I remain as open to the idea that Jack the Ripper was a Jew who died in an asylum not because of any judgement of what I think Jewish (or Polish or Russian) folks were like, and neither would I dimiss it on those grounds. That would be as bad as the delightful folks who didn't believe any Englishman could do such things. There was certainly an element of Anti-Semitism about the popular reports, and if we take the whole of London then Jews formed a minor fraction of the population.
But if we look at the immediate vicinity of the murders? Ah. In that area the proportion of Jews jump right up to the point that they are as likely as anybody else. And there is the thing, as with anybody else we have to judge the theory on the evidence and the facts. Now, I am not going to stick my head on the block and say I am convinced of any one suspect, Jew or not, but I will say that the detectives involved seemed fairly convinced they knew who the best suspect of JTR was, and despite the gaps in our knowledge (such as the Seaside home identification) there is some evidence that they were not just being Anti-semitic when they put a Jewish suspect on the list (but seemingly ignorant by getting the name muddled and confused). Firstly we have the marginalia being notes for personal use, not expected or required to mean anything to anybody else. There would be no reason to make claims about a Jewish suspect here if it wasn't believed. We may not know who the "only officer to get a good look" at JTR was, or if the identification was actually made at the sea side home, but we know some form of identification had been made and it was connected to some half remembered suspect that has cropped up in the personal notes of key detectives.
Further, if we take the general description given: Jewish descent, put in an asylum and died there, we could make arguments for Levy or Cohen, or if we take the name we could reconsider Kominski. Not entirely convincing, but something we should file under "distinctly possible". We aren't going to solve the crimes and the killer was in all likelyhood some complete unknown (who could be a Jew, not a Jew, a Cockney, or any other ethnicity who happened to live in London at the time), and we are probably never going to know all the details why the idea of the Jew kept cropping up with contemparies, but it is a worthy line for investigation. If for no other reason than it will shed light on the investigation (even if it fails to do so on the murderer). I have always assumed that Aberline was mistaking Chapman/Klosowski for another vaguely rememebered suspect who may have had a good reason to be suspected, and may have had a name that could also be mistaken for Kominski, and may have been diagnosed with some form of mania. But the supposition falls down as I honestly can't imagine why he would labour under such a misaprehension for so long and give interviews explaining how and why Chapman was JTR long after it would have come very apparent it wasn't the guy he had been thinking of after all.
Sorry for rambling, probably added nothing new to the conversation there...
But if we look at the immediate vicinity of the murders? Ah. In that area the proportion of Jews jump right up to the point that they are as likely as anybody else. And there is the thing, as with anybody else we have to judge the theory on the evidence and the facts. Now, I am not going to stick my head on the block and say I am convinced of any one suspect, Jew or not, but I will say that the detectives involved seemed fairly convinced they knew who the best suspect of JTR was, and despite the gaps in our knowledge (such as the Seaside home identification) there is some evidence that they were not just being Anti-semitic when they put a Jewish suspect on the list (but seemingly ignorant by getting the name muddled and confused). Firstly we have the marginalia being notes for personal use, not expected or required to mean anything to anybody else. There would be no reason to make claims about a Jewish suspect here if it wasn't believed. We may not know who the "only officer to get a good look" at JTR was, or if the identification was actually made at the sea side home, but we know some form of identification had been made and it was connected to some half remembered suspect that has cropped up in the personal notes of key detectives.
Further, if we take the general description given: Jewish descent, put in an asylum and died there, we could make arguments for Levy or Cohen, or if we take the name we could reconsider Kominski. Not entirely convincing, but something we should file under "distinctly possible". We aren't going to solve the crimes and the killer was in all likelyhood some complete unknown (who could be a Jew, not a Jew, a Cockney, or any other ethnicity who happened to live in London at the time), and we are probably never going to know all the details why the idea of the Jew kept cropping up with contemparies, but it is a worthy line for investigation. If for no other reason than it will shed light on the investigation (even if it fails to do so on the murderer). I have always assumed that Aberline was mistaking Chapman/Klosowski for another vaguely rememebered suspect who may have had a good reason to be suspected, and may have had a name that could also be mistaken for Kominski, and may have been diagnosed with some form of mania. But the supposition falls down as I honestly can't imagine why he would labour under such a misaprehension for so long and give interviews explaining how and why Chapman was JTR long after it would have come very apparent it wasn't the guy he had been thinking of after all.
Sorry for rambling, probably added nothing new to the conversation there...
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