Abstract

In the Federal Republic of Germany there is a discrepancy between public attitudes towards Jews as measured by polls and what people believe these public attitudes to be. This is due to a two‐fold case of ‘pluralistic ignorance’. On the one hand, a more liberal group tends to believe others’ conservative attitudes have changed less than their own. On the other, people who do hold antisemitic views also want to close the door to Germany's Nazi past and thus minimize the existence of antisemitism.

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