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I added the sentence about post-1991 emigration out of the ex-USSR to Israel, the US and Germany. The US figure of 250,000 with "refugee" status is accurate, but are there cites anywhere for more accurate numbers to Israel and Germany, and for non-refugees to the US? 13:51, 03 Jun 2005 (UTC)

#REDIRECT Talk:Immigration_to_Israel_from_Arab_lands

Until recently, this was a redirect. If there is a controversy, I'll just turn it back into a redirect. My guess is the focus on the Arab lands is because they focus on Palestinians. Humus sapiensTalk 04:54, 11 Oct 2004 (UTC)

I see. That history explains alot, especially the Talk page from the original link. In that light, you have done a very creditable job of listing the long history of cases of Jewish refugees. The intro just needs to be NPOVed. I don't think the focus on Sephardim in Israel is appropriate for the page title which is much broader. Thanks. Alberuni 05:04, 11 Oct 2004 (UTC)

Israel and jewish refugees

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From the article I see the following: 'The State of Israel (population in 1948 was about 650,000) absorbed approximately 600,000 of these refugees'

I suggest information is added on Israeli policies relating to the refugees as it is not clear how this worked.

Another comment relates to the definition of jewish refugees in the beginning of the article. Is it not recognized that this term is used on all jewish refugees? Tiller1 23:00, 21 Mar 2005 (UTC)

Really? Using a fictional story?

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"475 BCE Persia. Haman plots to expel and kill all Jews."

The entire narrative of Esther is FICTIONAL. It is almost superfluous to mention single points as evidence for the "unhistoric" character of the book. The exegetes have often emphasized how unthinkable a feast that all dignitaries of the Persian court participate in (1:1-4), how absurd a royal decree to all men to maintain the final say in their household (1:22), and how unlikely the promulgation of decrees in all languages of the world empire rather than in the official Aramaic (3:12; 8:9) would be. To these observations is usually added that neither a Vashti nor an Esther were ever queens in the Persian empire, that the only historically verifiable character of the book, Ahasveros or Xerxes I, had a queen by the name of Amestris and that as members of the royal harem neither Esther nor Vashti could have been called 'queen'. Additionally the Persian kings were obliged to choose their queen from one of the seven noble families. Therefore Esther doesn't even come into consideration. A Jew as vizier at the Persian court (8:2; 10:3) is extremely unlikely and a Persian king who sanctions a civil war within his own empire (8:8; 9:11 sq.) entirely unthinkable. Finally, if Mordechai had been one of the exiles who were deported from Jerusalem 597 BC, then he would have been more than 120 years old in the 12th year of Xerxes' reign (3:7) and his cousin Esther would not have been the beautiful young girl who won over the king to elevate her to queen (2:17).— Preceding unsigned comment added by Sickofthisbs (talkcontribs)

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  • What I think should be changed (format using {{textdiff}}):
    Jews expelled from Naples."Jewish migrations in the 16th century". Heimatkunde: Flucht - Migration - Integration in Brandenburg. 2021-01-24. Retrieved 2021-01-24.</ref>
    +
  • Why it should be changed: The link is currently formatted incorrectly meaning that this reference does not appear in the list of references.
  • References supporting the possible change (format using the "cite" button): n/a

Sw257 (talk) 13:34, 30 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]

 Not done The reference seems to show fine now, presumably someone fixed it. I have also added the archive link from 2022 as the original is dead. -OXYLYPSE (talk) 11:37, 11 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

References

  1. ^ Jews expelled from Naples."Jewish migrations in the 16th century". Heimatkunde: Flucht - Migration - Integration in Brandenburg. 2021-01-24. Retrieved 2021-01-24.