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The kidnapping of Edgardo Mortara by David…
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The kidnapping of Edgardo Mortara (original 1997; edition 1997)

by David I. Kertzer

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
3551171,890 (3.84)7
If you only have time to read one chapter, make it the first one "The Knock at the Door." If you have time to read another chapter, make it the Epilogue at the end. Hopefully, you will feel inspired to read all the chapters in the middle. ( )
  SheldonDeVane | Mar 24, 2018 |
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If you only have time to read one chapter, make it the first one "The Knock at the Door." If you have time to read another chapter, make it the Epilogue at the end. Hopefully, you will feel inspired to read all the chapters in the middle. ( )
  SheldonDeVane | Mar 24, 2018 |
Heartbreaking story of Edguardo Mortara's kidnapping at age 6, and how it affected his family, the Church, European history, the Jewish community and the press. ( )
  Bookish59 | Nov 11, 2017 |
True story of the Catholic Inquisition in Italy in 1858 taking a 6 yr old boy from his Jewish family because the illiterate maid had secretly baptised him when he was sick! Stunning story told in great detail.
Read Feb 2007 ( )
  mbmackay | Dec 6, 2015 |
Sadly, my background in European history is quite deficient, so much of what was in this book I had to reread a couple of times. Even still, this is a really engrossing book; extremely well written, deftly organized, and very readable even to folks like me who have little grounding in European history (especially Italian history).

It's a sad story of a little Jewish boy (Edgardo Mortara) taken from his parents by the Catholic church because the child had supposedly been baptized by the family's Catholic servant, and their efforts to get him back. It is told against the backdrop of the turmoil surrounding the unification of Italy and backlash against Papal temporal rule in the middle part of the nineteenth century.

It highlights very well the discrimination practiced against Jews - particularly by the Catholic church - presaging what would happen to them in the 1940s.

Highly recommended! ( )
1 vote mybucketlistofbooks | Jan 10, 2015 |
The kidnapping of Edgardo Mortara - David Kertzer 1997
Did the Montara story change the course of Italian and European history?

This book is about an important aspect of Jewish and Italian history.
Where a Jewish child had been baptized by a Catholic maid the church took them from their family to bring them up as Catholic. This had happened in numerous cases but with the atmosphere of the Risorgimento and after 1848 people stood up for their rights and this issue spread in the press. Bologna had been free for a period but with the help of Austrian troops reverted to being a Papal State.
The misuse of the Popes temporal power is one of the causes of Italian Independence demands. Pope Pius IX was a fundamentalist Catholic and tried fighting back against the liberal anti-religious trends.
In America it caused an anti-Catholic backlash but the President was not prepared to say anything as the US under Buchanan was on the verge of the civil war and the slavery issue.
In 1860 Covour died at the age of 50 of a heart attack at the height of his influence.
Alliances Israeli Universalle was started with a conference to do with the Montara kidnapping and its headquarters have remained in Paris since. Both Montifiori and The Rothschilds tried to intervene with the help of British and French governments,
Edgardo became a successful priest speaking 7 languages including Hebrew and died at the age of 88 in Belgium in 1940, 2 months before the Germans occupied it.
Converts like him became an embarrassment to the Jewish community.
I read about the Affair Finaly also which took place in France in 1952 it is amazing that 100 year after the Mortara experience the church had not changed ( )
  MauriceRogevMemorial | Oct 14, 2012 |
The Kidnapping of Edgardo Mortara describes a period during the mid 1800s when Italy was becoming a unified, secular country, modeled after France, Great Britain and other European countries. Prior to this time, it was a conglomerate of separate states with large areas ruled by the Catholic Church. Edgardo, a young Jewish boy, was taken from his home because he was reportedly baptized by a young illiterate servant working in the Mortara home. What made this so incredible was that, although baptism was not permitted without parental consent, once it was done, the Church felt it had no choice but to remove the child from his home so that he could be brought up as a proper Catholic. At the same time, there was a movement in Italy to unite under a secular ruler. The author contends that the Mortara case, although not unusual, was so widely publicized across the western world that it tipped the balance in favor of anti-papist sentiment and precipitated the annexation (under force) of the papal lands to Sardinia and the other parts of Italy. I don't know if I entirely buy this premise, but it certainly suggested to the rest of Europe an archaic way of thinking that they no longer wished to support.

My expectations for this book were slightly different. I think there was more of an emphasis on history than I expected, although the personal plight of the Mortara family was addressed within the context of the struggle between secular and religious forces in Italy. I was fascinated to learn that there was still an Inquisition in Italy at this time and that regions outside the papal rule did not require Jews to live in ghettos. The book clearly serves as a warning that theocracies are dangerous as governing bodies and likely to treat those of other religions as second class citizens. For the most part, the book was well written, although there were times when it seemed disorganized and repetitive, because it would go back a few centuries, then come back the the 1800s. I was also unfamiliar with the Catholic hierarchy, so it took me a while to realize that Cardinals could be archbishops etc. Nevertheless, I enjoyed the book and found that it significantly broadened my understanding of European history.

For those of you with the kindle edition: there are numerous typos, which did not really affect my enjoyment of the book, but just so you know... ( )
1 vote krazy4katz | Jan 21, 2011 |
Fascinating - ( )
  busterrll | Jul 29, 2008 |
A Jewish family's illiterate Catholic housekeeper sprinkles well-water over an infant child and furtively mumbles the baptismal sacrament. When the Inquisitor learns of the deed, he orders the kidnapping of the then six-year-old Jewish boy. This foul deed is almost certainly sanctioned by the highest levels of the Catholic hierarchy. The police forcibly remove the child from his family's Bologna home and swiftly transport him to the Church's House of Catechumens in Rome for reeducation. Despite all protests from the boy's family and the Jewish community and in the face of a destabilizing international uproar, the Holy Father refuses to yield. By holy grace, the boy has been miraculously saved and the Church keeps him, inculcates him in the Catholic Christian religion, and assiduously converts the boy.

The boy kidnapped in the name of religion? Edgardo Mortara. The Holy Father in question? Pope Pius IX. The year? 1858. That's right 1858, not 1458, not 1658, but smack dab in the middle of 19th century Europe.

Historian David Kertzer tells the complete tale in his excellent work, `The Kidnapping of Edgardo Mortara.' As Kertzer relates in the epilogue he learned to his surprise that there was no reliable work on this topic. Kertzer sets out to remedy this gap and succeeds by examining the episode in fine detail. Using detailed court and police investigation records, Kertzer explores numerous evidentiary questions such as whether the baptism took place at all, whether the proper conditions for a valid lay baptism existed, who put the girl up to it, and how did the Inquisition find out about it?

The story is told against the background of the movement to unify Italy under secular rule. And here is yet another surprise for the uninitiated reader, including this one: until 1861 the Pope was still the temporal ruler of a wide swath of the Italian peninsula (this rule continued on a lesser scale to 1870). The treatment of young Edgardo was one of the factors that helped build support across Italy and internationally for the Risorgimento or Italian reunification.

The episode also hastened Pius IX's evolution, shall we say, to reactionary beliefs. Pius IX not only made papal infallibility part of Church dogma, but he also issued his infamous Syllabus of Errors in 1864, a broad attack on rationalism, science, and religious freedom - really a frontal assault on the Enlightenment and most other signs of progress in the previous three centuries. If Kertzer's book does nothing more than direct his reader's attention to this astonishing document, he has succeeded in the historian's task.

Kertzer examines the trial of the Inquisitor in detail and the formidable difficulties facing the prosecution. For example, what crime did the Inquisitor commit when his acts were legal at the time he committed them? Would the new government prove willing to violate the fundamental principle that the accused must have had notice of the illegality of his acts?

As for Edgardo, he remained with the Church fathers until he reached his majority and by then his conversion had firmly taken hold. He went on to become a famed proselytizer for Catholicism especially among the Jewish peoples. This role may help explain why this story has remained untold: it embarrassed Jews and Catholics alike.

Some readers may find the detail devoted to the investigations and trials to be excessive, but bear in mind that Kertzer is writing the seminal history of Edgardo's kidnapping. A fascinating tale full of surprises, very highly recommended. ( )
2 vote dougwood57 | Sep 4, 2007 |
This book was a finalist for the National Book Award, and deservedly so. But the catch is, you probably really have to like a good history; the story is not told in straightforward, narrative style, and it isn't a novel. Parts of it read like one, but it probably isn't a book that you'll want to check out if you're looking for a "folksy" history for the lay person. This book has a great deal to do with the risorgimento, the unification of Italy, and it does give a lot of well-researched historical treatment to Edgar Mortara's story and that of his parents, the Jewish community at the time, and the outrage that was the last straw in the eyes and minds of many calling for the removal of the Pope from temporal power & the elimination of his territory, the Papal States. If you're interested in that topic, Kertzer has a marvelous book called Prisoner of the Vatican, which I can very highly recommend; again, another history.

But let me try to synopsize here. In 1858, the family of Momolo Mortara, living in Bologna, answer the door to find two Inquisition officers at their door, saying that they were there to take away their boy Edgardo, who was just 6. It turns out that when Edgardo was younger, a Catholic servant girl working in the Mortara home thought Edgardo was going to die during an illness, and "baptized" him. The law was that having been baptized (and how a mere girl could do this and have it stick is fascinating reading with long history), Edgardo was no longer a Jew and had to be put under the protection of the Catholic Church. Well, naturally, this didn't sit well with Edgardo's family; the story tells all about their efforts for years trying to reclaim their son. At first, the office of the Inquisition would not even tell them where he was being taken; Edgardo's father, Momolo, was simply told that the boy was going to "someone who is a good family man." (33) Before you think that this was an isolated case, the author notes that "the taking of Jewish children was a common occurrence in nineteenth-century Italy." (34) These types of "clandestine" baptisms occurred often. But they were also punishable by corporal punishment (44), but the cases where this law was actually applied were pretty rare.

One of the most interesting parts of this book was the "clash of two realities," or the Jewish take on the situation v. the Catholic take. The accounts in the newspapers & in reported testimony are absolutely fascinating to read... you can't tell who's telling the truth, although it's easy to see that both sides are embellishing for their own purposes. But even more fascinating is the fact that the news of this kidnapping leaked out of the Bologna borders into Europe & even into America -- there the same polemic started all over again, based on one's side in the religious debate. The case spawned several plays -- for example, the author notes "La Famiglia Ebrea" (The Jewish Family) in 1861 -- in which a Jewish boy was baptized in secret by the family servant & raised by Jesuits. However, in this version, the boy "nourished a smoldering hatred for those who had deprived him of his parents," and eventually came to lead the fight for Italy's unification! (252-253)

Absolutely fascinating; I also found a reference to the testimony of Edgardo Mortara himself, a deposition taken at a time when Pius IX (the pope at the time) was being considered for sainthood: here -- again, you have to kind of take it for what it's worth.

I didn't decide to read this as a part of any anti-Catholic campaign; the premise looked interesting and the subject matter looked intriguing. It is a very well-researched book, and it's obvious the author has a passion for his subject. The link between the kidnapping of Edgardo Mortara and the chain of events leading to unification of Italy is well established in his research.

Very well done, and if you are at all into history, you may really enjoy this. I had also read that at some point there was going to be a film made about this (with Anthony Hopkins as Pius IX), but funding fell through or some such thing.

I'm happy to have had the opportunity to read this one! ( )
1 vote bcquinnsmom | May 10, 2006 |
Kidnapped 6 yo Jewish boy in 1858 collapses the Popes' power in Italy
  Folkshul | Jan 15, 2011 |
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