It certainly contributed to it, but antisemitism existed in the Roman Empire long before that, and there is good reason to believe that the gentiles who woud convert to Christianity since the 1st century AD simply took their already antisemitic views with them when they entered their new Christian communities. People have often liked to blame their problems on outsiders and minorities, and in Europe, Jews have always been both minorities, and seen as outsiders to first Roman, then Christian society, as they were not only forced to live apart by necessity, law and custom, but were often also transitory settlers, who would be forced to leave their former communities whenever things went bad. And so, we have a long ingrained tradition of both viewing Jews with suspicion and treating them differently than Christians, and of blaming them for other people's misery in times of crisis and hardship.
Antisemitism in Europe has taken many different forms since then, but that core seems to have always remained.
Hitler's antisemitism itself drew upon an antisemitic tradition that was already deeply rooted in German intellectual life. Since many Ashkenazi Jews in Germany had converted to Christianity, or had simply integrated into modern industrial society, the antisemites had come up with a new justification for their antisemitism, a way to single out Jews even after they had become a normal part of industrial European society: "Scientific" antisemitism, or race-based antisemitism. Even conversion and assimilation would keep a Jew Jewish, or so they theorized, because Jews were simply a different race than Germans - intrinsically different in their genetic makeup.
And so, they could justify their antisemitism even in the face of Jews being regular folks who didn't differ in any significant way from their fellow German citizens. But because you couldn't tell a Jew from a Christian at first glance any more, the new racial antisemitism also opened the door to a new paranoia, that of the "secret Jew" lurking in the shadows, taking part in secret conspiracies to be the cause of crisis and hardship, just like they'd always accused the Jews of being cause for crisis and hardship.
Hitler wasn't the first who would use antisemitism for political gain. He wasn't the first antisemite who would link hatred of Jews to nationalism and nationalistic pride. He wasn't even the first antisemitic nationalist who would argue for a genocide against Jews and other "undesirables".
He was simply the most successful of the bunch.
Thank you for that interesting background information Kooky, but it simply reinforces the outcome of cause and effect IMO.
This is how I see the situation through my “Christian” eyes.....
The Jews were always a hated minority because of their beliefs in a single God and their religious customs, so their history is one of bloody conflict with their enemies who always wanted their choice land and to challenge their only God. When they were obedient to their God, he supported them with victory even when they were hopelessly outnumbered.
However, when they strayed from the path of obedience (which was a common problem through all their history) God left them to be conquered by their enemies, not to mention the many times that God punished them with death at his own hand, often thousands at a time. So Jewish history is warts and all, recorded for our benefit as we can see why they lost God’s favor on a regular basis.
On two occasions, they lost their Temple (the very symbol of God’s presence among them) to occupying forces in order to demonstrate his extreme displeasure with them. The first time he allowed a “remnant” of them to return from exile in Babylon and to rebuild their Temple and resume their worship....but as Jewish history attests, they could never stay on track. They always managed, through poor leadership, to adopt false worship and when God sent his prophets to correct them, he found them to be resistant to that correction. Jesus called them, “
the killer of the prophets and stoner of those sent to her” so this sums up their history and the reason why he said....”
your house is abandoned to you”. His next statement was significant because he said that they would ‘not see him again until they blessed the one who comes in Yahweh’s name”. (Matthew 23:37-39)
We can see that this is not something that the Jews as a nation have done for almost 2,000 years, and judging from their own words down to this day, there is no acknowledgement of Jesus as that one. Nor have they ever been commanded to rebuild their Temple. If God was still supporting his nation, they would have evidence of his blessing as they had experienced in the past. But without their Temple, they are unable to offer to God the sacrifices prescribed under their Law, which they say is still in force.
From my own perspective, I do not see the religious Jews as having any evidence of their God’s favor. It seems that they rely on their political allies to protect them, just as the Israelite Kings did in the past, incurring God’s anger for their reliance on foreign powers rather than on Him. I honestly cannot see how they can still cling to their beliefs in the vain hope that God is still with them....they are members of the United Nations Organization, which makes them part of the world....something God never allowed them to be....something Jesus specifically taught his own disciples to avoid. (John 17:16; John 18:36)
So its not anti-Semitism that gives the Jews ongoing grief.....IMO it is a case of the leopard never changing its spots. They are as committed to doing things their own way as they ever were, but the “new covenant” that Jesus instituted on the night before his death, meant that the “old covenant” that governed their lives, is no longer binding.....But because they refused to recognize their Messiah because he did not fit the profile that they gave him, they remain in a spiritual “no man’s land” being as a much a “part of the world”....and as guilty of bloodshed, as any other political nation. (Isaiah 1:15)
The latest news of the stampede by religious devotees in Israel has to be a wake up call, because where was God in that situation? As long as the ancient Jews kept God’s laws, they received his protection from their enemies and He blessed their sincere worship at his Temple.....I do not see that today.....do you?
That is not anti-Semitism, but IMO, simply an acknowledgment of their present state being a result of their well documented past history.