the yazidis were and are frly unknown to most, christians in particular know very little about them
you're understating it by "a bit". the accusation here would be that their god is clrly and plnly the devil, that their holy book is inspired by him and that all their feasts were prescribed by him and it wouldn't be "widely believed", it'd be firmly held as a fact by all
The Yazidis were historically despised by local Christians who avoided them, but because they didn't have much power when the Yazidi faith appeared, it was Muslim tribes and leaders who would actively persecute them on various occasions over the centuries. Despite the fact that Muslims and Christians alike believed the Yazidi were devil worshippers, their religion still exists.
...Are you kidding me
OTL Christianity still held the Hebrew Bible as sacred, their God as the True God and the jews as it's Choosen People(granted, depending on the interpretation the Church took that mantle, but still)
This is leagues from literally claiming that God is Evil and the Hebrew Bible conceived by Satan and the jews the evil spawn and worshippers of the Evil God
I don't see how that's any different than the belief that Jews bear the guilt for Jesus's death. Jews weren't even considered the chosen people by many Christians historically, since by rejecting Jesus they gave up that status to the Church.
Unless you're Mel Gibson the held belief is that ALL of humanity was eager to kill God both in their hearts and in practice and Christ died not because of either the jews or the romans but by the Will of God to sacrifice himself and all that stuff
Yes, the Bible does present both the jews and the romans in their respective roles as instruments of that, but you already have to be a antisemite beforehand in order to frame it as "the jews killed God so we gotta avenge hin" as if his death wasnt the entire point of his own freakin book
Matthew 27:24-25: "So when Pilate saw that he was gaining nothing, but rather that a riot was beginning, he took water and washed his hands before the crowd, saying, "I am innocent of this man's blood; see to it yourselves." And all the people answered, "His blood be on us and on our children!"
This passage was historically held by prominent theologians like John Chrysostom to represent a generational guilt of the Jews. It was widely believed by Christians and inspired endless persecution of Jews into the 20th century (and honestly the present day, since every Christian antisemite who commits a crime against Jews believes this). In the Quran, it says the Jews falsely claim to have crucified Jesus (which should show how widespread this belief was), but Jesus tricked them into believing he was dead.
Yes it very much does since for Christianity the religion of Judaism is a heresy competing with itself for the soul of men much like Islam
Which is still different from perceiving it as literal hell cult
It's not realistic to place the conception Christians have of Satanism in the past 200 years onto how a different religion would perceive the Jews, whom are very obviously not secretive occultists associated with crime as Satanists were until very recently. At least other than perceptions of Jews that involved the occult like ritual child murder i.e. perceptions that existed OTL.