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Napoleon, the Jews and French Muslims

It might all seem rather odd but not everything today is necessarily new - as this article from IHT [originally in the NY Times] reports:

"Not all stories from the past have relevance today. But here is one not very well-known story about the Jews in Napoleonic France that has much relevance to French Muslims in our own time."

Two hundred years ago, in one of his lesser-known demonstrations of meglomania, Napoleon, who had morphed in a few short years from a servant of the French Republic to emperor, reconvened what he called the Great Sanhedrin — a name taken from the governing body of the Jewish community under the Roman Empire. This council of French Jewish leaders was summoned to resolve a series of issues left unsettled since the French Revolution."

Comments

Michael said…
The difference, of course, is that Judaism is not a supremacist religion driven by replacement theology, while Islam is.

That is why there are problems with the muslims in France today.

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