But is Fagin a dangerous character? And unfortunately the answer is: oh yes, very much so.
What point are you making? Literature is populated with thousands upon thousands of dangerous characters of all cultures, religious beliefs and skin colours etc.
It surprises me that no one has mentioned the scene near the novel's end in which Dickens actually distances Fagin from Judaism.
Oh he did that far earlier in the novel; Fagin is pictured with a toasting fork cooking sausages for himself and the boys. Sausages that invariable would have contained pork and strictly non kosher.
Did Jewish child gang masters exist in London of the 1830s? Very probably but I think certainly not to the extent that non Jews were. However some Jews were heavily engaged in both women and child prostitution in the 19th century. It had a name ‘White Slavery’ and of course money lenders who date back to Shakespeare’s time and before. Money lending is not a crime in itself but recovering the loan plus the high interest rate charged from destitute borrowers often resulted in vicious criminal practises.
This is not to say that Jewish criminals were more or less evil that their English contemporary’s, but to deny any writer the right to expose their activities on the grounds that they were Jewish doesn’t ring my bell.
Dickens drew his characters from all walks of life and most could be judged as stereotypes or characterisations that made them easy recognizable to the general public which was the audience his work was aimed at.
To infer that Fagin was a dangerous character for the Jews would at least call for some proof that he was i.e. after publication of the book if attacks on the Jewish population occurred. That fact is they definitely did not, actually rather the opposite as around that time the bill for the Emancipation of the Jews was passed.
In the east end of London at that time both Jews and the English poor lived cheek by jowl with each other and suffered equally in the abject poverty together. Both were the victims of the rigid class system, the overhangs of which are still around today. ‘Know your place and stay there; it is the will of God’. If you are looking for a writer who supported the class divide look no further than Agather Christie--- Miss Marple on being told of the murder of her servant girl “Oh such a pity, it takes so long to train another girl”
An attitude that Dickens fought against all of his life.


Reply With Quote
