Classical antisemitism is nowhere near the levels at which it once was. However, there are still some hate crimes, plus the problem of terrorism.
Your question is way too broad for an answer. The Federal Government of the United States never had an established religion. Jews never had any of the European legal restrictions in America. In various places they had various degrees of acceptance or rejection. A Jew was a member of the Cabinet in the Confederacy during the Civil War. There would be places where Jews were not allowed. Unlike Blacks, no one could tell a Jew by observation. In Northern Cities, many Jews from Eastern Europe lived in ghettos. This was not a legal requirement. There was prejudice against people who did not speak good English.
Jewish people have been treated negatively throughout history. They have been enslaved and were murdered in large numbers in ancient and modern times.
In the West bad, in the east tolerated, and sometimes even good.
Americans welcomed Jews with open arms after the Holocaust. They didn't fight a war for nothing so why wouldn't they.
Many of the early Jewish settlers first came to New York's Lower East Side. However, others settled in smaller numbers throughout America.
cool
dick
because they didn't like the way the Jews were being treated by Germany
the japanese used steam boat to travel to the u.s
European colonists came across the Atlantic Ocean to settle in America (mainly at that time the dutch for north-eastern America).
Late eighteen hundreds -- early nineteen hundreds
late 1800 hundreds
in the late 18 hundreds
The immigrants were treated horribly. They were made slaves most of the time. Another thing that they had happen to them was that they had to leave relatives, children etc. behind. It wasn't a very nice life...
no.
The First Crusade was in 1096. In it, thousands of Jews were killed by the Christian crusaders.
Some Jews were transported from Germany to Poland in late 1939 and early 1940 on an 'experimental basis'. Routine transports of Jews from Germany to Poland began on 15 October 1941.
Western Wall Uprising or the Buraq Uprising, refers to a series of demonstrations and riots in late August 1929 when a long-running dispute between Muslims and Jews over access to the Western Wall in Jerusalem escalated into violence. During the week of riots 116 Arabs and 133 Jews were killed and 232 Arabs and 198 Jews were injured and treated in hospital
The people who took refuge in Poland during the Late Middle Ages were Jews form various parts of Western Europe. There is a link to an article on the history of Jews in medieval Poland below.