It doesn't really matter since you are part of the group. Maybe there were some friends of Jews in the NSDAP, just as there are friends of Christians among Rabbinic Jews, but the party policy is clearly extermination in a moment - ''Let the noẓerim and the minim be destroyed in a moment. And let them be blotted out of the Book of Life and not be inscribed together with the righteous.'' -
https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/birkat-ha-minim
Is this not anti-Christian?
Petosiris, with respect, are you anti-Semitic? Do you actually know the history of German anti-Semitism and the Holocaust?
I've explained to you, as your link surely does, that the ancient prayer against Christians apostates has not been part of the mainstream Jewish liturgy for centuries. If you don't believe me, please phone or email some rabbis in your area and ask for their explanations. I'm very serious about your speaking to knowledgeable Jewish people in your area, since you avoid taking my word for it.
I don't think you actually know any Jews with whom you can discuss their faith. Your "information" comes from age-old religious tensions that surely has no place among people of good will today.
You have a kind of anachronistic reading of Christian belief backward into Jewish texts written centuries before the birth of Jesus. Although this isn't unusual for fundamentalist Christians, it just doesn't hold up to scrutiny.
If you are trying to arm-wrestle me into a position of hating Christians, this would be laughable if it weren't so repugnant. Truly, you do not know me.
Personally, I have read the NT several times over in its entirety, starting when I was 13. Not to mention many subsequent referrals to specific themes and passages.
I view Jesus as a wise teacher, and proponent of a stringent code of personal ethics that few Christians actually follow. Do you follow it? Have you given up all of your belongings?
I grew up in an American family parented by "free thinkers." Their parents and grandparents went through several changes of Christian denominations in Europe and the U. S., ranging from Dutch Reform (Calvinist) to Lutheran to Catholic to Methodist, and simply lapsed--whatever. As a kid who wasn't baptized, my parents nonetheless agreed that I could attend Sunday school at the invitation of a neighborhood friend whose family were Congregationalists. I did this for several years. It's where I got my first Bible. When my neighbours switched to the Episcopalian (Anglican) church, I went to an Episcopalian summer camp for a couple of summers.
In high school and college, I was attracted to the Quakers (Society of Friends.) I attended some of their services in the city where I grew up. None of the members of the "meeting" that I attended evinced the slightest interest in converting me or having me attend, so I let it drop.
As an adult I also spent a lot of time as an adult in a community with many members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. I learned a lot about their faith. We got along fine. Late in life my husband reunited with a long-lost half-brother who was a Catholic priest. We had several family reunions in Germany and Canada, and I attended several Catholic services that this brother conducted. He was a very saintly man IMO, who put his belief into his mission.
I met my Jewish ex husband at age 22, and converted shortly before our marriage when I was 24. We were married for 20 years, and active in the Conservative/Reform Jewish community for most of that time. We spent an academic year in Israel. We sent our two children to Jewish Sunday school. When we separated and divorced ca. 1994 I became inactive in Judaism, a situation that I maintain through today. However, I have never forsworn it As adults my children also chose to be inactive in the Jewish faith.
I will honestly say that I never in 20 years heard vile anti-Christian statements by any Jewish people. Yes, there were a few low-order slurs. (You are familiar with the expression "goy" or goyim.) I never heard anyone curse Christians, and it was certainly never a part of any worship service I attended.
Petosiris, you are struggling to understand Jewish history and Judaism today, in light of the Christianity in which you believe.
I am here to help, if you will let me.