CNN poll reveals depth of anti-Semitism in Europe

The number of Americans who have never heard of the holocaust is more than 1 in 20.

That which is labelled anti-semitism is decent people's reaction to the crimes of the Zionist apartheid regime. The Zionist regime is earning it's reputation and the memory of the holocaust isn't going to save them from condemnation forever.

And fwiw, there have been far too many exaggerations and lies on what happened during the holocaust to keep the loyalties of people of decency who have been fooled too many times. The exposure of the lies and exaggerations of Elie Weisel was the beginning of the awakening.

And anybody who gives a damn can do their own research.

Yes, it happened. But it in no way justified apartheid and genocide against the Palestinian people.
 
I think a museum and reparations are going to be received very differently, politically. Reparations are viewed as individuals wanting a hand-out, whereas museums are set up to be a public good.

You would do well to learn something about the compromises that needed to be made when the holocaust museum was planned.
 
Feel free to teach me.

I was assuming you are an educated person who would either know or would want to know. There were disagreements on how the holocaust museum ignored other ethnicities and concentrated too much on the Jews. Yes, I will elaborate on that if you show you are interested.

I'm trying to single out a dozen or so people who are worth paying attention to on this forum. Not people who necessarily agree with my views but just rational people who are trying to rise above the rabble. Let me know if you feel it's important?
 
You know its bad when CNN is covering it. Jeremy Corbyn, the leader of the Labour Party, is well known as anti-semetic and iolo on this board defends him. America has her own problems but others looking in have a lot of cleaning up to do in their own houses.




One in 20 Europeans surveyed has never heard of the Holocaust. More than a quarter believe Jews have too much influence in business and finance. One in five believe anti-Semitism is a response to the everyday actions of Jews.

CNN poll reveals depth of anti-Semitism in Europe


Anti-Semitic stereotypes are alive and well in Europe, while the memory of the Holocaust is starting to fade, a sweeping new survey by CNN reveals. More than a quarter of Europeans polled believe Jews have too much influence in business and finance. Nearly one in four said Jews have too much influence in conflict and wars across the world.

One in five said they have too much influence in the media and the same number believe they have too much influence in politics.

Meanwhile, a third of Europeans in the poll said they knew just a little or nothing at all about the Holocaust, the mass murder of some six million Jews in lands controlled by Adolf Hitler’s Nazi regime in the 1930s and 1940s.

Those are among the key findings of a survey carried out by pollster ComRes for CNN. The CNN/ComRes poll interviewed more than 7,000 people across Europe, with more than 1,000 respondents each in Austria, France, Germany, Great Britain, Hungary, Poland and Sweden.

The poll was commissioned and completed before the killing of 11 people at a synagogue in Pittsburgh -- the deadliest ever attack on the Jewish community in the United States.

The poll uncovered complicated, contrasting and sometimes disturbing attitudes about Jews, and some startling ignorance.

Forgetting the Holocaust?

About one European in 20 in the countries CNN surveyed has never heard of the Holocaust, even though it’s less than 75 years since the end of World War II, and there are still tens of thousands of Holocaust survivors alive today.

Lack of Holocaust knowledge is particularly striking among young people in France: One out of five people there between the ages of 18 and 34 said they’d never heard of it.

In Austria -- the country where Hitler was born -- 12% of young people said they had never heard of the Holocaust. Austria also had the highest number of people in the survey saying they knew “just a little” about the Holocaust. Four out of 10 Austrian adults said that.

Across Europe, half of respondents said they know “a fair amount” about the Holocaust, while only one out of five people said they know “a great deal.”

(Americans do not fare any better: A survey carried out on behalf of the Claims Conference earlier this year found that 10% of American adults were not sure they’d ever heard of the Holocaust, rising to one in five millennials. Half of all millennials could not name a single concentration camp, and 45% of all American adults failed to do so.)

But Europeans do believe it is important to keep the memory of the Holocaust alive.

Two-thirds of Europeans said that commemorating the Holocaust helps ensure that such atrocities will never happen again. That figure rises to 80% in Poland, where the Nazis established Auschwitz, the deadliest concentration camp of all.

Half of Europeans said commemorating the Holocaust helps fight anti-Semitism today.

But at the same time, a third of Europeans said that Jews use the Holocaust to advance their own positions or goals. The same number disagreed and nearly a third of respondents expressed no opinion.

Complex relations

Attitudes sharpened when it comes to the relationship between the Holocaust, Israel, Jews and anti-Semitism.

A slight but solid majority of Europeans -- 54% -- said Israel has the right to exist as a Jewish state, with the figure rising to two-thirds in Poland.

A third of survey respondents believe that criticism of Israel tends to be motivated by anti-Semitism, while only one in five said it does not.

Nearly one in five said anti-Semitism in their countries was a response to the everyday behavior of Jewish people.

However, a third of people CNN surveyed said that Israel uses the Holocaust to justify its actions, with half the respondents in Poland agreeing. Only one in five disagreed.

A third of Europeans said supporters of Israel use accusations of anti-Semitism to shut down criticism of Israel, while only one in 10 said that was not true.

A third of Europeans said commemorating the Holocaust distracts from other atrocities today, with higher than average numbers of Germans, Austrians, Poles and Hungarians stating that.

And while many people said anti-Semitism is a growing problem in their countries -- to the extent that 40% said Jews were at risk of racist violence in their countries and half said their governments should do more to fight anti-Semitism -- substantial minorities blamed Israel or Jews themselves for anti-Semitism.

More than a quarter of respondents (28%) said most anti-Semitism in their countries was a response to the actions of the state of Israel.

And nearly one in five (18%) said anti-Semitism in their countries was a response to the everyday behavior of Jewish people.

"I'm not anti-Semitic, but…"

Few people said they personally have an unfavorable attitude toward Jews. Across the seven countries in the survey, one in 10 people said they did -- although the figure rises to 15% in Poland and 19% -- about one in five -- in Hungary.

In every country polled except Hungary, significantly more people said they had a favorable opinion of Jews than an unfavorable one. (In Hungary, favorable topped unfavorable 21% to 19%, with the rest saying they had neither a favorable nor unfavorable view.)

The poll also put a spotlight on European attitudes toward other minorities.

While 10% of Europeans admitted they had unfavorable views of Jews, 16% said they had negative views of LGBT+ people, 36% said they had unfavorable views of immigrants, 37% said that about Muslims, and 39% said it of Romani people.

But while the number of Europeans openly admitting negative attitudes towards Jews was relatively low, CNN questions about whether traditional anti-Semitic stereotypes still resonate across the continent found clear evidence that they do.

In Poland and Hungary, about four out of 10 people said Jews have too much influence in business and finance around the world.

Roughly one out of three people there said Jews were too influential in political affairs around the world, and more than a quarter of Poles and Hungarians said they had too much influence on the media.

A third of Austrians said Jews have too much influence in finance, while a quarter of French and German respondents said so.

About one in five people in all three countries said Jews had too much influence in media, and a quarter said they had too much influence on wars and conflicts.

Numbers

The belief in Jewish power runs in parallel with enormous overestimates of the number of Jews in the world.

About two-thirds of the respondents in the survey guessed too high when asked what percentage of the world is Jewish, and similar numbers got the answer wrong for their own countries.

A quarter of Hungarians estimated that the world is more than 20% Jewish, and a fifth of British and Polish respondents said so.

They were off by a factor of 100. About 0.2% of the world's population is Jewish, according to the Pew Research Center's Global Religious Landscape study.

Four out of ten respondents in the survey thought their own countries were between 3% and 10% Jewish. In fact, Israel is the only country in the world where more than 2% of the population is Jewish.

The overestimates came even as majorities or near-majorities in every country CNN polled said they were not aware of ever having met a Jewish person. Two-thirds of Germans, Austrians and Poles said they didn’t think they had ever socialized with a Jew, while about half of people in Britain, France, Hungary and Austria said the same.

ComRes interviewed 7,092 adults online in seven countries between September 7 and September 20 2018 (Great Britain, 1010; France, 1006; Germany, 1012; Poland, 1020; Hungary, 1019; Sweden 1018; Austria, 1007). Data was weighted to be representative of each country based on age, gender and region.



http://www.cnn.com/interactive/2018/11/europe/antisemitism-poll-2018-intl/

i love it when the white goyim talk about anti semitism. never have experienced it


In our synagogue our rabbi goes back and forth to europe and says the biggest threat to Jews is the rise of the right wing in places like poland and hungry and in germany as it is in the united states

You should check out Jewish sources to learn what is going on
 
Rabbi Efrati was asked to discuss the issue by an oriental studies student, who inquired on Judaism's stand toward the process Europe has been going through in recent years.



Following the election of a hijab-wearing Muslim woman as the mayor of the Bosnian city of Visoko for the first time in continent's history, the student asked the rabbi on the Kipa website: "How do we fight the Islamization of Europe and return it to the hands of Christians and moderates?"



Efrati wrote in response that the Islamization of Europe was better than a Christian Europe for ethical and theological reasons – as a punishment against Christians for persecuting the Jews and the fact that Christianity, as opposed to Islam, is considered "idolatry" from a halachic point of view.



"Jews should rejoice at the fact that Christian Europe is losing its identity as a punishment for what it did to us for the hundreds of years were in exile there," the rabbi explained as the ethical reason for favoring Muslims, quoting shocking descriptions from the Rishonim literature (written by leading rabbis who lived during the 11th to 15th centuries) about pogroms and mass murders committed by Christians against Jews.



"We will never forgive Europe's Christians for slaughtering millions of our children, women and elderly… Not just in the recent Holocaust, but throughout the generations, in a consistent manner which characterizes all factions of hypocritical Christianity…

https://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4299673,00.html
 
I was assuming you are an educated person who would either know or would want to know. There were disagreements on how the holocaust museum ignored other ethnicities and concentrated too much on the Jews. Yes, I will elaborate on that if you show you are interested.

I'm trying to single out a dozen or so people who are worth paying attention to on this forum. Not people who necessarily agree with my views but just rational people who are trying to rise above the rabble. Let me know if you feel it's important?

I'm curious: what were the compromises you're talking about?
 
i love it when the white goyim talk about anti semitism. never have experienced it


In our synagogue our rabbi goes back and forth to europe and says the biggest threat to Jews is the rise of the right wing in places like poland and hungry and in germany as it is in the united states

You should check out Jewish sources to learn what is going on

So CNN and their interviews are just making all this up? It is CNN so its definitely possible.

It's more a political thing than a religious thing to you. antisemitism is ok if the right people are doing it. Jeremy Corbyn being a big one.
 
Arming the Jews and Muslims works so well in the middle east, too bad we can't do the same in Europe and see the same effects.
Fuck that. I want to do that here. We need all the firearms we can get, and build some walls to keep you fucking Hillbilly's out of our State. My God look at what they've done to Cincinnati, Dayton and Middletown. Turned them into the white welfare meth capital of the country. Build The Wall! Build The Wall!!!
 
i love it when the white goyim talk about anti semitism. never have experienced it


In our synagogue our rabbi goes back and forth to europe and says the biggest threat to Jews is the rise of the right wing in places like poland and hungry and in germany as it is in the united states

You should check out Jewish sources to learn what is going on

That's what your rabbi in North Carolina tells you? And who's this rabbi and how many Jews does he claim to speak for? Because I do speak to Jews and they're not saying what you claim your rabbi is saying.
 
Not having heard of the mythical holocaust makes someone antisemitic? You'd expect the high school history books in France would devote several chapters to wailing about the Holocaust. Maybe we should impose sanctions until they're suitable obsessed about the Holocaust?
 
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