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ERLANGER, SIMON (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   089011


Anti-Germans: the pro-Israel German left / Erlanger, Simon   Journal Article
Erlanger, Simon Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
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2
ID:   096642


Real, imaginary, and symbolic roles of Jews in Swiss society / Erlanger, Simon   Journal Article
Erlanger, Simon Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract Numbering just under eighteen thousand, Jews constitute a tiny fragment of Switzerland's population of 7.7 million. Nevertheless, Swiss public discourse is preoccupied with things Jewish. This goes back at least as far as the first centralized Swiss state. The Helvetic Republic, founded in 1798, fell apart largely over the issue of Jewish emancipation. This issue remained at the very center of the Swiss political discourse up to 1868 when, under U.S. and French pressure, Switzerland granted equal rights to the Jews. Having benefited from foreign intervention, Jews in Switzerland have come to symbolize unwanted change and foreign influence. Moreover, the special, bottom-up character of the Swiss body politic, with its semiautonomous cantons and communities, has enabled medieval stereotypes to survive into modernity. The medieval image of the Jew as the religious Other has thus transformed into the image of the Jew as the essential Other against which, for most of the twentieth century, Swiss identity was defined.
Key Words Jews  Jewish Community  Jewish Identity  Swiss Society 
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3
ID:   138845


Swiss Jewry: between continuity and decline / Erlanger, Simon   Article
Erlanger, Simon Article
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Summary/Abstract In 2010, after 146 years of continuous existence, the Jewish community of Lucerne seemed to be on the verge of disappearance. There were only sixty, mostly elderly members. Hugo Benjamin, head of Lucerne’s Jewish community, announced to the media: “I do not know how to go on. In the whole of the canton of Lucerne and central Switzerland, there are only 300 active Jews.” He suggested turning the synagogue—built in 1912 on the model of the neo-Orthodox Frankfurt synagogue, Friedberger-Anlage, into a museum.
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