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Star of David - From Kikepedia
>During the 19th century the symbol began to proliferate among the Jewish communities of Eastern Europe, ultimately being used among the Jewish communities in the Pale of Settlement.
>A significant motivating factor… was the desire to represent Jewish religion and/or identity in the same manner the Christian cross identified that religion's believers.
>The earliest Jewish usage of the symbol was… medieval Arabic literature by Kabbalists for use in talismanic protective amulets…
>The symbol was also used in Christian churches as a decorative motif many centuries before its first known use in a Jewish synagogue.
>Before the 19th century, official use in Jewish communities was generally known only in the region of today's Czech Republic, Austria and possibly parts of Southern Germany, having begun in medieval Prague.
>The symbol became representative of the worldwide Zionist community, and later the broader Jewish community, after it was chosen as the central symbol on a flag at the First Zionist Congress in 1897.
The shape itself isn't Jewish, if anything, the kikes took a perfectly fine symbol for their own kikeish goals. The Hexagram is called Shatkona in Hindu religion (represents male/female power/union or something) and is a fairly common pattern in Japanese art and crafts and is called the Kagome>>564884