¿Why is Anti-Semitism dangerous in Portugal and in Spain?
Erica Zeman
Let me start by analysing the condition of the population in their family ties, religious adherents , political view points and economic situation as
best as I can give from my research:
Families built the bulwark of society.
Nevertheless, Spain has the second highest divorce rate, calculated that 85,5 from 100 marriages suffer divorce.
This internal destabilisation of a society and nation is alarming , as the chidden of such traumatic event are far less emotionally mature then children
from a fairly well functioning family.
It must not be dismissed when I state that the lack of identifying themselves with their fathers in particular is a tragic blow and strongly impacts their choice of a leading political figure as young adults.
Spain during Franco's regime prohibited marriages under no circumstances to be be divorced, and soon after his death the New Spanish Constitution shifted the impact of the Catholic Church into the political sphere of legalising divorce as legimite civil right in 1981.
The second generation after Franco's death rediscovers their Catholic roots.
At the present the
According to Sarah Ann Levine on 'Political Correctness in Spain, in 2010, she observed that the concept of this political mechanism or limitation
of the civic liberty e.g. Freedom of Speech was at the time of her studies in Madrid an unfamiliar concept.
Spainish people, in her time felt stretched in relating to Asian people, where as the Spanish Muslim population was a far more familia background in history, presence and culture.
The political landscape in Spain had changed according to the article by Victor Egio in 27.10.2025 , in which he describes the population's general dissatisfaction with the internal pickering of the coalition partners of the Socialist Party under Pedro Sanchez, the left wing Sumar bolstered by the basin and Catalonian national parties.
My research shows that Portugal and Spain have no Muslim presentation in their governments.
Th Muslim population in Portugal is about 0.4 percent of the total population.