sso
| Hello Guest - login | My Account | My bookshelf | My folders
Kotar website
Page:47

tendencies to the United States . Nor , however , was American public opinion favorably inclined to the Jewish capitalists . There were those in the non-Jewish majority who were angered by the wealthy Jews entering Wall Street , although they did not play a particularly significant role in the stock market . Nonetheless , the anti-Semites claimed that Wall Street was controlled and run by Jews , and that the Wall Street traders plotted to steal the money of the poor in America . The established Jewish community felt that the new Jewish immigrants had brought the “ Jewish problem ” with them from Europe , and that this generated anti-Semitism , directed not only against the newcomers , but also at the established Jews . Mass immigration did not cease until the beginning of the First World War in 1914 . More than two million Jews had come to the United States between 1880 and 1914 . Such massive numbers could not be ignored . In New York , for example , a quarter of the voters were Jews , and they constituted a major political force . In the first half of the twentieth century , up to the beginning of the Second World War ( in Europe - in 1939 , and for the United States - in 1941 ) , the bulk of the Jewish population in America was made up of foreign-born Jews . This changed only in the 1950 s , when a younger generation took the place of the immigrants . Most historians of American Jewry speak glowingly of the influence of the Jewish workers ’ organizations on the development of political thought in the United States , and write that they made a considerable contribution to Roosevelt’s New Deal philosophy . These historians prefer to disregard inconvenient truths . A prominent element of the anti-Communist propaganda in the United States , and of the actions against the Communists after the First World War , identified the Communists as Jews . This obviously was not true , but it was accepted as valid and became true by force of its very use against the Jews . About half of those who identified themselves as Communists in New York in the 1920 s were Jews . These numbers are naturally based on an educated estimate , since no actual count was conducted , but it is assumed that all of the factions of the Communist Party of America , even in its heyday , did not number more than 100 , 000 members in total . At any rate , even among the Jews only a small minority were attracted to the Communist Party and its front organizations . Anti-Semitism spread in America in the 1920 s and 1930 s . American society of those days recoiled from the masses of new immigrants who had begun to arrive in the last decades of the nineteenth century . This opposition was not directed solely against Jews : it also included Italians , Poles , and Russians - all those who did not belong to the Anglo-Saxon group depicted as having founded American society . A struggle , began at that time between those who called themselves “ true Americans , ” that is , those who did not belong to other peoples or foreign cultures , and those who prided themselves on bringing new values to America , thereby contributing to American society’s exposure to other peoples ’ cultures . These latter argued that this exposure enriched the homogeneous community that had existed until then in the United States . Following the First World War , the “ true Americans ” succeeded in having Congress pass laws that drastically limited the entry of immigrants from Central , Eastern , and southern Europe . The problem intensified at the end of the 1920 s and during the 1930 s , with the worsening of the Great Depression , the likes of which the United States had not previously experienced . When the Nazis took power in Germany in 1933 and declared their intent to expel the Jews from their land , American Jews began to exert pressure to open the gates for their brethren who were forced to migrate . More than 200 , 000 Jews came to the United States between 1933 and 1941 , but major forces opposed this immigration . The opponents claimed that there was no place in America for the immigrants , not only because they would change the cultural complexion of American society , but

Posen Foundation


For optimal sequential viewing of Kotar
CET, the Center for Educational Technology, Public Benefit Company All rights reserved to the Center for Educational Technology and participating publishers
Library Rules About the library Help