Friday, January 22, 2010

Today’s great defamation of the Jewish people

From a Word From Jerusalem posting, by Isi Leibler on January 21st, 2010:

...today’s Israel bashers have stooped to the depths of distorting the genocidal murder of the Jews as a vehicle to demonise the descendents of the victims.

...in Muslim countries generally it may have become a primary component of antisemitic delegitimisation of Israel...
...countries that actively promote Holocaust denial have begun citing the criminalisation of Holocaust denial to justify criminal proceedings against any critique of Islam, Islamic practice or Sharia Law. Resolutions to this effect have already been passed by the United Nations General Assembly.

Today, a more potent challenge to the Jewish people has emerged in the trivialisation, distortion and inversion of the Holocaust. The first systematic study of this phenomenon is contained in Manfred Gerstenfeld’s recent book, The Abuse of Holocaust Memory: Distortions and Responses.

Dr Gerstenfeld describes the efforts of some European nations to present themselves as victims of Nazi persecution in order to deflect attention from the role of their own citizens who collaborated with the Nazis or participated directly in the mass murder of Jews. For example, until the “Waldheim Affair”, Austria was notorious for its insistence that it was a victim rather than an accessory, suppressing the fact that the majority of Austrians had been enthusiastic Nazi collaborators.

Baltic countries are now applying moral equivalency between Nazi genocidal policies and Soviet crimes in order to cover up the fact that their own Nazi collaborators and murderers of Jews were never brought to justice.

The most obscene - and growing - of these current trends is that which equates Israelis - descendants of the victims - with Nazis.

This had its genesis in the Soviet-sponsored UN resolution of 35 years ago equating Zionism with racism. It has now been finessed and widened under the direction of Arab and other anti-Israeli agitators. The evil mantra reiterated is that “the victims have become the perpetrators”. In some countries, Holocaust Remembrance Day has even broadened to commemorate the “genocide of the Palestinian people”.

That these attempts to demonise Israelis as Nazis and accuse them of having committed war crimes against the Palestinians have succeeded is evidenced by the threat to issue arrest warrants against visiting Israeli political and military leaders in Britain and elsewhere.

The Nazis’ arch-propagandist Joseph Goebbels mastered the technique of repeating a lie ad nauseam until it was accepted as truth by the masses. Today, the same technique is being employed in this, the greatest of all contemporary defamations of the Jewish people.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Some of the Estonian Nazi criminals were put to trial and hanged, I am sure of it, I have seen articles on this subject in history books.
The question is how many criminals got away and are alive? For example Harry Männil was in Simon Wiesenthal Center's top 10 most wanted list during recent years.
But Harry Männil officially visited Israel in 1979 where he meet no more than Ariel Sharon himself. How come a person who is a Nazi criminal visits Israel with out the slightest guilt? How was this possible?
And Simon Wiesenthal Center also commented subjects that were not their business at all. In 2007 after Russian riots in Tallinn Efraim Zuroff spoke up to support Russian nationalism.

Steve Lieblich said...

No one knew about Harry Mannil's service in the Estonian Political Police when he was invited to Israel as a Venezuelan businessman. The Simon Wiesenthal Center only exposed his crimes in the 1990s.

As far as the so-called "subjects that were not their business", if Estonians want to move a monument honoring the Soviet troops who liberated Tallinn from the Nazis from the center of the city to a relativerly out-of town location because they prefer the Nazis to the Soviets, then that is certainly the business of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, whose raison d'etre is commemoration of the crmes of the Holocaust.