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  • 1
    Article
    Article
    In:  Nationalities Papers 16, 2 (1988) 201-208
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 1988
    Titel der Quelle: Nationalities Papers
    Angaben zur Quelle: 16, 2 (1988) 201-208
    Keywords: Antisemitism History 1800-2000 ; Jews History 1800-2000
    Abstract: Discusses the opinion that the 1907 peasant revolt in Romania had an antisemitic character, expressed frequently in Romanian historiography and by interwar political propaganda. Explains the penetration of anti-Jewish stereotypes in the rural areas, especially in the peasants' perception of the Jew as a non-Christian alien element. Analyzing the Romanian interwar press and results of the 1937 elections, considers the success of the extreme right-wing and antisemitic parties (the LANC, led by A.C. Cuza, and the Iron Guard) as an effect of antisemitic propaganda among the peasants. They were gravely affected by the economic crisis in the 1930s and disappointed by the National Peasant Party. In Greater Moldavia (including Bessarabia and Bukovina) the negative image of the Jew was also blackened by the activities of pro-Bolshevik Jews who supported Soviet territorial claims.
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2011
    Titel der Quelle: Nationalities Papers
    Angaben zur Quelle: 39,2 (2011) 277-294
    Keywords: Karaites History ; Karaites ; Jews ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)
    Abstract: The Nazi attitude regarding the question of whether the Karaites were of "Jewish racial origin" or not was inconsistent, as were their policies toward the Karaites. Before the war began, German scholarship and the SS regarded them as "racial Jews"; the attitude of the Reichsstelle für Sippenforschung, subordinated to the party and the state, was ambivalent. In 1939 the Reichsstelle issued a ruling that the German anti-Jewish laws did not affect the Karaites; however, in the occupied Soviet territories this decree was not always respected. Karaites of German-occupied Lithuania and Crimea, as well as of France, were spared from destruction, while Karaites of Kiev and Krasnodar were killed together with Jews. From 1943 on, there was a clear tendency in Nazi scholarship and policy to dissociate Karaites from Jews in both racial and religious terms, and to unite them with Tatars and Muslims. The motives for this tendency were complicated. Nazi scholars who ruled that Karaites were of Turkic origin were most probably eager to evade accusations of involvement with Nazi racial policies after the impending German defeat. For the German state and the SS, practical considerations, e.g. Germany's relations with the Muslim East, took precedence over the racial policies - the Karaite issue was an important factor in Nazi relations with the Crimean Tatars and Muslims elsewhere.
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