This article presents a timeline of anti-semitism sanctioned by various states from 1700 onwards.
1700s
1710s
1720s
1730s
1740s
1750s
1760s
1770s
1780s
1790s
1800s
1810s
1820s
1830s
1840s
1850s
1860s
- 1862: In the USA, General Ulysses S. Grant expels all Jews from his military district (an area now comprising Mississippi, Kentucky and Tennessee) during the American Civil War, claiming he did it to stop the illegal smuggling of Cotton. The measure was hugely controversial and reversed by President Abraham Lincoln.[1]
1870s
1880s
1890s
1900s
1910s
1920s
- 1924: The government of the USA imposes massive quotas for immigration, some of which target Jewish immigration from Eastern Europe.[2]
1930s
- 1936 - 1944: The government of Costa Rica restricts immigration for Jews coming into Costa Rica.[3]
- 1937: The government of Mexico restricts immigration from certain countries, notably Poland, in a possible move to prevent Jewish immigration.[4]
- 1937 - 1950: The government of Brazil denies 16,000 visas to Jews attempting to escape persecuation by the Nazis.[5]
- 1938 - 1946: The government of Argentina restricts Jewish immigration.[6]
- 1939: The German Ocean Liner MS St. Louis carries 937 Jewish refugees out of Nazi Germany to protect them from anti-semitic persecution. The governments of Cuba, the United States and Canada refuse to take any refugees. Whilst the governments of the United Kingdom, France, Belgium and the Netherlands agreed to take some refugees. 254 refugees from the ship perished in the Holocaust.[7]
1940s
- 1944: The government of the USA creates various bureaucratic difficulties for Jewish refugees. Research into this subject indicates that between 190,000 and 200,000 Jews could've been saved from the Holocaust had these measures not been in place.[8]
1950s
1960s
1970s
- 1976 - 1983: During the military dictatorship of Argentina, numerous government officials and soldiers hold anti-semitic beliefs and begin to believe in a conspiracy to create a second Israel in Argentina. Despite being about 1% of Argentina's population, Jews made up 12% of the victims of executions.
1980s
1990s
2000s
2010s
2020s
References
- ↑ Wikipedia - General Order No. 11
- ↑ Wikipedia - Immigration Act of 1924
- ↑ Wikipedia - History of the Jews in Costa Rica
- ↑ Wikipedia - History of the Jews in Mexico
- ↑ Wikipedia - History of the Jews in Brazil
- ↑ Wikipedia - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Jews_in_Argentina
- ↑ Wikipedia - MS St. Louis
- ↑ https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/holocaust-long/