T. Belman. The title refers to “antisemitism” appropriately, whereas the sub-title refers to “anti-semitism”. I suggest the editor consciously did so because that’s the term or the spelling commonly used today. But he is wrong. Obviously an anti-semite hates semites as opposed to only Jews. “Antisemitism” is a unique word pertaining only to treatment of Jews and should be the only spelling used.
When I grew up in the fifties and sixties, in the shadow of the holocaust, no one ever wrote “anti-semitism”. Antisemitism was the only word in use. So, I ask, how and why did this incorrect spelling come into vogue.
The first editor of the Oxford English Dictionary thought the term “anti-Semite” would be short lived and thus did not include it in the original edition of the massive lexicon.
By MARCY OSTER/JTA
Oxford, All Souls College (photo credit: Wikimedia Commons)
The first editor of the Oxford English Dictionary thought the term “antisemite” would be short lived and thus did not include it in the original edition of the massive lexicon.
A 1900 letter by the editor, James Murray, explaining why he omitted the term was discovered recently in the archives of the National Library of Israel in Jerusalem and placed online. The OED was first published in several installments between 1884 and 1928.
Murray, a British lexicographer, was writing to scholar and anti-Zionist Claude Montefiore, great-nephew of Moses Montefiore, one of the most important early supporters of the modern Zionist movement. The letter appears to be in response to a query from Montefiore.
“Antisemite and its family were then probably very new in English use, and not thought likely to be more than passing nonce-words, & hence they did not receive treatment in a separate article,” Murray wrote. “Probably if we had to do that post now, we should have to make antisemite a main word, and add ‘hence antisemitic, antisemitism.’”
Murray said the man on the street would likely have used the term “anti-Jewish.”
He also explained that “the material for anti- words was so enormous that much violence had to be employed” to triage them.
According to the National Library, the term “Semitism” did appear in the first edition of the dictionary, along with mention of the fact that “In recent use,” it had already come to be associated with “Jewish ideas or Jewish influence in policy and society.”
Murray’s letter was uncovered as part of an initiative, supported by the Leir Foundation, to review and describe millions of items in the National Library’s archives, which include personal papers, photographs and documents from modern historical cultural figures.
The OED list of new entries for January contains dozens of items with Jewish content, from “bialy” to “Jewfro” to “yeshiva bochur.”


Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.