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"Triple Identity": The Evolution of a German Jewish Arizonan Ethnic Identity in Arizona Territory
GERHARD GRYTZ
MODERN HISTORIANS OF GERMAN immigration often struggle
with the placement of German Jews. Historians of the German experience
in America encounter the dilemma of how to approach the Jewish
segment of the German immigrants and their unique situation. The majority
of them are fully aware of the important role Jews played in the German
American communities, yet they cannot decide whether to treat them
as Germans. The most common approaches by historians of German immigration
are either the complete inclusion of German Jews as Germans
without any reflection on their differences or their total exclusion. Struggling
with the Nazi experience, many twentieth-century historians cannot
imagine that nineteenth-century German Jews identified themselves
equally as Germans and Jews. For many writing after the Holocaust, such
a dual identity is inconceivable. Yet for people in the nineteenth and early
twentieth century, the conditions of the Nazi era were not part of their intellectual
equation. In effect, this divide is counterfactual history, a reading
back into the past the conditions of a later time.
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