ISRAEL MUST BE STOPPED NOW !, page-24542

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    https://psycnet.apa.org/record/1997-97489-012

    Jewish self-hatred: The internalization of anti-Semitism.

    itation

    Alperin, R. (2022). Jewish self-hatred: The internalization of anti-Semitism. The Journal of Psychohistory, 49(3), 202–220.

    Abstract

    Throughout history, Jews have been despised and abused. As with other large groups subjected to trauma, they have developed deep psychological scars as well as defense mechanisms for coping with it. One manifestation of this trauma is Jewish self-hatred. Although considered endemic to American Jews, Jewish self-hatred appears to have been largely ignored by psychoanalysts, including Jewish analysts. To understand the etiology and psychodynamics of Jewish self-hatred, and its neglect in psychoanalysis, requires a review of the history and large-group psychology of the Jewish people. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved)


    Self-Hatred Among Jews (1941).

    Citation

    Lewin, K. (1997). Self-Hatred Among Jews (1941). In K. Lewin, Resolving social conflicts and field theory in social science (pp. 133–142). American Psychological Association. https://doi.org/10.1037/10269-012

    Abstract

    That self-hatred is present among Jews is a fact that the non-Jew would hardly believe, but which is well known among the Jews themselves. It is a phenomenon which has been observed ever since the emancipation of the Jews. Professor Lessing treated this topic in Germany (1930) in a book, Der Judische Selbsthass ("Jewish Self-Hate"). Novels like that of Ludwig Lewisohn (Island Within, 1928), which pictures the New York Jew around 1930, and those of Schnitzler, who deals with the problems of the Austrian Jew in the period around 1900, are striking in the similarity of the problems which they show to exist. In these different countries, the same conflicts arise and Jews of the various social strata and professions attempt the same variety of solutions.
    Jewish self-hatred is both a group phenomenon and an individual phenomenon. In Europe, outstanding examples of a hostile sentiment in one Jewish group against another were those of the German or Austrian Jew against the East European Jew, and, more recently, the attitude of the French Jew toward the German Jew. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved)

 
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