anti-Semitism Anti-Semitism since the Holocaust and outside Europe

Anti-Semitism since the Holocaust and outside Europe

For a period of time after the Nazi defeat in 1945, anti-Semitism lost favour in western Europe and the United States. Yet anti-Semitism persisted in many countries. In the Soviet Union, opposition to the State of Israel and to the attempts of Soviet Jews to emigrate was linked to historic Russian anti-Semitism. In postcommunist Russia, political opposition to the regime or to the disproportionate representation of Jews among the powerful oligarchy has often had anti-Semitic overtones. In Poland in 1968, there were anti-Semitic purges, involving firings, denunciations, and expulsions of Jews, that prompted a mass emigration of Jews. More recently, international controversy over the legacies of Nazism in Austria and Switzerland has triggered increased anti-Semitism in those countries. Foreign concern over Kurt Waldheim’s Nazi past provoked angry anti-Semitic reactions among some of his supporters during his successful 1986 campaign for the Austrian presidency. During the late 1990s, when it was revealed that Swiss banks had laundered Nazi gold (much of it likely confiscated from Jews) during World War II and had failed to return money to Jewish depositors after the war, international criticism and demands for restitution provoked increased anti-Semitism in Switzerland. In several European countries, xenophobic and nativistic parties opposed to immigration and the European Union engaged in anti-Semitic statements or actions. Even countries with few Jewish residents can manifest anti-Semitism. The discredited and anti-Semitic Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion enjoyed significant popularity in Japan during the 1980s and ’90s.

For many centuries, Islamic societies had tolerated Jews but had made them pay special taxes, wear identifying clothing, and live in specified areas. Jews were thus treated much as other nonbelievers were in Muslim societies. But the emigration of large numbers of Jews to Palestine in the 20th century and the creation of the State of Israel (1948) in a formerly Arab region aroused new currents of hostility within the Arab world. Because the Arabs are Semites, their hostility to the State of Israel has been primarily political (or anti-Zionist) and religious rather than racial. Whatever the motivation, however, the result was the adoption of many anti-Jewish measures throughout the Muslim countries of the Middle East. In response, most of the Jewish residents of those countries emigrated to Israel in the decades after its founding.

American Jews became an integrated part of culture and society in the postwar United States. Barriers to complete Jewish participation in business and politics fell, and Jews found few obstacles in their way as they sought to participate in American life. Anti-Semitism became a fringe phenomenon with occasional lethal manifestations in hate crimes. Fewer in number, less widespread, and less tolerated by American society, virulent anti-Semitic acts still occasionally occur.

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