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  2. Jewish Cossacks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_Cossacks

    The Zaporozhian Cossacks were generally indifferent to religious matters and bore no particular ill will toward the Jews until the late 1630s. [1] They often included religious Jews among their company, but after the Union of Brest Mazur immigration introduced a negative feeling against the Jews from Poland to Ukraine during the reign of ...

  3. Like sheep to the slaughter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Like_sheep_to_the_slaughter

    "Like sheep to the slaughter" (Hebrew: כצאן לטבח) is a phrase that refers to the idea that Jews went passively to their deaths during the Holocaust.It derives from a similar phrase in the Hebrew Bible that favorably depicts martyrdom in both the Jewish and Christian religious traditions.

  4. Antisemitism and the New Testament - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antisemitism_and_the_New...

    [26] [27] Such visions of an end to the old Temple may be read as embodying the replacement theology, according to which Christianity supersedes Judaism. [ 27 ] The culmination of this rhetoric, and arguably the one verse that has caused more Jewish suffering than any other second Testament passage, is the uniquely Matthean attribution to the ...

  5. Holocaust theology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holocaust_theology

    As a result, God decreed Amalek to be obliterated "from beneath the heavens" (Deuteronomy 25:19). The Hebrew Bible connects "Haman the son of Hammedatha the Agagite" (Esther 3:1), the genocidal antagonist of the Book of Esther, to Agag, king of Amalek, whom the Israelites failed to kill (I Samuel 15:9). According to these verses Hitler may be ...

  6. Auschwitz: How death camp became centre of Nazi Holocaust

    www.aol.com/auschwitz-death-camp-became-centre...

    By the end of 1941, they had killed 500,000 people, and by 1945 they had murdered about two million - 1.3 million of whom were Jewish. Behind the lines, Nazi commanders were experimenting with ...

  7. Martyrdom in Judaism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martyrdom_in_Judaism

    The events described in the Bible known as the Binding of Isaac is the primal and archetypal example of martyrdom in the Torah. Abraham is called upon to fulfill God 's commandment to slaughter his son Isaac , [ 5 ] and Isaac to willingly submit to this and offer his life up as a korban [ 6 ] or "sacrifice" and hence, if need be, dying as a ...

  8. History of the Cossacks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Cossacks

    The Don Cossacks known for their attacks on the Ottoman Empire and its vassals (like the Tatars), although they did not shy away from pillaging other neighbouring communities. Their actions exacerbated the tension at the southern border of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth ( Kresy ), resulting in almost constant low-level warfare in those ...

  9. Jews as the chosen people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jews_as_the_chosen_people

    The Jamieson-Fausset-Brown Bible Commentary similarly argues that God made Israel the "holy nation" to exclusively uphold the promises made to their "pious forefathers". They argue that Jewish supremacist views are unsound, with Jews being frequently described as a small people that engaged in "perverse" moral conduct in the Bible. [62]