Monday, December 15, 2025

The Jews of Europe--a Brief Partial History of their Persecution and Survival

   

The Jews of Europe--a Brief Partial History of their Persecution and Survival

Very few of the Ladino-speaking Sephardic Jews of Andalusia in southern Spain would have survived the 1400s, after the expulsion from there of the Muslim Moors (during whose rule the Jews had flourished), without the main refuge they found, across the Mediterranean, in the Muslim-majority countries of North Africa and West Asia. 
 
A few of these Sephardim, also escaping by sea, found refuge instead in other places, including Protestant countries such as the Netherlands and England, where they congregated in cities like Amsterdam and London, contributing to the growth of business and finance there.
 
Very few of the mainly Yiddish-speaking Ashkenazi Jews, who had settled in Eastern, Central, and Western Europe, would have survived the 1930s and 1940s in Europe had it not been for those same refuges in the Muslim majority countries across the Mediterranean (that had not been occupied by the German and Italian militaries) plus the refuge provided by the USSR--and the eventual liberation of the survivors in Eastern and Central Europe by the Soviet Red Army.
 
Some of the Ashkenazim of Central and SE Europe reached the Mediterranean ports of SE Europe via Yugoslavia and Greece, aided by the multiethnic, communist-led guerillas, based mainly in the Balkan mountains, fighting the German occupation.

This occurred even as the Croatian fascists in Yugoslavia were killing Serbs and were also handing over Jews to the Germans, much as the collaborating governments and groups had done in France and elsewhere in Europe. 
 
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We should note that the Anglo countries had shut their doors to all but a few select Jews during the Shoah or Holocaust that lasted from the 1930s to the end, in 1945, of WWII in Europe.  During this, millions of Jews were killed, along with Gypsies and others, while Slav prisoners were being worked to death.
 
Close to 3 million people were killed, during WWII, in the USSR alone, a number close to those killed in China.
 
However, had it not been for the existence of the USSR, in which they were protected, even more Jews would have been killed by the Nazis and their many collaborating governments and groups. 
 
It was the Soviet Red Army that fought the long, hard land war in Europe that eventually liberated all of Eastern Europe, including especially its surviving Jews, Gypsies, and other minority groups, took Berlin and drove deep into the rest of Germany, where they waited for their Anglo allies to arrive in the last stages of WWII in Europe. 
 
The main contribution of those allies to the fight against the Axis powers in Europe had been the aerial war, waged mainly out of Britain, against the Axis powers in Europe.
 
In sum, had it not been for the Arab, Turkish, and other Muslims, starting in the 1400s, and for the communists and socialists of Eastern and Southeastern Europe in the 1930s and 1950s, there would have been even fewer European Jews left.
 
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The history of mutual animosity, over many centuries, between Jews and at least European Christians, led sadly by the Catholic Church, is well known, as are the atrocities carried out by the European Christian crusaders against Jews and Muslims in Palestine and the rest of the Levant.
 
Shamefully, some Jews, both secular and religious, have been intent, over my lifetime, starting earlier, on doing to the natives of Palestine and adjacent areas what the Romans did to many of the Jews there long ago and what the Catholic Church in medieval times and the Nazis and others, in the 1930s and 1940s, did to the Jews of Europe—with the history of the pogroms in Europe bridging these two great expulsions and massacres of the Jews in that continent. 

I cannot do justice to the sad history of those pogroms in this brief outline.
 
The Jewish Zionists have been strongly supported in this settler colonial venture in Palestine by their Christian Zionist allies, beginning in Britain and later and currently in the USA. These believe that the Jews of Europe and elsewhere must be congregated in Palestine for Jesus to come there and convert the Jews to Christianity, with those resistant to this being cast into Hell.  

A strong "anti-semitic" (meaning anti-Jewish) prejudice has been present within parts of the Christian Zionist movement from its start in Britain and still remains strong among some of its members in the USA.  

One should note that the terms "semite" and "semitic" make sense, much like the term "Indo-European" only as a grouping of languages. Hebrew, along with Aramaic, Arabic, Amharic, Ge'ez, and various other languages, past and present, of Ethiopia, West Asia, and adjacent areas belongs to the Semitic family of languages. The speakers of all of these languages, just like the speakers of English, Hindi-Urdu, and Malay, are typically of many mixed genetic and cultural ancestries.

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Zionism was strongly resisted among Jews themselves, especially the religious Jews, until the horrors of the 1930s and 1940s in Europe. Sadly, some religious Jews have become some of Zionism's most extreme adherents. Others, along with many secular Jews in the USA, Europe, and elsewhere, remain strongly opposed to the creation and extension of a settler-colonial, apartheid Jewish state in Palestine and adjacent areas, at the increasingly lethal expense of the natives there, and to the detriment of Jews everywhere.

This occurred to the Jews in the countries of North Africa and West Asia, who had been living there for centuries and even millennia, speaking the local languages, who began facing resentment and violence after the Naqba or Palestinian Catastrophe in 1948, during which most of the natives of Palestine were expelled, being faced with widespread, organized, terrorist violence carried out by the well armed and organized Zionist militias there. 

The movement of many of these "Mizrahi" Jews from their ancestral lands to what had suddenly become Israel, and what they faced when they got there, has been chronicled by Israeli historians such as Avi Shlaim, who was born in Iraq but had to move with his family to Israel as a young boy.
 
Many of the natives of Palestine, be they Christian, Muslim, Samaritan Judaic, or other, might in fact be the closest descendants of the inhabitants of Palestine in ancient times, including the Jews who were not expelled later by the Romans, soon after the time of Jesus of Nazareth. They may also be still carrying the genes of the Canaanites and others who were there even earlier, along with those of the Arabs and others who arrived there later.
 
2025 December 15, Mon.
Berkeley, California
 
Note: This began as a reply to a nasty comment on Facebook by Jarod Keren. 











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