dan rehm 🇪🇺

19.8K posts

dan rehm 🇪🇺 banner
dan rehm 🇪🇺

dan rehm 🇪🇺

@real_daniel67

Twitteur non compulsif Particulary love GB - Italy - Germany - Morocco & much more #SansMoiLe10Septembre

Strasbourg, France 🇲🇫 Katılım Mayıs 2009
4.2K Takip Edilen4.1K Takipçiler
dan rehm 🇪🇺 retweetledi
Papou M
Papou M@MichelF29015597·
Je crois que l’on tient là la photo la plus stupidobobokitch de ce début d’année, vous ne croyez pas !
Papou M tweet media
Français
199
211
1.1K
36.3K
Barefoot Jewess ✡️
Barefoot Jewess ✡️@BarefootJewess·
This is my mother and sister in 1959 in New Orleans, LA. ⚜️🇺🇸 My mother’s family are Alsatian French Jews that emigrated to the Southern US and settled in Louisiana in the mid 1800s. You may not know about French Jews so here’s a little background. The Jewish community in France can actually trace its presence back to as early as the year 6 CE and these early people were most likely descendants of Roman Jews. By the 6th Century, Jews were documented as living in Southern France (Marseille, Arles, Narbonne) as well as Paris, Orleans and Bordeaux. These cities had generally been centers of ancient Roman administration and were located along important trade routes. By 1200 CE, Jewish communities also flourished in the Alsace-Lorraine region of Western France. With the culmination of the French Revolution in 1799, France became the first country in modern Europe to grant Jews equal rights under the law. Still, the question of “if and how to integrate” the Jewish community into French society—a problem known at the time as “the Jewish question”—persisted after the Revolution. The hope was that Jews would integrate into the state like everybody else and that their differences would diminish over time. Proposing to put the question to the Jewish people, in 1806 Napoleon convened an assembly of important leaders in the Jewish community to clarify their political and religious loyalties resulting in Jews declaring themselves first and foremost French citizens with political allegiance to France. As a result, Jews became an integral part of French society and lived openly until 1894 when a Jewish military Captain (Capt. Dreyfus) was wrongfully accused and convicted of spying for Germany. Dreyfus was eventually exonerated, but the decade-long scandal was marked by violent anti-Semitic riots against the Jews. To many, this scandal was proof that anti-Semitism was endemic to Europe. One of the people who felt that way was a young journalist reporting from Paris, Theodor Herzl - who later founded the modern Zionist movement. 💙✡️🇮🇱 The Second World War had a devastating impact on Jews in France. By 1939, there were about 300,000 Jews residing France. In the wake of the German invasion, the government willingly helped the Nazis round up Jews in France. It is a stain on French history with tragic repercussions: by the end of the war, more than 70,000 Jews were deported from France, of whom only about 2,500 would survive. (67,500 were murdered.) In the decades following the war, as France pulled out of Algeria, Tunisia and Morocco, large populations of Jews in those countries fled along with it. Many left for the newly established state of Israel, but others went to France. The migration north was most pronounced in Algeria, where the people already had French citizenship because of the special status of Algeria as a French colony; 90% of Jews in that country headed for France. The influx from North Africa doubled the Jewish population in France and introduced new customs to the increasingly diverse Jewish community. The arrival of Jews from North Africa coincided with a massive influx of Muslim migrant laborers, also largely from North Africa. While there were occasional clashes between these two immigrant populations, Jewish and Muslim immigrants often lived & worked side-by-side in the early years. Beginning in the 1980s, however, tensions began to emerge, especially as the state failed to fully integrate the Muslim community into French society. These tensions were also heightened by the ongoing Israel Palestinian conflict. Meanwhile, French Jews—the third largest Jewish population in the world after America and Israel—are more integrated into French society than ever before. Today there are roughly 400,000 Jews living in France and many are asking if now is the time to stay or leave.
Barefoot Jewess ✡️ tweet media
English
40
93
511
10.2K
Il est l’or 🌱🚲
Mouahaha On lui avait promis une demontada, elle l’a eue 🤣🤣
Il est l’or 🌱🚲 tweet media
Français
11
20
142
3.2K
Il est l’or 🌱🚲
Allez je vous partage l’arrivée de la star, celle qui nous a libérés des écolos 💪 Go Catherine ! Et ciao Barseghian et son attelage de haineux 👋
Français
26
259
1.6K
29K
Renaud Pila
Renaud Pila@renaudpila·
Bayrou battu à seulement 343 voix
Français
9
18
121
10K
Clo Barrons🇺🇦🇫🇷🇪🇺
La victoire de Catherine Trautman Strasbourg est hautement symbolique …Les strasbourgeois ont viré la EELV et ont envoyé un beau fuck à Olivier Faure qui avait désavoué la socialiste. La NUPES est moribonde ce soir. Les militants PS doivent pousser Olivier Faure à la démission.
Clo Barrons🇺🇦🇫🇷🇪🇺 tweet media
Français
12
251
833
6K
dan rehm 🇪🇺
dan rehm 🇪🇺@real_daniel67·
@Clem_Autain Trop facile de tirer un trait sur ce qui s'est passé aujourd'hui et de vouloir dévier sur 2027. Oui au PS, non à EELV et LFI
Français
0
0
0
5
Clémentine Autain
Clémentine Autain@Clem_Autain·
Un seul message ce soir : halte à la guerre des gauches ! Cesser les invectives et construire l’union. C’est notre responsabilité face à l’alliance de la droite et de l’extrême droite. En avant pour une candidature commune de la gauche et des écologistes en 2027 ! Il faut arrêter les conneries. Signez et faites signer la pétition : arreterlesconneries.fr
Français
333
61
228
33K
Lucas Jakubowicz
Lucas Jakubowicz@lucas_jaku·
🌻Les grands perdants de cette soirée électorale sont incontestablement les Verts : Bordeaux, Annecy, Besançon, Poitiers, Colombes... C'est "systémique" pour reprendre un terme qu'aime bien ce parti. Car les autres partis bénéficient globalement d'une prime au sortant.
Français
16
107
539
17.3K
Vyé Nèg
Vyé Nèg@hd_kamanyok·
Au supermarché vous dites "merci" quand la personne devant vous met la séparation sur le tapis de caisse?
Français
1.2K
157
10.1K
904.6K