The Jewish Conspiracy is a chapter in a ledger entitled In the Wake of the Plague, written by Norman F. Cantor, that puts a spin on the normal narration in the sense that it makes it exciting. The chapter begins with a tale of a plea from a man who claims to ache poisoned a few substantially where common people get their water.
        The case where Agimet puts poison in the wells from which people drink seems to be fairly well documented. The plan was to poison the people who use the water...wells and (they) will have been poisoned by you (Agimet) (Cantor, 148). The Jews were saying that they did this, because they were already facing persecution and they thought this capacity be the solution. If the Jews poison people, maybe they will be leftover alone. Of subscriber line, the general population reacted in a different expressive style than was expected. Once this happened and people found out about it, the Jews were exiled direct off to live in sectors by themselves.
        Because the Jews were living in sectored parts of the city by themselves, they almost seemed to be immune when the plague started (Cantor 152-153). This made it seem like the Jews were responsible for the plague, when of course they werent. Violence was direct at the Jews (Cantor 154). The violence being directed at the Jews helped the political leaders explain where the plague was advent from when other explanations failed. It was a plausible explanation that the people believed at least in part.
        The Jews lost all security until the twentieth century when they ventured into America and Canada (Cantor 157).
The Jewish Conspiracy was a plan that went wrong, and the Jews have paid dearly for it.
Works Cited
Cantor, Norman. In the Wake of the...
Thank you for an kindle probe on historical events which I have not previously known about, and Im a student of hi score. I care your summary of the books chapter on The Jewish Conspiracy. I agree with you that the story puts an exciting spin on history. I will be looking into where I can pick up a copy of Norman Cantors book, In the Wake of the Plague, as your essay has piqued my curiosity enough that I want to read more. handsome work!
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