ratcatcher2 says: In Eastern Europe hundreds of thousands of Jews were organised by the Bund, a Jewish socialist group that was bitterly opposed to Zionism. Leon Trotsky and Rosa Luxemburg are among the many Jews who helped lead the wave of revolution that swept Europe after the First World War. The rise of the British Union of Fascists in the 1930s was resisted not by Zionists but by the Communist Party, which recruited heavily among Jewish immigrants already steeped in socialist tradition. The majority of Jews saw the links between racial oppression and economic exploitation – and fought against both. The minority of Jews who were attracted to Zionism were also reacting to antisemitism – but in a very different way. They accepted racism as an inevitable fact of life. Their response was to retreat into Jewish culture and emigrate to Palestine, rather than challenging antisemitism. ... fta A marvellous clip. The Third Reich and the Palestine Question fta Although Zionists today are loath to admit it publicly, the fact remains that the Zionist movement, during the period leading up to the Second World War, worked closely with the National Socialist government in Germany to solve the so-called Jewish question. Needless to say, professional historians have largely neglected this surprising cooperation. Two works by Jewish journalists, Lenni Brenner's Zionism in the Age of the Dictators and Edwin Black's The Transit Agreement, have dealt with the aspects of it, but their books must now be regarded as superseded by Francis R. Nicosi... Thanks for details, ratcatcher2! In German books will not be found such stuff, only the fundamental facts, and not all of them. I think, a main source for the fascist evolution is founded in Hitlers sight of jews: not the religion was for him the sign, that anyone is a jew - he called people jews, who not practice the religion for generations. So themselves got the strong idea of a nation and at least the Europeans too. How the Americans see this, I don't know. But this now seems to turn. From the emigrated russian jews, the biggest part came to Germany. So they are the predominant part of the jews in Germany. The german jews are here in the city lesser than 10%, and they have very differen... |
View the Top Clips from February 1, 2009
Embed This Clip In Your Site...
|
||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||
|
New from the makers of Clipmarks: Amplify.com - Don't just share the news...Amplify it!
|
|||||||||||