Above all, this country is our own. Nobody has to get up in the morning and worry what his neighbors think of him. Being a Jew is no problem here.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
The Jew does not wish to be isolated. He fears being alone, without allies.
The good Jew is ritually observant and resists assimilation, in some sense living apart, never fitting comfortably into American or any other society.
The Jew is upset because the nations of the world - the United Nations - lash him, brand him as racist and evil, hate him and openly demonstrate their desire to destroy him.
I'm not really a Jew; just Jew-ish, not the whole hog.
Four years ago in speaking of a Jewish nation one ran the risk of being regarded ridiculous. Today he makes himself ridiculous who denies the existence of a Jewish nation.
American Jews are no longer a homogenous minority; we come in all colors and from all corners of the world.
I don't like to publicly acknowledge being a Jew.
When you come to Germany as a Jew you have an uneasy feeling, but I've always felt okay in Berlin.
One must remember that the Jews have one, tiny country, the only place they have the right and capability to defend themselves by themselves. And it is our duty and my responsibility to see that we will never compromise about that.
I really don't even think of myself as being Jewish except when I'm in Germany.
No opposing quotes found.