Answer:
Arabs did not think about Jews and positively. Primarily because of any historical and social issue between them and because the "myth of the Aryan" had spread throughout Arab culture, promoting a negative outlook on Jews.
Explanation:
The problems between the Arabs and the Jews began since the end of the 19th century and were strengthened during and after the Second World War, when the Jews were presented as an inferior and deprecated race. In addition, during the second world war, the "Aryan myth" was spread in an influential way by many cultures, mainly the cultures considered smaller and weaker, as the Arab culture was considered at the time.
This "Aryan myth" placed white and unmixed ethnicities as superiors, which made the Jews even less so.
A. as an uncontrollable entity
The doctor tells Macbeth that his wife is very ill, and he cannot cure her. Macbeth reacts angrily, telling the doctor he cannot be bothered by such matters. This is so different than the start of the play when Macbeth and Lady Macbeth are shown as a close, loving couple. We know when Macbeth no longer cares about his wife that he is headed for tragedy