borjastick wrote:....
What shocked me was those who were talking about the immediate post war period when hundreds of thousands of Ashkenazi jews flooded into the country of Palestine from Europe. The interviewees generally said these ashkenazis were very unpleasant people, with massive egos, a feeling of entitlement and superiority and that they looked down on what could be called real or local jews from the mainly Sephardic branches.
Sometimes they will be brutally honest, it seems.
If the Ashkenazim from Eastern Europe really had that ego... then that's actually telling as well. Imagine a people being routed and humiliated the past ten years... Does one really think they would still have an over the top arrogant attitude then? I'd expect a more sober attitude on their behalf.
The Sephardim are probably more humble, because they lived in countries that were less liberal towards Jews and also not as wealthy. In fact I can imagine the Turks being a bit less benevolent with them than the Germans, Poles or even Russians were. But well, using common sense on historic ethnicities is deemed 'racist' nowadays.
As for the initial batches of Jews from Europe. I'd expect them to come from Germany, Hungary, Poland. But less from the Ukraine or Russia. Still I wonder WHEN Jews were pulled out of the Western Sphere of control in 1941.
I have access to a German universities media library. Interesting how many Jewish publications frequently used the term "Rassismus" (racism) during the 1930s 20-30 years before the term became general usage in the US let alone Europe were this may have taken even longer.
In Germany "Rassismus" reached its peak in the 1970s for the first time... declining for a while and than boosting up again during the later 1980s. It was probably a process to get this to be some smart sounding academic term.
https://books.google.com/ngrams/graph?c ... moothing=3It seems it is now replaced more and more with '-phobias'... Which sounds even more intellectual and really got some gaslighting ring to it.