friedrich, 139, 146 47

  Russia, 116

  anti-Semitic violence in, 119 20

  pogroms in, 38

  ritual-murder charges in, 123

  Russians, in Germany, 38

  Rutz, Mathilde, 85, 133

  St. Pölten, 98

  Sandomierz, 110 11, 115

  Sawischewski, Marie, 193 96

  Schama, Simon, 187, 206

  Schiller, Auguste, 82

  Schivelbein, 169

  Schlawe, 53

  Schleiminger, Franz., 59

  Schlichter, Gustav, 148

  Schmidt, Marie, 86

  Schnick, Anna, 149

  Schoppinitz, 124

  Schuclt, Baron von, 201

  Schudt, Johann Jacob, 106

  Schultz, Regina, 149

  Schweigger, Chief Prosecutor, 205, 214

  science, 20

  Senske, Elisabeth, 211

  Serbia, 123

  Settegast, Max, 26, 36, 151, 52, 198

  Simanowski, Rosine, 85 8b, 133, 142, 147, 156

  Simon of Trent, 106, 107 8

  Skurz, 121 23, 132, 198 99

  “social death,” 179

  Social Democrats, 20

  Soldin (merchant), 183

  Solymosi, Esther, 120

  Source Contributions to the Position of the Popes on the Jews, The (Stern), 116

  South Africa, 57

  Soviet Union, 165 66

  Spain, anti-Semitism in, 100

  Speisinger, Richard, 145, 146, 156

  Speyer, 100, 103

  Spiegalski, Klara, 27 28

  Spohr, Hedwig, 27

  Staatsbürgerzeitung (Berlin), 29, 47, 49, 50, 56–57, 60, 74,83, 151, 226n

  Hoffmann’s story published in, 60 68

  Stanford prison experiment, 177 78

  Steffan, Arthur, 193, 194, 195

  Stegers, 33, 179

  Steinert, Dr., 129

  Steinke, August, 81, 151

  Stern, Moritz, 116

  Stöckebrant, Hermann, 183

  Stolp, 169, 180, 247n

  Stolpmann (barmaid), 152

  Strack, Hermann, 116 17

  Strasbourg, 100

  Streubing, Klara, 151

  Streusz, Anna, 27

  suffrage, 20

  Swabia, 115

  Syria, 230n

  Szenicz, 125

  Szydlow, 110

  Szymanski (teacher), 190

  Tägliche Rundschau, 30, 212

  Talmudic Jew, The (Rohling), 117

  Talmud in Theory and Practice (Pawlikowski), 117 18

  Tempest, The (Shakespeare), 20

  Thiel, Jürgen, 36, 73

  Thirty Years’ War, 112

  Thomas a Becket, 92 93

  Thomas Aqu
inas, Saint, 96

  Thomas of Monmouth, 91–92, 229n

  Tirol, 109

  Tisza-Eszlar, 115, 120 21

  Toller, Ernst, 18

  transubstantiation, 95 96, 103

  Treitschke, Heinrich von, 37 38

  Trent, 102, 105, 110, 115

  Treue, Wolfgang, 133

  Tuchel, 173

  Tuchler, Selma, 145, 228n

  Turner, Victor, 174, 180

  Tuszik, Elisabeth, 148

  Ueberlingen, 108, 175

  Ukraine, 173

  anti-Semitic violence in, 119

  Ursula (child), 108

  Valréas, 97

  Vandsburg, 35

  Victoria, queen of England, 187

  Vital, David, 119

  Vogel, Max, 137, 170

  Volk, Das, 129

  Volkov, Shulamit, 22

  Wackerbarth-Linderode, “Krautjunker” Baron von, 131

  Waclawek, Philomena, 124

  Warburg, Aby, 21

  Weber, Max, 57, 115

  Weckbecker, Arno, 215

  Wehn, Inspector, 45, 192, 197

  Weichel (teacher), 189, 197 99

  Weikersheim, 98

  Weimar Republic, 21, 214

  Weissenburg, 97, 98

  Weissensee, 97, 98, 105, 108

  Welke (journeyman), 62

  Werner (butcher), 126

  Werner, “good,” 97 98, 112, 113, 234n–35n

  Wesendrupp, Heinrich, 127, 128–29, 130

  Westfälische Reform, 130

  Westpreussisches Volksblatt, 169

  Wielle, 168

  Wienecke, Max, 146

  Wiesenthal, Simon, 233n

  Wilhelm II, kaiser of Germany, 19, 52, 187

  Moritz Lewy pardoned by, 210

  William, Saint, 91 92

  Willich, 114

  Winkelmann, Johann, 80–81, 83

  Winter (Ernst’s mother), 27

  Ernst Winter’s funeral and, 41

  Winter, Ernst. 24, 137

  alleged “pederasty” involving, 180 90

  Anna Hoffmann’s alleged relationship with, 45 46, 49, 62, 145. 202 3, 205

  archives on murder of, 23

  autopsies on, 28, 64, 188

  background of, 26 27

  condition of body of, 26, 28, 63 64

  discovery of body of, 25 26, 30

  discovery of clothes of, 187–88

  funeral of, 41 42. 57

  Jewish girls and, 80, 81, 83, 145, 228n

  last day of. 27 28

  monument to, 209

  Moritz Lewy’s alleged association with, 139 40, 143, 144 49, 156, 201

  prostitutes visited by, 190 96

  semen stains and, 188, 202

  suffocation of, 188, 202

  working-class associations of, 190, 193

  Winter, Ernst, investigation of murder of, 28, 31, 36–37, 42–48, 187 206

  anti-Semitic parties and, 37, 39

  anti-Semitic stories and, 77 86

  handkerchief in. 70, 196 97

  Masloff’s accusations in, 68 75

  motives of testimony in, 136

  number of depositions in, 135

  reward in, 37, 60

  social composition of accusers m, 130 40

  spectral evidence in, 36, 135

  see also accusations, anti-Semitic

  Winter, Johannes, 25

  description of, 27

  Ernst Winter’s body discovered by, 25, 26

  Ernst Winter’s funeral and, 41

  Wiwjorra, Mrs. (cabinet maker’s wife), 66, 159, 160

  Wolff. Inspector, 130

  women’s suffrage, 20

  World War I, 21.57, 214

  World War II, 165 66. 215

  Wulff, Chief Prosecutor, 202

  Würzburg, 98, 99, 103. 113

  Würsburger Generalanzeiger, 209

  Wycliffe, John, 103

  Xanten. 115, 127 33, 151, 157, 188

  Zander. Moritz, 141

  Zander. Selig, 152

  Zedlitz und Neukirch, Baron Gottlieb von, 29, 48, 49–50, 51, 52, 169, 176, 181, 184

  Zeppelin, Graf, 55

  Ziebarth. Wilhelm, 46, 62, 203

  Zimbardo, Philip, 177 78

  Zimmer, Georg, 73, 156

  Zindler, Robert, 191 92

  Zola, Emile, 30

  Zuchowski, Abbé Stephan, 110

  More Praise for

  THE BUTCHER’S TALE

  “Smith tells the story of a ritual murder accusation made in 1900 against the Jews of the town of Konitz, now part of Poland. A vicious anti-Semitic movement quickly took form, one based on all the old terrors and prejudices. But, as Mr. Smith tells it, the story is a morally complex one.”

  —Richard Bernstein, New York Times

  “All things considered, Konitz in 1900 would have seemed to most an unlikely place for an outbreak of virulent anti-Semitism, yet that is exactly what it underwent. Smith, in his careful recapitulation of the murder and its aftermath, sees it as an instance of the ‘process’ of anti-Semitism…. Smith argues, and most persuasively, that what happened in Konitz was that the bonds of community were broken…. Anti-Semitism had burrowed itself into the fabric of the town, to fester there for years to come and then to explode in the late 1930s, as it did throughout Germany, in an orgy of violence unlike any the modern world had known. The summer of 1900, it turns out, was a tiny prologue, unrecognizable as such at the time, to unspeakable things to come.”

  —Jonathan Yardley, Washington Post

  “The Butcher’s Tale is an illuminating microhistory of a chilling event: a gruesome murder in a small German town that triggered a resurgence of the ancient blood libel, the anti-Semitic charge that Jews use the blood of young Christians to make the Passover matzo. The charge has long been studied as a powerful way to understand murderous fantasies about Jews in medieval and early modern Europe. But the event that Helmut Walser Smith brings to light occurred in 1900 and serves as a key to unlocking a complex process whose full meaning was disclosed in the death camps.”

  —Stephen Greenblatt, Cogan University Professor of the Humanities, Harvard University

  “Uncommonly interesting and exceedingly well researched. But there are greater reverberations…. The tragedy of our era is that this work has a timeless quality.”

  Michael Berenbaum (former director of the U.S. Holocaust Museum), The Jewish Journal

  “Taking as his subject the sensational murder of a high school student in the eastern reaches of the German Empire in March, 1900, Smith expertly deploys the tools of the historian to unravel a mystery. A meticulous and riveting account of the crime itself, … Smith’s tour de force shows how all too easily neighbors became strangers, lives were ruined, and justice retreated before prejudice.”

  R. S. Levy, Choice

  “Although classified by the publisher as history/Judaica, this powerful volume will also appeal to true-crime readers and anyone interested in the dynamics that can turn a peaceful community into a place of hatred and violence.”

  Publishers Weekly

  “A riveting account of how a murder in a small German town snowballed into anti-Semitic accusations and violence. The ancient accusation of blood libel and ritual murder spread from whispers in the taverns to riots on the streets and, in 1900, the thriving and seemingly secure Jewish community of Konitz fell victim to the rage of its Christian neighbors.”

  Joanne Philipps, The Jewish Times

  “An image with depth of field…. Helmut Walser Smith makes the virulence of anti-Semitism visible; and he shows the latent threat that emanated from it.”

  —Volker Ullrich, Die Zeit

  “An important, well-researched, and above all an easy to read contribution to a long forgotten piece of German history.”

  —Jüdische Allgemeine Zeitung

  “At first the text reads like a suspenseful detective novel. But then the micro-history, conceived as an interdisciplinary investigation, impresses with its appropriation
of cultural insights from anthropology, psychology and linguistics…. A profound study of anti-Semitism in Wilhelmine Germany.”

  —Deutschland Radio

  “Takes distance from easy explanations à la Goldhagen…. A pithy but multifaceted contribution to the cultural history of anti-Semitism.”

  —Neue Zürcher Zeitung

  “A brilliant thesis…. The book is … convincingly constructed, stimulating to read, and marvelously written.”

  —Nils Freytag, Sehepunkte

  Copyright © 2002 by Helmut Walser Smith

  All rights reserved

  First published as a Norton paperback 2003

  For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to Permissions, W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., 500 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10110

  Book design by Mary A. Wirth

  Production manager: Julia Druskin

  The Library of Congress has cataloged the printed edition as follows:

  Smith, Helmut Walser, 1962

  The butcher’s tale : murder and anti-semitism in a German town / Helmut Walser Smith.

  p. ; cm.

  Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index.

  1. Antisemitism Germany Konitz. 2. Blood accusation Germany Konitz. 3. Trials (Murder) Germany Konitz. 4. Konitz (Germany) Ethnic relations.

  I. Title.

  DS146.G4 S57 2002

  305.892’404382 dc21 2002022883

  ISBN 978-0-393-24552-3 (e-book)

  W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., 500 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10110

  www.wwnorton.com

  W. W. Norton & Company Ltd., 15 Carlisle Street, London W1D 3BS

 

 

 


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