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Antisemitism

Antisemitism

The Jews are also known as Semitic people, and the culture and virtues of the Jews are known as Semitism. The opposition is discrimination, prejudice or discrimination against Jews. The person holding this position is called anti-Semite. Hostility is generally regarded as a form of racism.

The then anti-wording was coined in 1879 by the German agitator Wilhelm Mar to carry out anti-Jewish campaigns in Central Europe at this time. Although the term now has widespread currency, it is a misnomer, as it implies discrimination against all centimeters. From the expression of hatred or discrimination against various Jews to the public pogroms organized by the public, state police, or military attacks on the entire Jewish community, it can be expressed in various ways. The anti-Nazi anti-Semitism, which ended in the Holocaust, was the racist dimension that it targeted the Jews because of their supposed biological characteristics because of even those who converted themselves to other religions or whose parents were converted. The diversity of this racism against Judaism is simply different from the date of the emergence of so-called “scientific racism” in the 19th century, and from the nature of previous anti-Jewish bigotry. Notable examples of persecution include the previous Rhineland massacre of the First Crusade in 1096, the expulsion from England in 1290, the murder of Spanish Jews in 1391, the persecution of the Spanish Inquisition, the expulsion from Spain in 1492, the Cossack massacre from Ukraine 1648 to 1657. The 1894–1906 France’s relationship with Dreyfus, the Holocaust in German-occupied Europe during World War II, anti-Soviet Jewish policies, and the involvement of Arabs and Muslims in the deportation of Jews from Arab and Muslim countries.

The idea was that Jews were evil during the Protestant Reformation. Although Martin Luther expressed positive feelings about Jews early in his life and relied on Jewish scholars to translate the Hebrew Scriptures into German, he became enraged at Jews for rejecting Jesus. The original term Semite gives the false impression that oppositionism is directed against all Semitic people, including Arabs and Assyrians. With the help of Arab scholars and thinkers in the tolerant society of Muslim Spain, they played a supportive role in transmitting the intellectual elitism of the classical world to the medieval Christian world. With the help of Arab scholars and thinkers in the tolerant society of Muslim Spain, they played a supportive role in transmitting the intellectual elitism of the classical world to the medieval Christian world. The term antisemitic was first used in Germany in 1879 as a scientific-sounding word for Judenhas in print and has been in vogue since then.