Isabelle Rohr writes in his new book on "The English right and the Jews" .
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is not re-discuss if Franco did a lot for the Jews or could do much more during the Second World War. Nor where traditional English Judaism ended filosefardismo predominantly on the colonial lobby, with the Count of Romanones to the head, used to penetrate with economic interests in Morocco. What distinguishes this study, among the abundant literature that has been writing about Jews in contemporary Spain, is seeking a full explanation of twentieth-century English anti-Semitism as a historical problem which crosses old and new myths about the Jewish people, deeply rooted in national consciousness, with need to define an international strategy for a country like Spain which humiliated out of the deep crisis of 98 and whose attitude toward the collective Jew could be an important asset in its place in the new international order.
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