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November 05, 1993 - Image 45

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1993-11-05

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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living next door to non-
whites.
According to the survey,
those expressing negative
attitudes toward Jews
tended to be older, less well-
educated and poorer.
The behavior of Jews was
considered agreeable by all
but 8 percent of those asked.
That acceptance level was
bested only by the Chinese.
Only 7 percent of re-
spondents said they did not
consider Chinese people
agreeable.
Gypsies, once again, scored
highest for provoking
hostility.
In the area of intermar-
riage, Britons were also in-
creasingly willing to accept
Jews, said Mr. Singer.
A separate survey showed
that 82 percent of people ac-
cepted the idea of a Jew
marrying a non-Jew, while
77 percent accepted mixed
racial marriages.
In 1967, the figures for this
were 50 percent and 29 per-
cent, respectively.
There was one disturbing
finding regarding Jews in
Britain.
In "looking ahead over
several years," some 25 per-
cent saw anti-Semitism in-

Gypsies scored
highest for
provoking
hostility.

creasing rather than
decreasing.
Tony Lerman, director of
the Institute of Jewish Af-
fairs here, welcomed the
survey. He said it showed
that while "anti- Semitism
worldwide is getting worse,
it is yet to register'' in
Britain. •
On the question of Middle
East politics the respondents
felt more sympathy with
Israel than Arab nations,
but less sympathy than for
the Palestinians.
Asked to evaluate the im-
portance of such surveys,
Mr. Singer said it is vital to
gather comparative data on
other groups because at-
titudes toward Jews cannot
be understood in isolation.
It is for the same reason,
he said, that the AJCom-
mittee examines com-
parative attitudes toward
Jews in a variety of different
countries.
The New York-based
organized has commissioned
the same survey throughout
Eastern Europe and the
former Soviet Union, and a
poll in France is now being
planned. I 1

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