The Jews' Search for Zugehörigkeit in Austria up to 1938
Authors
Albert Lichtblau
Abstract
From the Enlightenment to the Nazi era, Jewish diaspora identity within the territory
of the Habsburg Monarchy and its successor states (the Austrian First Republic
and the Austrofascist system that existed between 1934 and 1938) vacillated
between Jews’ sense of integration, assimilation, and belonging to the larger society
in which they lived and a sense of exclusion from it. Four historical turning points
were most relevant to the lives and perceptions of the Jewish population of Austria:
the 1780s, bringing legislation infused with the spirit of the Enlightenment; 1848 as
the first expression of participation by Jews in the political life of society at large;
the attainment of equal rights in 1867; and, beginning in 1879, anti-Semitism,
nationalism, and rejection of the integration of the Jewish population. The Jews of
the Habsburg Monarchy were ultimately the only discernable ethnic group to symbolize
the dynastic principle of the multi-ethnic state, in that they did not live in a
geographically defined region in which they constituted an identifiable majority;
with the collapse of the Habsburg Monarchy in 1918, their role became that of a
conspicuous and vulnerable minority.