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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 November 2018
With the destruction of the Third Reich and subsequent establishment of two separate and sovereign German states, different perspectives on society and class have resulted in differences in German-Jewish affairs. The Jewish communities in the Federal Republic of Germany, while predicated on the principles of religious corporations, became oriented toward the World Zionist Organization and the State of Israel. Indeed, Jewish life in West Germany soon represented expatriate Israeli existence, and the religious, cultural and political organizations of West-German Jews have become largely extensions of Zionist and Israeli purposes.
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8. Standpunkt, Evangelische Monatszeitschrift, vol. 2 (Berlin: Union Verlag, February 1974), 47.Google Scholar
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10. Criss, Nicholas C. in the Los Angeles Times (October 11, 1977), 8.Google Scholar
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30. Telegram to the World Congress of Jewish Communities, Brussels, dated May 25, 1976 and signed by Dr. Peter Kirchner, as chairman of the “largest Jewish congregation in the German Democratic Republic.”Google Scholar
31. Pommersche Zeitung, Hamburg, Jan. 8, 1972. The anti-communist newspaper ascribed these desecrations to the GDR's “anti-Israelitic” policies. Thereby, the newspaper confused the term anti-Israeli (opposition to the State of Israel) with “anti-Israelitic” (Israelites as members of the universal, theological Israel). In fact, the desecrations described were entirely unconnected to GDR political and ideological opposition to the policies of the Republic of Israel.Google Scholar
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