Part 24 (1/2)
”Go,” answered the Governor; ”but come again to-morrow or the day after.
I have much to talk over with you.”
As Mendel bowed himself out, Pomeroff muttered to himself:
”Strange man! He thinks more of allaying the anxiety of his wife than of currying favor with his ruler. He is right; such a people as he represents cannot be forced into baptism. They place their moral law and their ancient faith above temporal advantage.”
As Mendel had antic.i.p.ated, Recha was a prey to the liveliest fears at the protracted absence of her husband. It seemed incredible to her that the busy Governor should have kept him so long. With Mendel, however, smiles and contentment returned.
That evening the Rabbi called Hirsch Bensef and the elders of the congregation into his house and told them all about the Governor and his schemes. Great was the surprise of these worthy men and unanimous their approval of Mendel's course in the matter.
”I believe,” said the Rabbi, in conclusion, ”that we have gained a friend in the Governor, and I see rising above the horizon a new era of security and prosperity for Israel.”
”G.o.d grant it,” cried the listeners, fervently.
CHAPTER XX.
NEEDED REFORMS.
If Governor Pomeroff abandoned his original plan of Christianizing the Jews, he did not relinquish his friends.h.i.+p for Mendel. The Rabbi was frequently summoned to appear before him, professedly for the purpose of giving an account of this or that good work which he had undertaken, but in reality to entertain the Governor by his brilliant conversation.
So frequent had these visits become that the guards about the palace were no longer surprised at the strange companions.h.i.+p and the term ”Jew,” with which they were wont to designate Mendel, gave place to the more respectful appellation of ”The Rabbi.”
As Mendel became better acquainted with his powerful friend, his appreciation of his n.o.ble qualities steadily increased and they became warmly attached to each other.
”Would that all the Jews were like you,” Pomeroff occasionally remarked, to which Mendel would reply: ”How fortunate would be our lot if all Christians possessed your n.o.bility of character.”
Then came the glorious year 1861, the year in which Russia freed millions of serfs and removed the shackles of slavery from a debased people.
While much praise should be accorded to the liberality and humanity of Alexander, the main cause of the emanc.i.p.ation act was the unprofitableness of serf labor. Public opinion, too, had demanded the change. What ”Uncle Tom's Cabin” accomplished in this country Gogol's ”Dead Souls” and Tourgenieff's ”Recollections of a Sportsman” did for the Russian slaves. The disasters of the Crimean War were attributed to the corrupt condition of all cla.s.ses, caused, it was claimed, by this pernicious inst.i.tution of serfdom. By the edict of 1861, in the same year in which our own struggle for the emanc.i.p.ation of our Southern slaves began, the peasants were made free and were granted the right to purchase the lands occupied by them at the time. ”Enfranchis.e.m.e.nt was effected in Russia in a manner far more skilful than in our own country, where it was accomplished through the terrible agency of a civil war.
Yet the Russian people have been, perhaps, less satisfied with its results. Since then the serfs have been compelled to work harder than ever to pay for the land they had always cultivated and regarded as their own. The complete ignorance of the _moujiks_ has laid them open to greater vices than serfdom possessed and drunkenness has greatly increased since the emanc.i.p.ation.”[13]
At the time of which we speak, however, there was nought but rejoicing in Russia. Freedom had unfurled her banner, and the sanguine prophets foresaw in the near future a complete cessation of despotism and a const.i.tutional government such as the people had demanded since the beginning of Nicholas' reign in 1825. Amidst the general joy, the Governor of Kief found an opportunity for materially improving the condition of the Jews of his province.
Mendel would have been less than human had he not endeavored to turn this condition of affairs and Pomeroff's friends.h.i.+p to practical account. For himself he desired nothing. When the Governor, in order to have him constantly at his side, tendered him an honorable office in the palace, Mendel gently but firmly declined the proffered honor. All his energies were directed towards ameliorating the lot of his co-religionists.
He one day induced the Governor to stroll with him through the Jewish quarter, and with tact and eloquence called his attention to the crowded condition of the houses and streets, explaining how difficult it was to preserve health where the hygienic laws were of necessity utterly disregarded. He showed how the streets, at first ample for all requirements, had in the course of years become overcrowded; how hut had been built against hut and story erected upon story, until the lack of room deprived many a dwelling of light and air. He led the surprised Governor through the squalid lanes near the river and demonstrated how difficult it would be to master an epidemic when once it had taken root there, and how the welfare of the entire town of Kief depended upon the sanitary condition of each of its parts.
With the financial ac.u.men of his race, he appealed to the economic aspect of the case, demonstrated how many houses, large and small, were standing idle in the city proper, bringing neither rent to their owners nor taxes to the province, and depicted the benefits that would be gained by granting the Jews the privilege of occupying such dwellings.
The Governor, who had never before visited the haunts of poverty, felt a positive repugnance to the system, or rather lack of system, that could countenance such a condition of affairs. He hurried away from the uninviting neighborhood, and, having again reached a spot where the air was fit to breathe, he promised to exert his influence with the Czar to have the boundaries of the Jewish quarter extended.
n.o.bly did he keep his word. He journeyed to St. Petersburg and sought an audience with Alexander. What happened at the interview the Jews of Kief never discovered, but the result was extremely gratifying. At the end of a fortnight there came a ukase extending indefinitely the limits of the Jewish quarters of all large cities, granting permission to all Jewish merchants who had been established in some branch of trade for twenty-five years or over, and to all rabbis and teachers, to reside in the city proper, in such streets as they might select, and permitting merchants of ten years' standing to dwell on certain streets carefully specified in the proclamation. It also made it lawful for Jews and Christians to live in the same building, a privilege hitherto withheld.
Many were the Jews who availed themselves of their new privileges.
Bensef was among the first. His house, since the arrival of Mendel's parents, had been too small for comfort and the wealthy man desired a dwelling befitting his means. Haim Goldheim, the banker, found that there was not enough room in his house for the works of art it contained. He took a house in the fas.h.i.+onable Vladimir quarter, where, to the intense disgust of the aristocrats, he established himself in princely magnificence. A hundred families, at least, followed the example thus set, leaving the crowded streets, in order to breathe the purer air of the more select quarters of Kief. To their credit be it said, however, few went far from their old homes; the synagogue still formed the rallying centre of their community. About it revolved their daily thoughts and actions and the greatest recommendation a new home could have was that it was near the _schul_.
Upon Mendel, who had brought about this change, the greatest honors were showered. His congregation almost wors.h.i.+pped him. There were envious detractors, however, who contended that it did not behoove a Jew to become so intimate with a _goy_, and a Governor at that. They claimed that the Rabbi labored only to promote his own private ends; but, as these malcontents were among the first to seize the opportunity of bettering their condition, Mendel could afford to shrug his shoulders and smile at their insinuations.
The princ.i.p.al cla.s.s to benefit by the new order of things were the poor, who now found abundant room and greedily availed themselves of it. To them Mendel was a saviour in the practical sense of the word, and many a grateful woman whose hovel had been exchanged for a more commodious dwelling would kiss the Rabbi's hand as he pa.s.sed through the quarter on his errands of mercy.