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Finland, a country located on the Scandinavian peninsula in northern Europe, was part of the Swedish monarchy until the early 19th century and forbade Jews from living within its borders until the mid-19th century. Today, roughly 1,300 Jews live in Finland.
- Early History
- Arrival of Jews in Czar's Army
- Finnish Independence & Jewish Emancipation
- World War II & the Holocaust
- Modern Jewish Community
Early History
The territory which is now
Finland was for more than half a millennium--until 1809--part of
the Swedish Kingdom. Under Swedish law, Jews of that period were
allowed to settle only in three major
towns in the Kingdom, none of them being situated in the territory of
Finland. In 1809, as a consequence of
the defeat of Sweden in the Russian-Swedish war of 1808-9, part of the Napoleonic Wars, Sweden lost control of
Finland and an autonomous Grand Duchy of Finland was
established within the Russian Empire. The Swedish constitution and
legal system was, however, maintained in
the Grand Duchy, and the prohibition on Jewish settlement in Finland
thus continued.
Arrival of Jews in the
Czar's Army
Finnish
Jewish history effectively began in the first half of the 19th
century when Jewish soldiers (so-called
cantonists), who served in the Russian Army in Finland, were
permitted to stay in Finland by the
Russian military authorities following the soldiers' discharge.
Subsequently, the presence of Jews in
the country was governed by the decree of 1858, under which
discharged Russian soldiers and their
families, without regard to their religion, were allowed to stay temporarily in Finland. The occupations open to
discharged soldiers were defined in a decree of 1869
which was applied also to soldiers of Jewish origin.
In 1889 the Government
issued an administrative decree
expressly governing the presence of Jews in Finland. Under the decree
a number of Jews mentioned by name were
allowed to stay in the country only until further notice and
to settle only in certain towns assigned to them. They were given
temporary visit permits with a period of
validity not exceeding six months. The occupations open to the Jews,
being the same as under the decree of
1869, meant in practice that they were to continue supporting themselves
mainly as dealers in second-hand clothes. They were forbidden to
attend fairs or perform their activities
outside their town of residence. The slightest violation of any of
these limitations served as grounds for
expulsion from Finland. Children were allowed to stay in Finland
only as long as they lived with their parents or were not married.
Jews conscripted to the Russian Army
within Finland were not allowed to return to Finland after their
discharge.
Finnish Independence &
Jewish Emancipation
The struggle for equal
rights for Jews was taken up in the Finnish Diet in 1872. The press debate on Jewish emancipation that started
about that time continued during the 1870s and 1880s. There
was not, however, yet to be any change for the better in the status
of the Jews in Finland. By the end of
the 1880s there were about a thousand Jews resident in Finland. It
was not until 1917, when Finland became
independent, that the Jews received civil rights. On 22 December 1917, Parliament approved an Act concerning
"Mosaic Confessors," and on 12 January 1918 the Act
was promulgated. Under the Act, Jews could for the first time become
Finnish nationals, and Jews not
possessing Finnish nationality were henceforth in all respects to be
treated as foreigners in general.
Between the two world wars,
the Jewish population increased to about 2,000 as a result of immigration
mainly from Soviet Russia during the early period of the Revolution.
Many young Jews studied at university,
and others entered the liberal professions as physicians, lawyers,
and engineers. Still others turned to
industry and forestry, but the majority continued in the textile and clothing business. With a few isolated
exceptions, the Jews did not take part in internal party politics
or join any political movement.
World War II & the Holocaust
During the Finnish-Russian
War of 1939-40 (the Winter War), Finnish Jews fought alongside
their non-Jewish fellow countrymen. During the Finnish-Russian War of
1941-44, in which Finnish Jews also took
part, Finland and Nazi-Germany were co-belligerents. Despite strong
German pressure, the Finnish Government refused to take action
against Finnish nationals of Jewish
origin who thus continued to enjoy full civil rights throughout the
War. There are many interesting
anecdotes from this period, concerning, among others, the presence of
a Jewish prayer tent on the Russian
front virtually under the Nazi's noses and the food help given to
Russian-Jewish POWs by the Jewish
communities of Finland.
Modern Jewish Community
After
the end of the war, the integration of Jewish population of Finland
into Finnish society was completed. The War
of Independence for the State of Israel brought to the new State Finnish-Jewish volunteers as well as weapons
donations by the State of Finland. These Finnish volunteers
represented the highest per-capita participation of any Diaspora
Jewish Community. The following years
saw a fairly high rate of aliyah.
Today, Finnish Jewry numbers some 1,500, of whom
about 1,200 live in Helsinki, about 200 in Turku, and about 50 in
Tampere. There are organized Jewish
communities in Helsinki and Turku with their own synagogues, both
Ashkenazi-Orthodox, built respectively
in 1906 and 1912. The Jewish community of Tampere discontinued its activities in 1981. The communities are
members of the Central Council of Jewish Communities
in Finland, a consultative body dealing with matters of general
interest concerning Jews in Finland.
This body is in its turn a member of the European Council of Jewish
Community Services and of the World
Jewish Congress Connections with communities in the other Nordic (Scandinavian) countries are also maintained.
Today, most of the Finnish
Jews are corporate employees or self-employed professionals. Some
are civil servants. Among Jews who have occupied important positions,
Max Jakobson, former Finnish Ambassador
to the United Nations, should be
mentioned. In the music world, the late
Dr. Simon Parmet definitely won his place as a composer and
conductor. Worth mentioning also is the
late painter Sam Vanni, a member of the Finnish Academy and of the
European Academy of Science, Art and
Literature. Rafael Wardi, another scion of the community, is also a very well-known painter. In 1979, Ben Zyskowicz
became the first Finnish Jew to be elected member
of Parliament, where he continues to serve today.
Sources: Jewish
Community of Helsinki |