Despite their history of suffering and oppression, Jewish people have always been resilient; always able to survive the worst that humanity has thrown at them and even come out of many of these experiences victorious.
Despite their history of suffering and oppression, Jewish people have always been resilient; always able to survive the worst that humanity has thrown at them and even come out of many of these experiences victorious.
Plague, or Yersinia pestis, has “plagued” humankind throughout history. Since at least the reign of Byzantine Emperor Justinian in the 500s—and likely for much longer before that—it has claimed millions of lives. This section presents the voices of people throughout history who have recorded their experiences of the plague and who have also represented it in popular culture.
Originally written by G.W.M. Reynolds and published in The Monthly Magazine in 1837: List awhile, and I will tell / Crimes that caus’d a doom so fell / I Know, then, that as we led afar / The Saviour unto Golgotha, / Where, as the ban of all our race, / The cross was rear’d tow’rds heay’n’s face.