American Decades
The Assimilation of the Jews
Decline of Anti-Semitism.
The postwar expansion of the American economy and the movement to the suburbs coincided with a decline in anti-Semitism. Jews, almost all now in their second or third generation in the United States, were able to move up professionally and out geographically. Their success made them the model ethnic group, offering other immigrants an example of what could be done in the United States. In spite of Zionist hopes, few Americans chose to go to the new Jewish state of Israel. By the 1960s many were Americans who happened to be Jews, and successful Americans at that.
Vanishing Judaism?
While they were a successful group, what did it mean to be a Jew in America? Very little, some Jews feared. By 1964 surveys indicated that weekly religious attendance at synagogue or temple was only 17 percent, compared to the 42 percent weekly church attendance among Christians. Some Jewish observers wondered if...
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1960's Religion
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- The Arab-Israeli Six-Day War, 1967
- The Assimilation of the Jews
- Black Manifesto
- Black Muslims
- Books and Movies
- Catholics and Politics
- Charismatics
- Church Unions
- Civil Rights and the Churches
- Communism and the Churches
- Consultation on Church Union
- The Death of God
- Freedom Songs
- On Human Life
- The Mod Church
- New Translations
- Religion in the Schools
- The Second Vatican Council and the American Church
- Vietnam and the Clergy
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Religion, 1960–1969
