XXVI. Increased Jewish disabilities.
1. The Pahlen Commission and
New Schemes of Oppression 336
2. Jewish Disabilities Outside
the Pale 342
3. Restrictions in Education
and in the Legal Profession 348
4. Discrimination in Military
Service 354
XXVII. Russian reaction and Jewish
emigration.
1. Aftermath of the Pogrom
Policy 358
2. The Conclusions of the Pahlen
Commission 362
3. The Triumph of Reaction
369
4. American and Palestinian
Emigration 373
XXVIII. Judaeophobia triumphant.
1. Intensified Reaction
378
2. Continued Harassing
382
3. The Guildhall Meeting in
London 388
4. The Protest of America
394
XXIX. The expulsion from Moscow.
1. Preparing the Blow
399
2. The Horrors of Expulsion
401
3. Effect of Protests
407
4. Pogrom Interludes
411
XXX. Baron Hirsch’s emigration
scheme and unrelieved suffering.
1. Negotiations with the Russian
Government 434
2. The Jewish Colonisation
Association and Collapse of the Argentinian
Scheme
419
3. Continued Humiliations and
Death of Alexander III. 423
CHAPTER XIII
THE MILITARY DESPOTISM OF NICHOLAS I.
1. Military service as A means of de-Judaization
The era of Nicholas I. was typically inaugurated by the bloody suppression of the Decembrists and their constitutional demands, [1] proving as it subsequently did one continuous triumph of military despotism over the liberal movements of the age. As for the emancipation of the Jews, it was entirely unthinkable in an empire which had become Europe’s bulwark against the inroads of revolutionary or even moderately liberal tendencies. The new despotic regime, overflowing with aggressive energy, was bound to create, after its likeness, a novel method of dealing with the Jewish problem. Such a method was contrived by the iron will of the Russian autocrat.
[Footnote 1: See Vol. I, p. 410, n. 1.]