They did not need to flee. Spain was never occupied, nor did it have to surrender its Jews.
It takes 6 exclusions to be expelled. But dont let it go to your head it is hard not to get them.
Many.
199,000 people go to Spain every year
They went to southern Europe, North Africa, Arabia, the Near East, and further afield (especially northward, gradually, throughout Europe).
Many carriers go to the alicante airport in spain. They are listed on their official website. I counted approx. 13.
PoliticallyIt doesn't.Spain has always been very Catholic. It is even the state religion.If you go back in history, the Iberian peninsula has seen eras of paganism, Christianity, Christianity vs Islam, and even a few periods dominated by Islam when the Moors nearly conquered the entire peninsula.I am sure that there are a few Jews living in Spain, but the country itself has no ties to the Jewish nation.Jewish History in SpainUmayyad Islamic Spain was one of the Jewish Golden Ages. A number of Jewish poets like Ibn Gabirol and Yehuda Ha-Levi composed beautiful poems and piyyut in Spain. Spain also gave rise to important Jewish theologians like Rabbi Moses ben Maimon (Maimonides) and Rabbi Moses ben Nakhman (Naimonides). Some Jews even considered Toledo, Spain to be the "New Jerusalem". (It is important to note that they did not consider Toledo to be holy, just very special.)After the fall of the Islamic States in 1492, Spain instituted the Inquisition, in which tens of thousands of Jews were killed and the expelled. Many of those Jews fled to Thessaloniki, Greece (in the Ottoman Empire) and Fez, Morocco. This community in exile became known as the Sephardic Jewish Community.
Portugal, North Africa, Ottoman Empire (including what are now Greece, Bulgaria, Serbia and Bosnia), Iraq, Syria, Israel, Bukhara, India and elsewhere. Many were killed or died enroute.
yes she may just because she got expelled from that one school does not mean that she is expelled from every school
some blamed go for it. While others blamed jews for it.
Of course there are Jews in Germany, but under no seecomstance is there or has there ever been only Jews. Many different people have different religions every where you go.
they had nowhere else to go to.
Many, likely, went to both countries.