No. Jews believe that they were chosen, but this does not connote superiority.
It is worth noting that many non-Jews (as well as less-educated Jews) misunderstand the concept of "chosen-ness". It is not a statement of ethnic superiority in the vein of the übermensch or "White Pride". The Jewish understanding is that the Jewish people were charged with a distinct mission/task that the rest of the world was not assigned and this is to elevate the spiritual character of the world. This charge is very similar to that which monks and nuns take on in Catholicism and nobody chastises them for this act because we understand the hardship that comes out of that level of dedication. Jews are compelled to be so dedicated. That's it. Jews do not claim non-Jews to be inferior, unimportant, unworthy or lacking full rights in this life, or even unworthy of entering "the good place" after death. They, in fact, advocate exactly the opposite (that non-Jews are equal, critical, worthy of rights, have a reserved place in the "good place" after death provided they are good people).
(Another more pop-culturally modern version of this is the idea of the "Fellowship of the Ring" in the "Lord of the Rings". The members of the Fellowship are in no way superior or better than the rest of the inhabitants of Middle Earth, they just have a specific task to which they have been assigned and upon which the entire world depends. People outside the Fellowship are more than capable of helping this mission, and some of them (like King Theoden of Rohan and Faramir of Gondor) certainly do. It is just that the onus of responsibility lies on the Fellowship.)
Orthodox Jews are taught to do everything "by the book" and believe ALL Jews should do the same.
We believe that we were chosen to keep Torah. We do not believe that this makes us better than other people, just that we have a different path to HaShem (The Creator).
To the gentiles = any non Jewish people Romans 11:13 For I speak to you Gentiles; inasmuch as I am an apostle to the Gentiles, .....................
No doubt the first-century Jews of Jerusalem and Galilee saw nothing to convince them that Jesus was other than a wandering preacher, like many others of his time. It is only the gentiles who could not have known about Jesus, other than what they were told, who began to believe in Jesus in significant numbers. Aside from that, in the Tanach, it is specified that HaShem (The Creator) is not man or son of man. The idea that a man is HaShem completely violates the teachings of Judaism.
It is because they simply are better, nicer, more generous, giving and loving than all the other folks who don't realy believe in the Jew Jesus. yes, dry and hot Christians fart more than Jews and are cheaper than anyone.
There were fewer Jews. For the Jews life had changed a great deal. For gentiles, not so much. Most changes to life in Europe at this time were more due to the war than to the Holocaust.
No, cowboys are not better than Indians, though some might believe they are. Of course, others might believe Indians are better than cowboys.
Yes. They did not kill them.
Yes, although Jesus did preach that he had come to save all people and the ministry of St Paul initiated the spread of Christianity to non Jewish peoples in a major way. Peter was the first to bring the Gospel to the gentile Cornelius in Acts 10.Yes, Jesus was Jewish and his Apostles were definitely the first Christians and were also Jewish. Jesus sent the Apostle to preach only to the "lost sheep of the house of Israel" and commanded them "Go not into the way of the Gentiles, ....." Mark 10:5-6.It was Paul of Tarsus, who never walked with Jesus that broke his commandment and preached it to the Gentiles that resulted in present day Christianity.
If some Jews think they are 'better than others' it is no different from some Christians and Muslims who think that morally and spiritually they tower above head and shoulders above ordinary people. In my experience they Jews don't 'bang on' about the subject, though. Perhaps the notion that Jews think they are better is part of the stereotype?
People evangelize for Islam because they believe it to be both the Word of God and because they believe it to be a better moral compass than its competition. In addition, Moslems wish to save others from Eternal Damnation as non-believers (in God, not Islam) or Kafirin and so try to proselytize those who do not believe in the One God with more fervor than Jews and Christians.
Oh yes, Jews are no better (or indeed worse) than any other people.