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Bernard Lewis, a lifelong student of Jews and Islam and himself a Jew, reflected on the fourteen centuries of Jewish life under Islamic rule, eight centuries after Maimonides' damning verdict. Lewis wrote: 'The Jews were never free from discrimination, but only rarely subject to persecution.' He noted that the situation of Jews living under Islamic rulers was 'never as bad as in Christendom at its worst, nor ever as good as in Christendom at its best.' Lewis observed that 'there is nothing in Islamic history to parallel the Spanish expulsion and Inquisition, the Russian pogroms, or the Nazi Holocaust.' But he also commented that, on the other hand, there was nothing in the history of Jews under Islam 'to compare with the progressive emancipation and acceptance accorded to Jews in the democratic West during the last three centuries.'11