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Discussion History Main / AllJewsAreAshkenazi

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Changed line(s) 1 from:
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YEAH-YUH, it is!
to:
YEAH-YUH, it is!
But I mean, there\\\'s even a lot of stuff that \\\"didn\\\'t even happen,\\\" or misremembered dialogue.
Changed line(s) 1 from:
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Removed a list of \
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Removed a list of \\\"aversions\\\" on the examples list. From the AvertedTrope page, \\\"Even though There Is No Such Thing As Notability, averting is generally not an example for mentioning on a trope page, except for tropes that are so common that the list of aversions is actually shorter.\\\" The mere presence of a Jewish character who is or isn\\\'t Ashkenazi is not really worth mentioning, as stated in the trope description.

Here is a list of removed examples.

* Avoided in an issue of the Marvel \\\'\\\'[[ComicBook/GIJoeARealAmericanHeroMarvel G.I. Joe Special Missions]]\\\'\\\' comics. Some Sephardi Mossad agents are masquerading as South American bandits in order to capture a Nazi war criminal. Recondo sees right through their cover.
* Most characters in Creator/EphraimKishon\\\'s stories are Ashkenazim (as the author, who immigrated from Hungary), but there are exceptions, like the Yemenite Jew Sa\\\'adya Shabatai.
* Inverted mightily in Creator/EricFlint\\\'s alternate-history novel \\\'\\\'Literature/SixteenThirtyTwo\\\'\\\' and the Ring of Fire shared universe: Rebecca Abrabanel, the main viewpoint character from the year 1632, is a Sephardic Jew. Unusually well-educated (for the era), she gives the readers a quick infodump on the cultural basis of Sephardim mannerisms during her first appearance in the book.
* Sofia in Mary Doria Russell\\\'s Main/TheSparrow is Sephardic.
* In Faye Kellerman\\\'s Peter Decker/Rina Lazarus mysteries, Peter\\\'s son-in-law (introduced in Street Dreams) is an Ethopian Jew.


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