This petition was made by the Jews of Algeria regarding their citizenship status against the backdrop of the influx of Arab and Muslims coming into the country at that time and the status that they held. Most of the signatories sign in Hebrew.

Algiers, Imp. Bouyer.

The Crémieux Decree was passed in Algeria in October 1870 granting French citizenship to Algerian Jews but not to Muslims, effectively dividing indigenous Algerians with a potent political wedge. The Decree transformed the structure of the Algerian Jewish community, which had prior been autonomous and self-governed by Jewish religious law. As French citizens, Algerian Jews were subject to secular French laws, which prompted some dissent among the Jewish community. French colonists and colonial leaders in Algeria did not themselves accept the Jews as fellow citizens, and expressed a considerable amount of anti-Semitic sentiment particular during the period of the Dreyfus Affair. This worsened in the coming century with the rise of the Nazi Party in the years leading to World War II, and of the Algerian Jews who had settled in France, an estimated 3,000 were deported.

The Crémieux Decree was abolished in October 1940 under the Vichy government, and the same anti-Jewish laws promulgated in France were imposed in Algeria. Notably, some of the Algerian Jews received assistance from their Muslim neighbors. The Decree was reinstated in 1943 through a combination of Jewish lobbying and American diplomatic efforts and remained in effect until the 1962 Algerian independence, at which point nearly the entire Algerian Jewish population relocated to France.

Sources:

Pierre Birnbaum, “French Jews and the ‘Regeneration’ of Algerian Jewry, ” Jews and the State: Dangerous Alliances and the Perils of Privilege, ed. Ezra Mendelsohn (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003), pp. 88-103.

See: https://academic.oup.com/fh/article/35/2/243/6299901

And https://www.marxists.org/history/algeria/1870/decree-jews.htm

Azzedine Haddour, Colonial Myths: History and Narrative (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2000).

The National Assembly (French: Assemblée nationale) was a French legislative body elected on 8 February 1871 in the wake of the Armistice of Versailles signed on 26 January 1871 at the end of the Franco-Prussian War. It sat in Bordeaux until 20 March 1871, when it moved to the Palace of Versailles. The cabinets which issued from it governed France from 19 February 1871 to 31 December 1875.

43.5cm L.

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Lot #13

Petition by Algerian Jews to The French National Assembly after The Crémieux Decree, 1870. With Hebrew signatures.

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