History, asked by 22austingreene, 8 months ago

During the late 1800s in Poland and Russia, anti-Semitism took the form of violent attacks called . These attacks forced many Jews to flee to western Europe. Nonetheless, some Jews continued to survive in eastern Europe in small villages called .

Answers

Answered by AnupamAditya
6

Answer:

While it has been cited as having been expressed in the intellectual and political centers of ancient Greece and the Roman Empire, the phenomenon received greater institutionalization within European Christianity following the dissolution of the ancient center of Jewish culture, Jerusalem, resulting in the forced segregation of Jewish populations and restrictions on their participation in the public life of European society at times.

In the 20th century, antisemitism in Europe, particularly during the reign of Nazi Germany, resulted in the death and dislocation of the majority of Europe's Jewish population

Answered by psjain
17

Explanation: Anti Semitism

  • Anti Semitism is a hostility towards Jews as a religious and racial group.
  • Poland was home to largest and significant Jewish communities in the world.
  • During the late 1800`s in Poland and Russia, anti Semitism took the form of violent attacks called Pogroms.
  • Pogroms were series of genocidal persecutions against Jews.
  • It were mainly inspired by the Russian and Germans authorities.
  • Kristallnacht or Night of Broken Glass was one of the major pogroms carried out by Germans.
  • It was known as Holocaust.
  • It was the largest genocide.
  • Shtetls was a small Jewish town or village in eastern Europe which existed before the Holocaust.

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https://brainly.in/question/13445727

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