No, you're mistaken. The law he's talking about here is the "judereglementet" from 1782. It specifically said where in Sweden Jews were allowed to live. It remained in force in Finland after 1809.
The one that you are thinking about is probably the one during WW2 and why some Jews were sent away because they weren't citizens. If you search on YT for "Strangers in a Stranger Land: Finland's Jewish Soldiers in WWII" he mentions both cases and a bit more than this video.
@@seneca983 And it was not only Jews it was everyone not protestant so a church law from the time there was a religious "disagreement" in Europe.... Yes they later made the law you speak about but my point is that it was not against the Jews only it was the religious divide in Europe that created the situation so that they had to make a law like that. Religions have probably caused more harm than good for humanity but no one can really say because the victors wrote the history.
The law was not against jews, it stated that foreigners, any of them, could not live in Finland.
No, you're mistaken. The law he's talking about here is the "judereglementet" from 1782. It specifically said where in Sweden Jews were allowed to live. It remained in force in Finland after 1809.
The one that you are thinking about is probably the one during WW2 and why some Jews were sent away because they weren't citizens. If you search on YT for "Strangers in a Stranger Land: Finland's Jewish Soldiers in WWII" he mentions both cases and a bit more than this video.
@@seneca983 And it was not only Jews it was everyone not protestant so a church law from the time there was a religious "disagreement" in Europe.... Yes they later made the law you speak about but my point is that it was not against the Jews only it was the religious divide in Europe that created the situation so that they had to make a law like that. Religions have probably caused more harm than good for humanity but no one can really say because the victors wrote the history.
Wow! Finally something on Finland's Jewish community!
Look this youtube Jewish history in Finland
"Strangers in a Stranger Land: Finland's Jewish Soldiers in WWII"
Such a mekhaye to hear all this from Monsieur Bolotowsky.
אַדאַנק. ווירקלעך אינטערעסאַנט.
Yiddisch is so beautiful