Anti- Semitism Timeline

  • 1400 BCE

    Abraham

    Abraham
    Abraham's family moved to Egypt and became slaves in the working force.
  • 1280 BCE

    Moses

    Moses
    Moses led the Hebrews out of slavery and parted the Red Sea
  • 807 BCE

    The Belts

    Jews were forced to wear a yellow belt to separate them from the Christian
  • 721 BCE

    Invasion of Israel

    Assyrians invade and conquer Israel's northern tribes.
  • 70 BCE

    Burning of the Jerusalem Temple

    Roman invaders conquer Jerusalem, seize the city, and destroy the temple, which is never rebuilt.
  • Apr 3, 1400

    Abraham

    The descendants of Abraham moved to Egypt and began working as slaves.
  • Jews become Murders

    Several Jews were accused of murdering a Roman Catholic monk and several of his servants.
  • Jewish Child Kidnapped

    Edgardo Mortara was kidnapped, at the age of six, from his Jewish family by Roman Catholic officials after they found out that a maid had secretly baptized him. He was not returned to his family but was raised a Catholic. He eventually became a priest.
  • Transportation of Jews

    600,000 Jews were forcibly moved from the western borders of Russia towards the interior. About 100,000 died of exposure or starvation
  • Civil War in U.S.S.R.

    Two hundred thousand Jews were murdered in the Ukraine alone.
  • Hitler Came Into the Public

    Hitler had published in Mein Kampf in 1925, writing: "Today I believe that I am acting in accordance with the will of the Almighty Creator: by defending myself against the Jew, I am fighting for the work of the Lord." The Protocols are used by the Nazis to whip up public hatred of the Jews in the 1930's.
  • Anti-citizenship

    Jews had their citizenship taken away
  • Stars of David

    Hitler brought back century-old church law, ordering all Jews to wear a yellow Star of David as identification. A few hundred thousand Jews are allowed to leave Germany after they give all of their assets to the government.
  • Murder of Jews During WW2

    Polish citizens in Jedwabne in northeastern Poland killed hundreds of Jews, by either beating them to death or burning them alive in a barn
  • World War 2 ends

    Jewish people regain citizenship and other human rights
  • In Poland

    In some parts of Poland Jews were still being treated with anti-
    Semitism.