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JG
 
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Being well-integrated those days did not mean that their religion wasn't
obvious. They went to temple, among other things (and on a different day
than Sunday), and this would be obvious to non-Jews.

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"j" ganz @@
www.sailnow.com

"Vito" wrote in message
...

"Jeff" wrote
While the East-European Jews were often "set apart" by their various
customs, the German Jew were well integrated into society for more
than a century. Extreme prejudice does not require funning clothing
as a target.


I don't know about pre-ww2 Germany since I wasn't there but there must
have
been some differences because the nazis had so little trouble identifying
Jews. By contrast one would have a hard time telling jews from non-jews
anywhere I have lived or worked in America if you didn't know a person
well
enough to talk religion. Extreme prejudice may not require funny cloths
but
it does require something discernable to set the victims apart from the
mainstream. I wonder what that was if German Jews were as well integrated
into the mainstream as US Jews.