319
The Journal des Débats reports on this outcome of the proceedings that Herr Fould had rejected "in the name of the Israelite religion" the succour which had been offered to it as superfluous and unnecessary; it should, however, also have reported whether Herr Fould had presented a credential which accredited him as authorised for so official a declaration; it should finally also have given its readers information on how it was possible for Herr Fould at all to come forward with a declaration whose meaning, if taken seriously, is no less than that the religion of his co-religionists no longer exists. Herr Fould, however, is not elected and sent to the Chamber of Deputies solely by Jews, not as a Jew, not as a representative of the Jews, not with the authority to represent and interpret the will and views of his co-religionists, but as a deputy of France. He therefore has not at all this one-sided right to declare that for the Jews in France the Sabbath no longer exists — it would, namely, no longer hold good if the commandment of complete rest were abolished and the day's rest limited to rest during a single hour — he therefore also has not the right to declare that Judaism in France has ceased to exist — just as, namely, Herr Martin du Nord saw in the proposal to omit the mention of Sunday in the law the motion for the declaration that Christianity had ceased to exist, with the same right (and this right is perfectly well-founded) the declaration that the Sabbath law no longer has any obligatoriness for the Jew would be the proclamation of the dissolution of Judaism. Herr Fould, however, had no right to this one-sided declaration; as a deputy of France he had only the duty to keep the general interest of the country in view, when a collision occurred, to present it clearly, if a party — and were it even the party of the overwhelming majority — wished to privilege a religion and subordinate the law to the privilege, to protest against it and to move for the abolition of the religious privilege, i.e., as he gave up Judaism in relation to the law, for the complete separation also of Christianity from the state law and for the declaration that Christianity no less than Judaism must be left as a mere private affair to the private judgment of each individual, with reservation of the inviolability of state interests.
[Notes for 319 here]