The Jewish Community of Antwerp, Belgium
Antwerp (Antwerpen, in Dutch, Anvers, in French), the second
largest city of Belgium and the capital of the Dutch-speaking region of Flanders
and a major port and industrial center, is the home of the second largest Jewish
community of Belgium and one of the most observant Jewish communities in Western
Europe.
Middle Ages
The first Jewish presence in Antwerp is attested to by the will
of Henry III, the Duke of Brabant and Margrave of Antwerp who in 1261 expressed
his wish that the Jews of Brabant should be expelled and destroyed because they
are all "usurers". His widow, the Duchess Adelheid, took a more practical view
and asked for the advise of the greatest Catholic theologian of the time, Thomas
of Aquinas that formulated his response in a tractate later known as De regimine Judaeorum ("On the status of the Jews").
According to Thomas Aquinas's reply to Adelheid, the Jews should be encouraged
to make a living from other occupations than money lending. A document of 1286
mentions the name of a Jew living in Antwerp: Daniel Judeus (Daniel the Jew), a
wine merchant, moneylender and magistrate at the Jewish law court who came to
Antwerp from Cologne (Koeln), Germany. In 1292, the Duke of Brabant John I
granted a charter to the city of Antwerp in which the Jews are listed among the
inhabitants of the city. It is possible that some of the Jews who were expelled
from England in 1290 and from France in 1306 settled in Antwerp that by then was
on a process of becoming an important commercial city. Apparently the small
Jewish community of Antwerp continued to exist during the first half of the 14th
century, but the anti-Jewish persecutions that followed the Black Death epidemic
of 1348, when Jews were accused of poisoning the wells, put an end to the Jewish
settlement in Antwerp. Jewish sources, especially the Memorbuch of Mainz and
also that of Deutz record among the dead during the anti-Jewish riots and
persecutions in Brabant also the victims of Antdorf, the German name of Antwerp.
Although there is no direct evidence about the fate of the Jews in Antwerp, it
is safe to assume that they could not have continued to reside in that city
after John III, the Duke of Brabant, conducted a massive anti-Jewish campaign in
Brussels and Louvain during the mid 14th century.
 |
|
“Flower Day” of the Jewish National Fund
Antwerp, 1914
Beth Hatefutsoth - Visual Documentation Center
|
|
 |
|
Rabbi Klingberg talking to members of his congregation in front of his house
Antwerp, 1981
Photo: Helene Kuropatwa, Belgium
Beth Hatefutsoth - Visual Documentation Center
Courtesy of Helene Kuropatwa, Belgium
|
|
Spanish Rule (1506-1713)
A new group of Jewish immigrants started to settle in Antwerp
in the early 16th century when the city became a relatively safe heaven for
crypto-Jews fleeing the persecutions and the expulsions in the Iberian
Peninsula. The growing commercial importance of the city, bolstered by the
international maritime trade to the newly discovered American continent and the
declining traditional economies of other cities in Flanders, could only attract
Jewish merchants from Spain and Portugal as well as from other parts of Europe,
who arrived in Antwerp later on in the 16th century. An edict of 1526 by the
Emperor Charles V guaranteed a safe-conduct for the Portuguese New Christians in
Antwerp. Although under Spanish rule, the Inquisition was not allowed to
activate in Antwerp, a situation that facilitated the settlement of crypto-Jews
from Spain and Portugal. The commercial connections that the Portuguese
crypto-Jews maintained with their former country enabled them to have a share in
the lucrative Portuguese monopoly of the spice trade with India and the Far
East. The general attitude of the Spanish authorities did not permit overt
practice of Judaism and indeed from time to time several crypto-Jews were tried
under the accusation of being pseudo-Christians and conducting illegal trade
relations with the Ottoman Empire. The most famous trial (1532) was conducted
against Diogo Mendes (before 1492-c.1542) followed by a posthumous process
against him in which the Spanish authorities aimed to prove that he was not a
sincere Catholic and consequently to confiscate his estate. Antwerp was also the
home of Beatrice de Luna later known as Dona Gracia Mendes Nasi (1510-1569), a
sister-in-law of Diogo Mendes and wife of Francisco Mendes (d.1536). She lived
in Antwerp from 1536 until 1549 when she fled to Venice, Italy, and then to the
Ottoman Empire. Her nephew, João Miguez, better known as Don Joseph Nasi
(1524-1579), was also a resident of Antwerp. Having been arrested in 1549, he
too left for the Ottoman Empire where he eventually became Duke of Naxos. Other
famous crypto-Jews who resided in Antwerp during the 16th century include the
physician Amatus Lusitanus (d.1568) who lived in Antwerp from 1533 to 1540, when
he was invited to the French court. The Spanish policy took a turn for the worse
in 1543 and again in 1550, when probably all crypto-Jews were forced to leave
Antwerp, despite strong opposition from the local municipality. It appears,
however, that members of the "Portuguese nation" - a generic name that included
New Christians from the Iberian Peninsula, several of them undoubtedly
crypto-Jews, continued to reside in Antwerp in the second half of the 16th
century. They were encouraged by the Calvinist Reform that was spreading in the
Low Countries and became very popular in Antwerp too. But towards the end of the
16th century the conflict that developed between Spain and the people of the Low
Countries turned into open war. Antwerp was recaptured by the Spanish troops in
1585 who then introduced an intolerant policy favoring the Roman Catholic Church
with the effect that the Protestant inhabitants of Antwerp and probably most of
the crypto-Jews fled to the Northern Provinces and particularly to Amsterdam.
While in 1571 there were 85 families belonging to the Portuguese nation in
Antwerp, their number declined to 47 in 1591 while a list from 1619 mentions 46
names and another one from 1666 gives 65 individuals. It is possible that some
clandestine synagogues functioned occasionally in Antwerp. A report of the
Inquisition of Lisbon contains a list of the worshipers of the synagogue in
Antwerp in 1585. In 1565 Christopher Plantin (1514-1589) fled the Catholic
censure in his native France and opened a printing-press in Antwerp that during
following twenty years produced a number of important Hebrew books. Even though
for the most part rejected by the Jewish rabbinical authorities of the time,
Plantin's Hebrew editions of the Bible helped to geminate and encourage a new
interest in the biblical and Jewish studies among the non-Jewish intellectuals
of the early modern times.
The Peace of Westphalia (1648) made possible for some
crypto-Jews to return to Antwerp. However, they could not enjoy freedom of
religion, and continued to be targeted by the Inquisition. Protocols of trials
by the Inquisition in the Canary Islands during the 1660's contain testimonies,
sometimes taken under torture, according to which there were crypto-Jews in
Antwerp who maintained various Jewish costumes and relationships with Jews in
other countries, especially with the Jews of Amsterdam. In the early 1670's the
bishop of Antwerp Ambrosio Capello complained to the Archduke of the presence in
Antwerp of insincere Catholics whom he suspected of being crypto-Jews. There
were rumors about Jewish prayer books having been printed in secret in Antwerp
as well as the existence of clandestine synagogues. In 1682 the municipal
authorities discovered a secret synagogue that was frequented by members of the
Portuguese nation. When another secret synagogue was discovered in 1694, Elijah
Andrada, one of the local crypto-Jews, took the matter to the courts demanding
the restitution of the property confiscated in the name of the King of Spain.
Austrian
Rule (1713-1794)
The Treaty of Utrecht (1713) transferred Antwerp to the
Austrians. The new authorities were more interested in collecting their taxes
than in enforcing anti-Jewish policies. Although in principle there were limits
on the number of Jews permitted to enter the country, after 1718 they were
required to pay the Toleranzgeld, a special tax for the right to reside in
Antwerp. The first Jewish inhabitant that was inscribed in the Poorterboek (the
municipal register of Antwerp) was Abraham Arons, a shopkeeper, in 1715. Other
Jews originally from Amsterdam or Germany are mentioned in the municipal records
of the early 18th century. During the reign of Maria Theresia (1740-1780) the
situation of the Jews was again unstable. Jews are mentioned in many cities in
the region, including Antwerp, from 1745 to 1748, when the Low Countries were
temporarily occupied by the French. The economic decline of Antwerp resulting
from the closing the River Scheldt, forced the city magistrates to endorse a
consistent policy of encouragement of the commerce, including tolerating the
settlement of Jews in the city. Sometimes this attitude brought them in conflict
with the Austrians. During the second half of the 18th century there were a
number of attempts by Jews to obtain citizenship, but they were strongly opposed
by the city council. As early as 1769, Abraham Benjamin, a Jew of London who
conducted an important trade with the Flanders applied for citizenship of
Antwerp, having moved to the city. Fearing the concurrence, the city authorities
accorded him the citizenship with the condition that this decision should not
serve as a precedent for other Jews. New requests for citizenship followed from
Jews who came to Antwerp from Amsterdam and from Germany, but not all were
answered positively. The general situation of the Jews improved during the reign
of Joseph II (1780-1790), particularly after the publication of the
Toleranzpatent of 1787.
French Rule (1794-1815)
In 1794 Antwerp was captured by the French revolutionary army
and remained under French administration for the subsequent twenty one years.
Under French rule, Jews could settle freely in Antwerp for the first time.
Whereas the French Revolution granted full citizenship to the Jews living in
French territories, the administration of Napoleon I intervened into the
internal affairs of the Jewish community. Following the French model, all Jews
of Belgium were organized into a Consistory. Because during the 1800's there
were only about 800 Jews in Belgium, they all were annexed to the Consistoire of
Krefeld, in Germany. In 1808 the Jews of Antwerp were accorded three months to
adopt a family name and change their traditional Jewish given names to local
names. The municipal records preserved the names of 36 Jews of Antwerp, the
great majority born in Holland. With a few exceptions, they all changed their
names and adopted vernacular, mostly French names.
 |
|
Orthodox Jewish family on Shabbat
Antwerp, 1981
Photo: Helene Kuropatwa, Belgium
Beth Hatefutsoth - Visual Documentation Center
Courtesy of Helene Kuropatwa, Belgium
|
|
 |
|
At the entrance to Eretz Israel Soldiers’ Club
Antwerp, 1946
Beth Hatefutsoth - Visual Documentation Center
|
|
Dutch Rule (1815-1830)
At the end of the Napoleonic wars, Antwerp was incorporated
into the Netherlands. All religions, including Judaism, were granted equality.
Jews from the Rhine districts as well as from Holland started to settle in
Antwerp. From the administrative point of view, the Jews of Antwerp were
subordinated to the Jewish community of Brussels. The Jewish community of
Antwerp was officially established in 1816, when there were about one hundred
Jews living in the city. This first legally recognized community was known as
the Jewish Community (Communaute Israelite) also called the Dutch community. It
continued to exist as a separate body until 1931, when it merged with the Jewish
Community Shomre Hadas. The first Jewish public prayers were held in the private
home of a certain Moise Kreyn, having received the approval of the city
authorities. The Jews of Antwerp acquired possession of a cemetery in 1828.
There were 151 Jews in Antwerp in 1829.
Belgian Independence
Antwerp became part of the independent Kingdom of Belgium in
1830. During the 19th century the Jewish population of Antwerp augmented
considerably: from about 100 individuals in the late 1810's to around 500 in
1847, and almost 1,000 in the late 1860's. The largest growth, however, occurred
after 1880, when Antwerp became home to many Jewish immigrants fleeing the
pogroms in Russia and the anti-Jewish discriminations in other countries in
Eastern Europe. Tens of thousands of Jewish emigrants passed through Antwerp on
their way to the Americas (USA, Canada, and Argentina), of them many thousands
choose to stay in Antwerp. There were about 8,000 Jews in Antwerp in 1880 and
that number doubled itself before 1920. This immigration brought about a
significant change in the structure of the Jewish community. From a small
community dominated by Dutch Jews, many of them Sephardi, and German Jews, in
the early 20th century Antwerp had a large Yiddish speaking Jewish population
from Poland, Russia, Hungary, Romania, and Slovakia. Another group of Jewish
immigrants arrived to Antwerp from various parts of the Ottoman Empire (Salonica,
Turkey) and joined the local Portuguese Jews.
As a result of the heterogeneous composition of the Jewish
population, Antwerp has had since the early 20th century three separate Jewish
communities. The oldest Jewish community started to organize itself in the early
19th century. Following the establishment of the independent Belgian State, the
Jewish community of Antwerp has since 1832 belonged to the Consistoire Central
des Israelites en Belgique. The first public synagogue in Antwerp opened on
Paardenmarkt 83 on September 21, 1832. In 1846 this synagogue was closed and the
community opened a new one on the Grote Pieter Potstraat in the building of an
ancient church (built in 1433 and turned into a warehouse from 1802 to 1846). At
the same time the first mikve (ritual bath) opened in Antwerp. The first large
synagogue in Antwerp, built in an "oriental" style to the plans of the Jewish
architect Joseph Hertogs (1861-1930), was inaugurated on Bouwmeestersstraat in
1893. This synagogue is still known as the "Dutch synagogue" because it was
built by descendants of Jews who came to Antwerp from Holland in the early 19th
century.
A second Jewish community was organized in 1898 by the
Portuguese Jews of Antwerp and it is has since been known as the Jewish
Community of Portuguese Rite. Despite the fact that there was a strong presence
of Sephardi Jews in Antwerp since the beginnings of the Jewish settlement in the
city, this separate Sephardi Jewish community was recognized officially by the
city authorities only in 1910. By then, in addition to descendants of the
"Portuguese nation", the community included many Sephardi Jews who came to
Antwerp from the Ottoman Empire. Their synagogue was built on Hoveniersatraat
according to the plans of the architect J. De Lange and was opened in 1913.
The third Jewish community known as Machsike Hadas was
organized in 1892 century by Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe. Their
synagogue was opened in 1918 on Oostenstraat and was built to the plans of the
architect Jules Hofman in the style of Art Nouveau. The Machsike Hadas community
opened a religious school for boys - Jesode-Hatora - in 1895, and acquired a
cemetery in the border Dutch village of Putte in 1908. Machsike Hadas Jewish
orthodox community was recognized officially by the city authorities in 1910.
During the early 20th century another two synagogues were
opened in Antwerp: the Eisenmann synagogue on Oostenstraat and the Dutch minyan
on Fabriekstaatje, in 1907 and 1919, respectively.
Jewish charity organizations started to activate in Antwerp
from late 19th century, especially after the arrival of many immigrants from
Eastern Europe. The Oesterreich-Ungarischer Hilfsverein ("The Austro-Hungarian
Help Union") was founded in 1887 and it was followed in 1888 by Hulp in Nood
("Help in Emergency") founded by Jewish women of the Dutch community.
First Half of the 20th Century
The Jewish population of Antwerp continued to grow in the
first half of the 20th century and the city became the main Jewish center of
Belgium. It is estimated that there were about 50,000 Jews in Antwerp on the eve
of WW2, of them probably only around 10 percent were Belgian nationals.
During the late 1930's there were in Antwerp three separate
communities that together operated five synagogues and twenty-eight Batey-Midrash,
of them the oldest were Feiner (established in 1884) on Leeuwerikstraat and
Ahavas Choulom (established in 1888) on Van Diepenbeeckstraat. The majority of
batey-midrash, however, were established in the 1920's and 1930's and included
many that belonged to the various groups of Hasidim that settled in the city:
Haside Belz (est. 1929), Haside Gur (est. 1929), Haside Wisjnits (est. 1928),
Haside Siged (est. 1928), Haside Kadichah (est. 1919), Haside Czortkow (est.
1928) and others. The Jewish education was supported by a developed network of
institutions: several schools were dedicated to Jewish studies only while others
included in their curriculum the study of non-Jewish disciplines as well. Yesode
Hatorah was established in 1903 as a school for boys continuing an earlier
Talmud Torah (opened in 1892). It offered courses in Yiddish and also included a
kindergarten. Beth Yaakov religious school for girls was opened in 1937
replacing an earlier school for girls that was established in 1923. Yesode
Hatora was associated to Beth Yaakov and together became a prestigious Jewish
educational institution whose reputation spread beyond the borders of Belgium.
The Tachkemoni school for boys was opened in 1920 and included the study of
Hebrew. In addition there functioned in Antwerp another six religious schools,
among them a school that was affiliated to the Zionist party Poale-Zion Tseirey-Zion
(est. in 1926), and two yeshivas: Etz Haim (est. in 1929) and Yeshivat Shaare
Torah (est. in 1930).
Although Antwerp had an old tradition of diamond industry and
commerce, it was only towards the end of the 19th century and in the first half
of the 20th century that the diamond industry turned into a major occupation for
the Jews of Antwerp. In the early 1900's there were already about 700 Jewish
diamond-cutters in Antwerp. This development coincided with the arrival to
Antwerp of Jewish immigrants from Central and Eastern Europe. The influx of row
diamonds from the Belgian colonies in Africa, the trade connections of the Jews
and the willingness of the new immigrants to work for lower salaries helped to
turn Antwerp into the main world center for the diamond industry. Much of this
industry has since been owned by Jews to such an extent that this occupation
more than anywhere else in the Diaspora has become a veritable trademark of the
Jewish community of Antwerp. However, many other Jews in Antwerp were active as
small artisans and merchants, especially in the textile industry. Other Jews
were employed within the various Jewish organizations as teachers, rabbis,
kashrut supervisors, clerks and an additional ten percent of the work force of
the Antwerp Jews were engaged in various liberal professions outside the
community.
In the late 1930's there were in Antwerp twenty-two Jewish
organizations and associations. They included many Zionist associations, among
them the Federation Sioniste de Belgique (est. in 1905), Keren Kayemet LeIsrael,
Keren Hayesod, WIZO (est. in 1920), Nachim Misrahi (est. 1922), and Zionist
parties - Poale Sion-Tseire Sion (a union of two separate parties founded in
1908 and 1904, respectively), the Revisionist Zionists (est. 1926), Poale Sion-Gauche
(est. in 1927). The Yiddish culture and politics were well represented by Der
Bund - the Jewish Socialist non-Zionist party, whose local branch was
established in 1924 and had many adherents, and the Friends of YIWO (est. in
1928). Agudath Israel started its activities in 1912. Fondation-Frechie, the
hevra kadisha (burial society) in charge of the Jewish cemetery in Putte
(Holland) was founded in 1884. Additional associations included V.E.V.A. (Verbond
voor Economisch Verweer Antwerpen = The Union for the Economic Defense) that was
supported by most Jewish organizations; The Association of Jewish Polish
Combatants 1914-1918 (est. in 1936); The Union of Polish Jews (1931) and others.
There were six professional Jewish organizations in Antwerp
during the interwar period: among them Yiddisher Handverkerfarain was founded in
1919 and in 1938 merged with the Yiddisher Handerverkering (est. 1935); a
painter's association; and a shopkeepers' association.
Zionist activities and associations commenced from the early
1900's with the first Belgian Zionist Congress organized in Antwerp in 1906. The
Jewish Territorial Organization founded by Israel Zangwill (1864-1926) had an
active branch in Antwerp. here were nineteen Jewish Youth movements active in
Antwerp during the late 1930's affiliated to all political factions in the
community. The Zionist movements included Bnei Akiba (est. 1932), Beitar (est.
1926), Bar Kochbah (est. 1920) that turned into Hashomer Hatsair in 1924, Hanoar
Hatsioni (est. 1930), Brith Hakanaim (1936), Hehalutz (1929), Benoth Misrahi
(1926), Maccabi Hatsair (1931) and others. Tseire Agoudah, established in 1912,
was the first youth movement active in Antwerp and along with Pirhe Agoudat
Israel, established in 1923, and Benos Agoudah, established in 1926 for girls,
grouped the supporters of Agudat Israel.
Sporting activity was promoted by three different
clubs: Maccabi, the oldest, opened in 1920 and had sections for
basket-ball, football, swimming, tennis, gymnastics, chess, and bridge. Hapoel belonged to Poale Sion-Tseire Sion party and opened in 1927 with
sections for football, table tennis, and chess. The third club, Yask (Yiddisher
Arbetersportklub - the Sport Club of the Jewish Workers) opened in 1935 and
was affiliated to the Bund party. It included sections for football, tennis,
chess, swimming and in addition it had a cultural section as well.
The first amateur theater circle started its activities in as
early as 1878 and it was followed shortly by another group called De
Vriedenkring. In 1912 the Yiddisher Progresiver Dramatisher Klub was founded.
Antwerp was frequently toured by renowned Jewish musicians and performers as
well as distinguished Jewish theater companies from other countries, like
Habimah of Moscow, Die Wilner Truppe of Vilna, and Jiddisches Kunstthater of New
York.
Hatikwah was the first Jewish weekly in Belgium published in
Antwerp by the Agudath Zion association in 1905 and until 1914 it appeared in
German. During the first half of the 20th century more than fifty various Jewish
periodicals, the majority in Yiddish and a few in Dutch, French, and Hebrew were
published in Antwerp.
The Holocaust
On May 10, 1940, Germany attacked neutral Belgium. On May 28,
Belgium surrounded and was occupied by the Nazi Germany. Fearing the Germans,
the majority of the Jewish population of Antwerp fled to other regions in
Belgium or to France. As many of the Jews living in Antwerp and indeed in
Belgium were not Belgian nationals, they were initially refused entry into
France. Nonetheless, many did manage to enter France taking advantage of the
huge waves of refugees and the general chaos that prevailed in northern regions
of France before its defeat in June 1940. Contrary to what happened in Eastern
Europe, the German occupation forces did not start their anti-Jewish
persecutions immediately. The inability to find shelter elsewhere, especially
not being able to cross the sea to England, as a handful of Jews from Antwerp
did before the German invasion, combined with the apparent correct attitude of
the Germans, convinced about 25,000 Jews to return to Antwerp. But on October
1940, the Germans changed their policy and gradually introduced a long series of
anti-Jewish measures. Some 13,000 Jews were registered in a special
Judenregister; they were forbidden to leave their homes from evening till
morning, enter public parks, and Jewish owned businesses were marked with signs
in Flemish, French and German. Between December 1940 and February 1941 more than
3,000 Jewish immigrants that entered Belgium after 1938, were deported at the
order of the German army from Antwerp to a rural area in the Belgian province of
Limbourg. More than in other cities of Belgium, in Antwerp the Germans received
the support and collaboration of local pro-Nazi and anti-Semitic parties and
groups. On April 14, 1941, a pogrom was organized against the Jews of Antwerp by
local pro-Nazi groups, especially the VNV (Vlaams Nationaal Verbond), De Vlag,
and De Algemeene SS-Vlaanderen, with the assistance of the German forces. The
Van den Nestlei and the Oostenstraat synagogues were looted; many Jewish-owned
shops were burnt. The municipal council of Antwerp assumed responsibility for
the attacks and decided to refund the Jews for the damage, but the Germans
blocked the implementation of the decision. On May 1942 all Jews were compelled
to bear the yellow-star badge. During the summer of 1942 mass arrests of Jews
were initiated all over Belgium. A transit camp was opened at Mechelen (Malines)
from where the arrested Jews were deported to the Nazi death camps in Central
and Eastern Europe. On Friday night, August 28, 1942, most Jews in Antwerp were
arrested and deported. The remaining ones who held Belgian citizenship or
belonged to the Judenrat (established in November 1941 and called Association
des Juifs en Belgique - AJB) were arrested at their turn one year later on
September 4, 1943.
By the time Antwerp was liberated by Allied troops on
September 4, 1944, only about 800 Jews had managed to survive in the city with
the help of members of the local population, for the most part devout Catholic
individuals and activists of the Communist-dominated Resistance. Members of the
pre-war Zionist Youth Movements continued their activity in the underground and
helped smuggle Jews into Switzerland and Spain during 1942-1943. The
annihilation of the Jewish community of Antwerp was almost total. There were a
series of factors that facilitated the destruction, among them the fact that the
majority of the Antwerp Jews were not Belgian nationals, most of the Jews in
Antwerp were concentrated in distinct neighborhoods, and especially because the
support received by the Germans from local anti-Semites was stronger than in
many other places in western Europe. Moreover, the local Belgian authorities
apparently showed almost no resistance to the Germans and thus enabled them to
carry the mass deportations, while the effective assistance to Jews from the
local population was weaker than in other cities in Belgium. Jews from Antwerp
who fled to France or other regions in the German occupied Europe suffered the
same fate and the majority perished in the Holocaust.
 |
|
Classroom at Jesode Hatorah school
Antwerp, 1965
Dr. Brachfeld Collection, Israel
Beth Hatefutsoth - Visual Documentation Center
|
|
 |
|
Children learning at Tachkemoni school
Antwerp, 1991
Beth Hatefutsoth - Visual Documentation Center
Courtesy of Dafna Mor, Belgium
|
|
Second Half of the 20th Century
HISO (Hulp aan Joodse Slachtoffers - Help for Jewish War
Victims) was the first Jewish organization that started to operate in Antwerp
immediately after the liberation with the aim of aiding the survivors and the
few Jews who returned to the city from the deportation. The rebuilding of the
Jewish community began already in 1946. The Synagogue of Van den Nestlei, built
in 1928, was renovated in 1954 and has since been known as the Romi Goldmuntz
Synagogue. It belongs to the Modern Orthodox stream and serves as the main
synagogue in Antwerp.
The Jewish community grew again quite rapidly during the
1950's and reached about 10,000 members in the early 1960's. Many of them were
Holocaust survivors and their descendants who were joined by immigrants from
Eastern Europe, mainly from Hungary, Romania, Slovakia, and Poland. For the most
part these new immigrants belonged to various Hasidic groups; their impact to
the Jewish life of Antwerp has been strongly felt especially as they have continued
to observe a traditional Jewish way of life typical of the small towns in
pre-Holocaust Eastern Europe. Unlike the situation before WW 2, they all
received Belgian citizenship, apart for a few who preferred to maintain their
status of refugees. Since the early 1960's Jews from other countries as well,
including Israel, settled in Antwerp.
In the second half of the 20th century the diamond industry
became the main occupation for the Jews of Antwerp. Most of them are either high
skilled artisans who specialize in executing the most professional stages in the
process of turning row diamonds into high quality precious stones or merchants
who are connected to the global network of diamond trade. The diamond bourses of
Antwerp are located inside the Jewish districts of the city; they close Friday
afternoon before the unset of the Shabbat and are deserted during Jewish
holidays. After the 1980's, though, changes in the world diamond industry
brought about a decline in the importance of Antwerp with the result that the
influence of Jewish-owned companies on the market has diminished.
Due to its large concentration of orthodox and ultra-orthodox
Jews who maintain a very traditional Jewish way of life, Antwerp has many times
been nicknamed the last "shtetl" in Western Europe. Yiddish is widely spoken
even outside the homes and also by Jews who were born in Belgium. In the second
half of the 20th century Flemish has been increasingly adopted by the Jews of
Antwerp, many of which also speak French and Hebrew. Many Jews in Antwerp live
in Jootsewijk, a district around the Pelikanstraat, not far from the Central
railway station.
During the early 2000's the Jewish population of Antwerp was
estimated at about 18,000, the great majority of them belonging to the there
separate Jewish communities in Antwerp. The ultra-orthodox Machsike Hadas (Israelitische
Gemeente Van Antwerpen - Machsike Hadas) is home to most Hasidic groups in the
city including the Belz, Gur, Satmar, Czortkow, Lubavitch, and Vizhnitz Hasidim.
Antwerp is also the home of a new Hasidic group that was formed after WW2 by the
followers of Rabbi Yitzhok Gvirzman (1881-1976), also known as Reb Itzikel (or
Yitzkel), a Galician-born descendant of the Pshevorsker dynasty of rabbis, who
immigrated to Antwerp in the 1950's. The Hasidim comprise about forty percent of
the Jews of Antwerp, but their presence is strongly felt . The members of the
Shomre Hadas community (Israelitische Gemeente Van Antwerpen - Shomre Hadas)
have a modern orthodox Jewish way of life. The Sephardi community of
Antwerp is known as the Jewish Community of Portuguese Rite (Israelitische
Gemeente van de Portugese Ritus). The three communities are members of the
Central Jewish Consistory of Belgium, the main Jewish umbrella organization in
Belgium. It is estimated that about twenty percent of the Jews in Antwerp are
not affiliated to any of the religious communities in the city.
Each community has its own synagogues, batey-midrash, and
kosher slaughterhouses. There are two ritual baths, one for men and a separate
one for women. There are about thirty synagogues and prayer houses in Antwerp,
most of them located within the neighborhood of Jootsewijk. Jewish education is
provided by four main Jewish schools in Antwerp: Jesode Hatorah (for boys), Beth
Yaakov (for girls) - both belonging to the Machsike Hadas community, Yavne, and
Tachkemoni of the Shore Hadas community, in addition to other smaller private
religious educational institutions that include Yeshiva Etz Haim and Yeshiva
Tichonit. More than eighty-five percent of the Jewish children in Antwerp attend
Jewish schools, one of the highest rates anywhere in the Diaspora. Student and
youth organizations include Agudath Israel, Bnai Akiva, Hashomer Hatzair, and
Hanoar Hazioni.
A number of welfare Jewish organizations are active in
Antwerp, among them the Federation of Jewish Women's Associations and the Jewish
Welfare Organization. The community maintains two senior citizen homes and a
hospital. Keren Hayesod, WIZO, Keren Kayemet, and the Zionist Federation are the
main Zionist organizations in Antwerp.
Belgisch Israelitisch Weekblad ("Belgian Jewish Weekly"), the
largest Jewish newspaper in Belgium is published in Antwerp. The Romi Goldmuntz
Center serves as the stage for many cultural events of the community, including
lectures, music and dance performances and it also shelters a Jewish library.
The Royal Maccabi Sports Club is the main Jewish sport center in Antwerp.
There have been a number of anti-Jewish attacks in Antwerp in
recent years. The Hoveniersatraat Synagogue was the target of a terrorist attack
in 1981. The rise of the right-wing Vlaams Belang (formerly called Vlaams Blok)
party encouraged an increase in the intolerant atmosphere towards non-European
immigrants in Belgium; occasionally members of this nationalistic party
expressed anti-Jewish opinions as well. The Forum of the Jewish Organizations in
Flanders, established in the 1990's, undertook the task of informing the public
opinion about the dangers of the newly emerging anti democratic and anti-Semitic
currents in the Belgian society. In the early 2000's there was an increase in
physical attacks on Jews and Jewish property especially by members of the Muslim
immigrant community of Antwerp.
HFG
Bibliography
ABICHT,
Ludo. Antwerp: The Jerusalem of the West. Dutch Jewry
(2000):289-300
GUTWIRTH,
Jacques. Le judaïsme anversois aujourd'hui. Revue
des Études Juives,
125(1966):365-384
MICHMAN, D.
Why Did so Many of the Antwerp Jews Perish?, Yad Vashem Studies
30(2002): 465-481 [Review article]
SCHMIDT,
Ephraim. L'histoire des Juifs a Anvers (Antwerpen). Introduction by Dr.
Nico Gunzburg. Pp. xxi, 291, 52 plates, illus. Antwerpen: [s.n.]: Imprimerie
Excelsior, [1969?] ( Translated from the Dutch edition, 1963)
Addresses
Israelitische Gemeente Van Antwerpen - Shomre Hadas
Terlisstraat 35
Antwerp
Belgium
Phone: 32-3-232 0187
Israelitische Gemeente Van Antwerpen - Machzike Hadas
Jacob Jacobstraat 22
Antwerp
Belgium
Phone: 32-3-233 5567
Israelitische Gemeente van de Portugese Ritus Antwerpen - Beth Moshe
Hovenierstraat 31
Antwerp
Belgium
Phone: 32-3-232 5339
Links
Consistoire Central Israélite
de Belgique - Centraal Israelitisch Consistorie van Belgie
Forum der Joodse Organisaties
Het Jeruzalem van
het westen. Joden en Goyim in Antwerpen
Register of Burials in Antwerp, Belgium
Register of Burials in Antwerp, Belgium in the MACHSIKE HADAS Cemetery from
1939 to 1958
Register of Burials in Antwerp, Belgium in the SHOMRE HADASS Cemetery from 1947
to 1958
Register of Burials in Antwerp, Belgium in the SCHOONSELHOF Cemetery from 1944
to 1957
List
of marriages in Antwerp from to 1926 to 1950
Institut voor Joodse Studies
-
Universiteit Antwerpen

|