Brainliest.
Antisemitism peaked in America in the [years between World War I and II], and was practiced in different ways by even highly respected individuals and institutions. Private schools, camps, colleges, resorts, and places of employment all imposed restrictions and quotas against Jews, often quite blatantly. Leading Americans, including Henry Ford and the widely listened-to radio priest, Father Charles Coughlin, engaged in public attacks upon Jews, impugning their character and patriotism. In several major cities, Jews also faced physical danger; attacks on young Jews were commonplace.
–"The American Jewish Experience in the Twentieth Century: Antisemitism and Assimilation,"
Jonathan D. Sarna and Jonathan Golden
Which forms of discrimination did Jewish people face in America during the 1920s and 1930s? Check all that apply.
-violent physical attacks
-attacks on their character
-unequal access to education
-unequal access to employment
-forced relocation to ghettoes
-imprisonment in concentration camps