If you believe your European ancestors, then you'd believe that there are not only German jews, but European ones.
Jews lived in Europe for centuries, and lived in specific places for centuries. Anti-Semitism was never simply the uniform norm for all European societies. Anti-Semitism was something that typically happened when a king decided he'd rather not pay back his loans, when he could just secure himself politically. Jews got the same treatment the Knights Templar did.
As much as jews were expelled, they were asked for money by the same people. Sometimes more than once. The fact that jews were invited into kingdoms, then expelled, then invited back, then expelled again, then invited back again, shows how the con game works.
The harshest criticism you could give to jews is that they don't learn not to come back when invited, and to stop loaning christians money.
The ancient Europeans never considered jews to be one of them lmao. If they were not considered outsiders they would not have been expelled again and again. Ancient Europeans never considered jews as one of them.
That's too bad that you're wrong. Jews have lived in Europe for millennia, and many are European. The romans understood this concept. There were both jews and christians (off-set jews) living in Rome. Their opposition to both was the fact that the romans saw both as a backward and inferior culture of religious looneys. At no point did the Romans consider either group "non European".
If you believe your European ancestors, then you'd believe that there are not only German jews, but European ones.
Jews lived in Europe for centuries, and lived in specific places for centuries. Anti-Semitism was never simply the uniform norm for all European societies. Anti-Semitism was something that typically happened when a king decided he'd rather not pay back his loans, when he could just secure himself politically. Jews got the same treatment the Knights Templar did.
As much as jews were expelled, they were asked for money by the same people. Sometimes more than once. The fact that jews were invited into kingdoms, then expelled, then invited back, then expelled again, then invited back again, shows how the con game works.
The harshest criticism you could give to jews is that they don't learn not to come back when invited, and to stop loaning christians money.
The ancient Europeans never considered jews to be one of them lmao. If they were not considered outsiders they would not have been expelled again and again. Ancient Europeans never considered jews as one of them.
That's too bad that you're wrong. Jews have lived in Europe for millennia, and many are European. The romans understood this concept. There were both jews and christians (off-set jews) living in Rome. Their opposition to both was the fact that the romans saw both as a backward and inferior culture of religious looneys. At no point did the Romans consider either group "non European".