Thank you for answering my question but I still have some questions regarding the Jews in Europe, Mr. David Elias.
Is that what are Jewish Peoples treated and are like in Europe 2022 specifically in the German Empire.
Is Antisemitic Still a Problem in Europe?
What did the Jewish community during the SGW especially in the Military and Citizen were like in that Period? like Werner Goldberg and Erhard Milch who are German Jews fought in WW2
What do the Average European especially the Germans think of the Jews of their respective country?
What the number of Jewish population in Europe?
And finally, How many Jews migrate to Commonwealth of Zion after The Bloody Collapse of the Ottoman Empire?
Are still sizable Jewish community in Europe after the Commonwealth Zion Migrations ?
By 2022, Jews have legal equality in the European countries where they live.
Social equality is another thing entirely. Throughout East Central Europe, the Jews are staunchly loyal to the royal dynasties established by the Central Powers after the end of the First Great War. This loyalty was only cemented during the Second Great War in light of the danger poised by the Russian Empire. By 2022, most Jewish communities in East Central Europe have a tradition of practicing self defense and of military service.
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The European countries with the largest Jewish communities by 2022 include the German Empire (~800,000 people), the Austro-Hungarian Empire (~2,000,000 people), the Kingdom of Poland (~6,000,000 people), the Kingdom of Ukraine (~2,500,000 people), the Kingdom of Belarus (~2,100,000 people), the Kingdom of Lithuania (~500,000 people), the Grand Duchy of Latvia (~250,000 people), the Kingdom of Bulgaria (~1,000,000 people; Bulgaria includes the majority Jewish city of Salonika), the Kingdom of the Netherlands (~550,000 people), and the Italian Empire (~400,000 people; this includes the Jewish communities of OTL Tunisia and Libya).
The world’s single largest Jewish community by 2022 is in the United States of America (~15,000,000 people).
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While the Jewish communities are still large in a number of European countries, they also tend to be politically fragmented. Some Jews support political parties or movements oriented around Bundism, while other Jews tend to follow parties or moments oriented around World Agudath Israel; within the religious Jewish world in Europe, some powerful Hasidic groups tend to support their own factions outside of the umbrella of World Agudath Israel.
By 2022, the Bundist movement is fading among the Jewish communities in East Central Europe. The fierce opposition by Bundists to the Mizrachi movement became untenable in light of the genocidal campaign launched against the Jews of what was then the Sanjak of Jerusalem and the Vilyat of Beirut by the Ottoman government and the Golden Wolves.
In different countries, including the German Empire and the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Jewish citizens tend to vote for traditional liberal/centrist mainstream political parties.
By 2022, the Jewish communities throughout Europe are adjusting to the surge in popularity of the Mizrachi movement, TTL’s equivalent to Zionism, following the establishment of the Commonwealth of Zion in the early 2010s. While there have not been huge waves of Jewish emigration to the Commonwealth of Zion from Europe in comparison to the major wave of Jewish emigration to the Commonwealth of Zion from the Middle East and North Africa, there were a large number of European Jews, most of whom had military experience, who fought alongside the Mizrachi movement in what became a war of independence against the Golden Wolves and the collapsing Ottoman state.
There are some Jews who have emigrated from Europe to the Commonwealth of Zion by 2022, though this is usually for religious or ideological reasons.
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Unfortunately, antisemitism is still present in Europe by 2022, including in the form of traditional religious Judaeophobia and racist “modern” antisemitism.
In several East European countries, such as the Kingdom of Poland, the Kingdom of Ukraine, the Kingdom of Belarus, the Kingdom of Lithuania, and the Grand Duchy of Latvia, antisemitism is often part of the programs offered by far right nationalist groups opposed to the royal dynasties that were put into power by the Central Powers; these kinds of groups hate any kind of “foreign” presence in their respective countries; these kinds of groups are often the most fanatical in terms of their antisemitism.
Since the fall of the Action Française regime after the end of the Second Great War, and the fall of the Romanov Dynasty in the Second Russian Civil War, there have not been ideologically antisemitic governments in power in any European countries.