Telling the story of Sweden’s Jews
11 November 2021

Carl Henrik Carlsson’s book has been nominated for this year’s August Prize in the category of Swedish non-fiction.
"There are many ways of being Swedish, and being Jewish is one of them." These words set the seal on Carl Henrik Carlsson’s history of the Jews in Sweden (Judarnas historia i Sverige). Carlsson is a researcher at Uppsala University, and his book has been nominated for this year’s August Prize in the category of Swedish non-fiction.
As a researcher and teacher specialising in the history of the Jews in Sweden, Carl Henrik Carlsson grasped the need for a new overview. In 1924, the story of Jews in Sweden had been chronicled by the historian Hugo Valentin in a standard work, which was published 40 years later in an abridged version.
“He also writes about his own day, and his account holds up quite well. But a great deal has happened in the world, and in research, since then. Several aspects weren’t addressed. I thought someone should write an up-to-date overview, and guessed that meant me,” Carlsson says with a laugh.
Key research environment
Although the project was his own initiative, he benefited greatly from his research environment at the Hugo Valentin Centre, part of Uppsala University’s Department of History.
“I’d never have been able to do this without being in this environment.”
Having joined the Centre a few years after his PhD on Eastern European Jews who migrated to Sweden in the 19th century, Carlsson became the coordinator of a research network focusing on the history of the Jews. For many years, he has also been teaching courses in the subject at both Uppsala University and Paideia Folk High School in Stockholm.
Alongside his research and teaching, he began writing. The work culminated in a rough manuscript of 600–700 pages that he then cut down to 400.
Relationship with the state
One theme in the book is Jews’ relationship with the majority society – government, Church and opinion leaders. Not until the 1770s were Jews allowed to live in Sweden without having to convert to Christianity.
“King Gustav III was influenced by Enlightenment ideas and economists who believed the Jews were good at business and capable of boosting the Swedish economy. In 1782, Judereglementet (the ‘Jew Rules’ statute) was introduced. It was a compromise between the King's and officialdom’s positive view on the one hand and anti-Jewish forces, such as burghers and priests, on the other,” Carlsson relates.
Eventually, Jews were allowed to live in Sweden on the same terms as everyone else. In the past few decades they have gained national-minority status, and in 2000 Yiddish became a national minority language.
Heterogeneous group with varying attitudes
Trends of the Jewish population are another theme in the book.
“It’s easy to see the Jews as an organic whole when it comes to their relationship with the state, for instance. But they’re a heterogeneous group with class and other differences, and divergent religious leanings, that have sometimes led to conflicts. For Jews, it’s been a balancing act to both adapt and, simultaneously, preserve their uniqueness.”
The book describes periods of large-scale immigration, such as in the decades around 1900 with the influx of Eastern European Jewish migrants into Sweden, and the years up to and after 1969 when Jewish refugees from Poland arrived.
In the 1930s, Sweden’s immigration policy was highly restrictive towards Jews. But in and after autumn 1942, several rescue operations were carried out. Some 12,000 Jewish Holocaust survivors came in Sweden in 1945, although many later left the country.
Emergence of Jewish elite
Carl Henrik Carlsson thinks Jewish integration has been broadly successful. A key year was 1870, when being a Lutheran ceased to be a requirement for a central government position. It became possible for Jews to be employed at universities and become Riksdag members. During this period, industrialism picked up and a Jewish elite emerged in Sweden.
“A few were hugely successful in trade and industry, while many became prominent in cultural life and as patrons for not only hospitals and charities, but also cultural and educational institutions. But such people were only a small fraction of the highly heterogeneous Jewish population.”
Anti-Semitism has been a recurrent theme of Jewish history.
“It affects Jews’ lives – they have to relate to it. People may sometimes get the idea that what happened in the Second World War was an evil aberration; but it’s always existed, expressed in varying ways and degrees of intensity,” Carlsson says.
Anti-Semitism was religious in origin, and many Jews converted to Christianity so that they could be accepted as Swedes. Later, more ethnic or purely racist anti-Semitism gained sway.
Interest in Jewish culture growing
The book also covers the past 30 years, if more briefly. Contemporary anti-Semitism comes up but so, too, does the fact that interest in Jewish culture has been increasing in Sweden.
“Anti-Semitism has become stronger. It takes on various expressions, and comes partly from other groups. At the same time, public awareness has grown. And there’s immense vitality in Jewish life. They’ve become more open, revealed themselves and invited outsiders in.”
One example is Stockholm’s Jewish Museum, which reopened on 6 June (Sweden's National Day) 2019, in new premises: the old synagogue in Gamla Stan. Inside, the building had remained largely unchanged since the synagogue’s closure in 1870.
“At the opening, the motto was: ‘There are many ways of being Swedish, and being a Jew is one of them.’ And with those words, I end the book.”
News
-
Human diversity as a research area
29 maj 2018
Human diversity abounds in language, culture and biology. An understanding of this diversity is central to a lot of research, but it is important to address the ethical issues raised by this research. The Human Diversity Research Network takes an ...
-
Shared meals important for wellbeing
29 maj 2018
How, where and when we eat are key issues for human health and wellbeing. A multidisciplinary research network at Uppsala University aims to deepen knowledge about the significance of meals.
-
Is citizenship necessary for being part of a democracy?
26 april 2018
Nowadays, civil rights are usually connected with citizenship of a country. But how do growing globalisation and more mobility affect this?
-
Mobilising for research on higher education
26 april 2018
Remarkably little research is conducted on higher education in Sweden, but a large share of existing research on the subject is at Uppsala University. Through a research network for research on higher education, researchers are now mobilising to d...
-
Two Uppsala researchers elected at American Academy
25 april 2018
The American Academy of Arts and Sciences recently elected new members. Two Uppsala researchers were elected as international honorary members.
-
The Well-Laden Ship: Viking exhibition soon to reach America
11 april 2018
In late April, a ship will reach New York bringing the exhibition “The Vikings Begin” which will embark on a two-year tour of the US. On display will be a selection of 1,300-year-old items from the pre-Viking Age. Usually in storage at Gustavianum...
-
Art historian receives award from Vitterhetsakademien
09 april 2018
Every year, Vitterhetsakademien (The Royal Swedish Academy of Letters, History and Antiquities) confers prizes for outstanding scholarly achievements. PhD Hedvig Mårdh at Uppsala University was one of the 2017 prizewinners.
-
New Oscar Prize winners announced
21 december 2017
Uppsala University’s Oscar Prize for young researchers has been awarded to Eric Cullhed, Doctor of Philosophy, Department of Linguistics and Philology and Oskar Karlsson, Doctor of Pharmacy, Department of Pharmaceutical Biosciences.
-
New thesis on 21st-century Swedish crime fiction: A Market of Murders
20 december 2017
Why have Swedish detective stories become so immensely popular in our century? What murder motives and weapons are most common in the genre, and why? And is it true that Swedish crime fiction is characterised by social criticism? A new thesis from...
-
Collaboration for new knowledge in culture and society
09 december 2017
Uppsala University is aiming to develop new research collaborations spanning different research subjects. The newly created Centre for Integrated Research on Culture and Society at the Disciplinary Domain of Humanities and Social Sciences will fac...
-
Ola Larsmo and Quentin Skinner new honorary doctors
16 oktober 2017
Author Ola Larsmo and Professor Quentin Skinner, University of London, have been appointed new honorary doctors at Uppsala University’s Faculty of Arts.
-
Equal Opportunities Award goes to Anita Hussénius
12 oktober 2017
Anita Hussénius, head of the Centre for Gender Research, has received the 2016 Equal Opportunities Award for her gender-equal and inclusive leadership.
-
Exhibition: Viking Age patterns may be Kufic script
03 oktober 2017
What was previously thought to be typical Viking Age, silver patterns on woven silk bands, could in fact be geometric Kufic characters. As part of an exhibition at the Enköping Museum, ongoing research is presented where a textile archaeological a...
-
First genetic proof that women were Viking warriors
08 september 2017
New DNA evidence uncovered by researchers at Uppsala University and Stockholm University shows that there were in fact female Viking warriors. The remains of an iconic Swedish Viking Age grave now reveal that war was not an activity exclusive to m...
-
Gustavian style – a Swedish style?
05 juni 2017
Why has the neoclassical Gustavian style become so prominent in the Swedish self-image? A new dissertation from Uppsala University shows how researchers in art history, along with museums, commercial enterprises and the monarchy, have contributed ...
-
Mandelgren Prize to Michael Neiß
13 april 2017
Svenska fornminnesföreningen (the Antiquarian Society of Sweden) has decided to award PhD student and archaeologist Michael Neiß the 2017 Mandelgren Prize for his research on Scandinavian animal art.
-
Archaeologists at the vanguard of environmental and climate research
26 februari 2017
The history of people and landscapes, whether natural or cultural, is fundamentally connected. Answering key historical questions about this relation will allow us to approach our most important environmental issues in novel ways. Today in the ope...
-
New database of Swedish archaeological research in Greece
09 januari 2017
In a recently completed project at the Swedish Institute in Athens, materials from more than a hundred years of Swedish archaeological research in Greece has been made available through the database PRAGMATA. The database includes, among other thi...
-
Bokrelease - Vicke Lindstrand On The Periphery
18 november 2016
Den australiensiske designhistorikern Mark Ian Jones lanserar sin nya bok Vicke Lindstrand On The Periphery. Detta är den första engelskspråkiga publikationen som beskriver Vicke Lindstrands liv och verk.
-
Digitisation of cultural heritage discussed at AIMday
03 november 2016
Cultural heritage has become a field of great importance for the development of modern society. Modern technology creates new opportunities for communicating and presenting cultural heritage, as well as making it accessible. The potential and chal...