Message from @Dostayer
Discord ID: 603681149075718366
They
At least they were not much disadvantaged by being reloacated, as opposed to being jailed
Anyhow
Many jews that were good to tsar remained in the heart of russia with no issues
It's completely different in western Europe and in the Ottoman Empire
Being a jew was not in itself a crime
@Uksio ok fucker
Albeit russia always was casually antisemitic, but mostly on a banter level though
Wow you guys bullying jews smh
Well, the Ukrainians were the real the anti-Semite
ruskyes were antisemite too
like proper anti semite
Yeah...
everybody was
jews were big gai
in fact everyone was
until ww2
Ukrainians got too many of jews sent to them, a lot of them for the crimes (usually economic or trade related crimes)
aside from maybe georgia
Tsar was not sending the best jews to Uraine, as Trump would put it
@Uksio no, it was there when Ukraine was part of the Polish Commonwealth
ye
Bogdan lived during the commenwalth years...
And he's know in infamy here.
Well not here
In the different parts of pre-partition Poland the Polish-Jewish relations ended up looking quite differently: they were the worse in the Prussian part and the best in the Austrian part. And this appears to be largely because of the way the Jooz tended to react to Polish nationalism which, as time went by, ended up being the most defining factor in Polish politics. In the Prussian part, where the Jewish enlightenment was in full force, the Jooz largely assimilated with German society (ironically enough) and had no interest in allying themselves to the Poles who didn;t want to assimilate. In the Austrian part the Jews were largely left alone by the government and a lot of them ended up going quite isolationist (though there were also some stories of integration into the Imperial apparatus as that was seen as a good thing by the Habsbourgs, though not enforced). this lead to them being far more inclined to support Polish nationalist causes, especially since the Habsbourg tactic in Galicia was to pit the Polish and Ukrainian nationalist against one another, and the Jooz preferred the Polish one for a plethora of reasons. In the Russian Empire the situation was more complicated, but indeed the Russian Empire did enforce segregation. The Russian part is also where all the major Polish uprisings took place and the Jewish community understandably didn;t want anything to do with that for understandable reasons (on top of religious reasons) so they alienated *both* sides by not choosing either side basically.
In the Jewish folklore.
i dont speak essay
I'm not speaking to u, so it's fine nigger
understandable, have a nice day
@Tonight at 11 - DOOM well, the Germans pursed a very... Strict... Germanisation policy...
After the war there were 2 major visions of Poland among the Polish elite. A state based on ethnic and cultural uniformity and a federation based on Poland, Lithuania and Ukraine
we need more florida men
the Jews tended to be more inclined towards the latter
understandably
We are in desperate need of an alien invasion