WWI Part II: Corrections, Questions, and Omissions

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0:00 Intro
0:28 Minor corrections: the Scheldt and Salazar
0:43 Question: internalized crypto-Judaism
2:33 Minor correction: the Putilov factory
2:46 Minor correction: the February Declaration
2:58 Omission: the two assassinations of Symon Petliura
5:58 Omission: Leo Amery
7:37 Omission: Wickham Steed
9:05 Omission: tanks on the Palestine Front
10:04 Correction: the first modern Jewish general
10:23 Correction: the Sixtus Affair
11:14 Correction: Lithuanian in Austria?
12:00 Question: Latvia and the Mendelssohn Line
15:05 Why isn’t John Monash more celebrated?

Пікірлер: 60

  • @SamAronow
    @SamAronowАй бұрын

    2024 Viewer Survey forms.gle/Lm22oDgbR7ohfjrA7

  • @singularkakapo

    @singularkakapo

    Ай бұрын

    Viewers surveys are something way more channels should use

  • @miaththered

    @miaththered

    Ай бұрын

    and filled out.

  • @hasmoneanhistorian
    @hasmoneanhistorianАй бұрын

    Just wanted to say thank you for all your videos. You got me interested in Jewish history and inspired me to make my own Jewish history KZread channel. I remember watching you when you were still covering the second temple period, I never thought we'd get to the modern age

  • @singularkakapo

    @singularkakapo

    Ай бұрын

    Didn't expect to see you, love your videos!

  • @hasmoneanhistorian

    @hasmoneanhistorian

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@singularkakapo Thanks! I'm hard at work on the next one

  • @sirushti1132

    @sirushti1132

    Ай бұрын

    Ay yo butt naked commando??

  • @sirushti1132

    @sirushti1132

    Ай бұрын

    your answers and memes on reddit are awesome dude.

  • @SF2K01

    @SF2K01

    Ай бұрын

    Just found your videos yesterday (and subscribed for more), and you've got some incredible material! Keep improving your recording quality and editing; we definitely need someone highlighting the more unhinged history that's out there.

  • @jonyprepperisrael60
    @jonyprepperisrael60Ай бұрын

    10:03 hey that was my correction, glad to have made an impact, no matter how small it was

  • @alankaufman385
    @alankaufman385Ай бұрын

    The Mendelson Libe looks like it follows the Gefilte Fish Line fairly closely.

  • @ekmalsukarno2302
    @ekmalsukarno2302Ай бұрын

    Hi Sam, did you know that Melbourne has a renowned university named in honor of John Monash? If not, well now you know.

  • @Dracopol
    @DracopolАй бұрын

    7:36 Your audio mentions "The other person I left out was Henry Wickham Steed" twice.

  • @sirushti1132
    @sirushti1132Ай бұрын

    gave the viewer survey. not a jew, not israeli, nor palestinian, arab or even middle eastern. i live thousands of miles away yet my interest in jewish history is peak. how far will the jewish history series go? Will you dive more into the "controversial" parts of jewish history that has relevance to everything that is happening right now?

  • @proledad3802
    @proledad3802Ай бұрын

    Telling us there's another Mendelssohn line running through Asia but not showing us a map is plainly cruel.

  • @pckrichards7980
    @pckrichards7980Ай бұрын

    Exciting to see you get into the more modern parts of history. Thanks for this new perspective on history! Especially now.

  • @DGAMINGDE
    @DGAMINGDEАй бұрын

    Glad you are finally covering "87 5", my favorite part of Jewish history.

  • @singularkakapo

    @singularkakapo

    Ай бұрын

    He edited the title a few minutes after the notification, weird quirk

  • @welcometonebalia
    @welcometonebaliaАй бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @haydenwaller1924
    @haydenwaller1924Ай бұрын

    I'm an Australian and I always saw john monash on the $100 note, but thinking back I don't remember ever hearing his name at school, not even in history. Our ww1 story is only focused on the scrappy young ANZACs at Gallipoli and then it's right onto ww2 and the cold war. The part you mentioned about us not articulating our pre ww2 history is very true and I suspect it will get worse with time.

  • @Cybernaut551
    @Cybernaut55129 күн бұрын

    Gratulon kaj dankon!

  • @west8715
    @west8715Ай бұрын

    I am not Jewish but I still really love these videos they are very interesting

  • @jevgenijdan7328
    @jevgenijdan7328Ай бұрын

    @SamAronow Thank you so much for answering the question!!! I also only realized/remembered that the questions were only for Gaon and Navi level patrons after I sent in the question. I know there was a phenomenon in Kurland where at least one congregation built a Reform synagogue. It was boycotted by the Orthodox rabbis and, with the exception of Shabbat, was mostly empty, as people only came to it for Shabbat, just like church. At some point, the bima was moved and the synagogue was made Orthodox, so that the Orthodox could come on weekdays and everyone was together on Shabbat. Latvia has always been a mixture of Eastern and Western influences.

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah, this is actually pretty typical east of the line.

  • @reesyroxlol
    @reesyroxlolАй бұрын

    I thought "WW1: Part 2" was just known as "World War 2"

  • @israelilocal
    @israelilocalАй бұрын

    Great video as usual sam

  • @bomoose
    @bomooseАй бұрын

    leo amery quoting cromwell:in the name of god... go!

  • @thedemongodvlogs7671
    @thedemongodvlogs7671Ай бұрын

    Is there a small cut error around 07:38 :) ?

  • @Courtenaire9911
    @Courtenaire9911Ай бұрын

    Hi Sam! Do you think you will return to the Elections channel one day? I am eager to learn about the newer elections and drama in the Knesset

  • @MrLachlan1903
    @MrLachlan1903Ай бұрын

    Australians are VERY bad at teaching our history. When someone says this they think we are refering to aboriginals, which is certainly true, but I doubt many Australians would be able to name our first Prime Minister. Imagine most Americans not knowing who George Washington was...

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    Ай бұрын

    In fairness, Edmund Barton was no George Washington. I suspect a lot of this has to do with Australian independence being a slow transition as well as previous generations' aversion to engaging with the country's convict origins.

  • @MrLachlan1903

    @MrLachlan1903

    Ай бұрын

    @@SamAronow He certainly wasn't, his successor Deakin is much more well known. We never had an 'exciting' or dramatic founding myth, federation and independence was peaceful, and framed as an economic and bureaucratic convienience. It's also an awkward truth that many of the founders of our political parties were avowed supporters of the White Australia policy, specifically the (then) socialist Australian Labor Party.

  • @johnkilmartin5101

    @johnkilmartin5101

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@SamAronowI don't hear much talk in the U.S. about its convict origins either. Americans tend to gloss over the fact that the first novel in english deals with Britain sending its convicts to what are now the U.S. .

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    28 күн бұрын

    @@johnkilmartin5101 That's because it only applied to the Carolinas and Georgia, whose convict descendants flat out _denied_ their convict origins and insisted that they were descended from Norman nobility as part of a wider justification for slavery.

  • @johnkilmartin5101

    @johnkilmartin5101

    28 күн бұрын

    @@SamAronow Moll Flanders is set in Virginia. I think an enterprising genealogist could find the origins of "white trash" in those convicts.

  • @Arturino_Burachelini
    @Arturino_Burachelini25 күн бұрын

    Mises, the momentous person of libertarian economics, was born in a jewish family in Lviv. That what I can be proud of :)

  • @CellThePerfectAndroid
    @CellThePerfectAndroidАй бұрын

    0:40 is it just me or he kinda looks like Avraham Stern?

  • @Mark761966
    @Mark761966Ай бұрын

    The 1920s... EVERYBODY CHARLESTON!

  • @thedemongodvlogs7671
    @thedemongodvlogs7671Ай бұрын

    Is the special on the Jews of Denmark/Scandinavia? That would be my guess given the post about Bohr, but I'm sure it's pretty far off, either way looking forward to it!

  • @phillipben-shmuel8811
    @phillipben-shmuel88113 күн бұрын

    Okay, let's get real niche and arcane: Regarding the 72 names of HaShem (known as ע"ב שמות or שם בן ע"ב or, incredibally, השם המפורש)- though, by definition, such a concept is esoteric, it is certainly not obscure or forgotten, nor is it relegated to one lesser Kabbalist. Far from it. It is both a very old tradition and an extremely influential one in contemporary Jewish mysticism. It is FASCINATING that a crypto-Jewish community preserved it but changed 72 to 73. The tradition that HaShem has 72 names is at least as old as the Talmudic era. The earliest reliable explicit mention of this tradition which I could find is a midrash attributed to the 3rd or 4th century Galilean amora, Rabbi Abin (cf. Midrash Raba on Song of Songs). However, only in the Middle Ages do we see the 72 names actually spelled out - 72 names of 3 letters each, derived from a manipulation of the Hebrew letters of the verses in Exodus 14:19-21 (each of those three consecutive verses is comprised of exactly 72 Hebrew letters). Rashi (in the 11th century) mentions these 72 names in his exegesis on the Talmud and assumes (probably incorrectly) that the tanaim (rabbis of the Roman era) were aware of it. Rabbi Abraham ibn Ezra of the 12th century (I'm assuming that's who you meant by Ezra of Tudela, but correct me if not), arguably the most influential Sephardic exegete on the Torah (and my personal favourite medieval exegete period), explicates the 72 names in more detail in his mystical(?) text "Sefer HaShem". It is further developed in the seminal (12th c.?) Kabbalist text Sefer Habahir, and even more so in the Zohar, where it is quite central. It was also a major part of the teachings and practice of such central Kabbalistic figures as Abraham Abu-Lafia, the RaMaK (Moshe Cordobero), and, of course, HaARI (Isaac Luria). Today you will often find the 72 names in the form of an 8X9 table of arcane three-letter combinations that is appended to Mizrahi and Hassidic sidurs, or as an amulet of sorts. It continues to be a huge part of both "serious" Kabbala and "popular" Kabbala. Outside of Haskala-centric Judaism, the 72 divine names continue to feature prominently, as has been the case for over a millenium. Ibn Ezra does indeed relate the number 72 to the Tetragrammaton in the sense that 72 is the gematric value of י יה יהו יהו-ה; later Kabbalists also derive it from the value of יו"ד ה"י וי"ו ה"י. But the arcane sequence itself of 72X3 letters is derived (through a rather counterintuitive method) from those verses in Exodus. I personally suspect that the number 72 came first and the clever ways of arriving at the number came later. In fact 72 may go all the way back to Canaanite mythology being the number of the gods: El, Asherat, and their seventy sons. Also: Moses, Aaron and the seventy elders as the prototypical Sanhedrin G'dola, which is likely modeled in part on the Canaanite notion of the pantheon. The Zohar and later Kabbalistic speculation also include a sacred sequence of numbers: 72, 63, 45, 52 - each corresponding to a different variation on the tetragramaton. MAYBE the sequence 72-63 contributed to the (d)evolution of 72 into 73 in the isolated crypto-Jewish tradition. But that might be a stretch.

  • @hmich176
    @hmich176Ай бұрын

    2nd commemt Thanks for everything you do Sam!

  • @mgplayzxd3062
    @mgplayzxd3062Ай бұрын

    I feel like I need to say this, as it has picked on me for a while, as we lead more into the contemporary period were the event past are starting to overlap with larger portions of the population today of whom may be born of this time period onward. When the main Jewish history series ends, as it were does it cut off into modern-day politics and culture?

  • @Duiker36

    @Duiker36

    Ай бұрын

    IME, historians tend to refuse to cover recent events, but given that Sam has a second KZread channel dedicated to contemporary Israeli elections, he might do. OTOH, I kinda hope he goes back and revises some of his oldest videos to improve them to his current standard of quality, but that probably won't bring in many views.

  • @almogz9486
    @almogz9486Ай бұрын

    Thank you for answering my question! I thought that the crypto jews perhaps changed certain key rituals to make them more secretive and came to think the new practices are a part of the religion. But if i understand your answer correctly they didnt misremember or change the ritual. Instead they simply thought of the secrecy itself as a part of the ritual and nothing more.(Besides the changes to prayers and removal of hebrew as you mentioned)

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    Ай бұрын

    There was at least one thing they changed: they observed Yom Kippur a day early to throw off the authorities.

  • @almogz9486

    @almogz9486

    Ай бұрын

    @@SamAronow that's interesting! Surprised that it worked

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    28 күн бұрын

    @@almogz9486 Who's to say that it was necessary at all? The only thing that's certain is that it didn't fail.

  • @TheZerech
    @TheZerechАй бұрын

    Just wanna say, as a student of Ukrainian history who is of partial jewish descent, I really appreciated the nuance with the whole Petliura episode. Having also read Abramson's book, I'm glad his own very nuanced and balanced appraisal has become much more mainstream. I hope we get a video on Jewish autonomy in Soviet Ukraine and Belarus, and the Jewish-Ukrainian encounter of the 1920s as it relates to art and culture. Two of the most important Ukrainian-Soviet poets, Ivan Kulyk and Leonid Pervomais'kyi were Jewish. On that subject Petrovsky-Stern's Anti-Imperial Choice is an excellent book. Of course, we've also got tons of great Jewish literary and film figures who were Russophone in the USSR, Mandelstam, Babel, Vertov, and Eisenstein for example. Also excited for all the internal Zionist drama we're going to see in the next two decades, following Zabotinsky's career.

  • @amsellem
    @amsellemАй бұрын

    "Marc François Jérôme Wolff, est colonel en 1808. Il se convertit cette année-là au christianisme et devient ensuite général et baron d'Empire. Mais se n'est pas par besoin de carrière qu'il se convertit. Un autre, resté Juif, devient général : Henri Rottembourg (1811); son nom est gravé sur l'Arc de Triomphe de l'Etoile." Wolff converted... but was really the 1st... after I recognize it got in the fringe...

  • @mbathroom1
    @mbathroom1Ай бұрын

    1st like, comment and view

  • @benjaminklass5118
    @benjaminklass5118Ай бұрын

    For which reason would you say the Israeli religious far right tends to be pro-Russia/Putin?

  • @SamAronow

    @SamAronow

    Ай бұрын

    No idea; I haven't gotten there yet.

  • @johkupohkuxd1697

    @johkupohkuxd1697

    25 күн бұрын

    Probably nostalgia for the homeland (lots of Russian Jews made Aliyah after '91). Perhaps they also buy Putin's nominal act of anti-nazism (vis-a-vis Ukraine). These are just my guesses.

  • @dafyddthomas6897
    @dafyddthomas6897Ай бұрын

    Again, the survey does not contain the category "man" so I cannot complere it

  • @rapasvi

    @rapasvi

    27 күн бұрын

    But there is… 👀 I just saw it