Recently a poster posted the following words in a discussion thread under the post about the Pittsburgh Tree of Life Synagogue Shooting.
"So long as it benefits the Jews, it is good, and to heck with everybody else.
To heck with the Christian church-massacre victims getting proper compassion ...as victims of a heinous hate crime.
And to heck with the 100 million non-Jewish victims of 20th-century genocides.
That is the crux of the whole problem."
The poster also implied that media coverage would somehow be more sympathetic to Jewish victims of shootings than to non-Jewish victims of shootings, and that public education on the Holocaust would eliminate public education on other atrocities.
When I read this comment, I thought of the following.
In 1998, Adam Hochschild, of Jewish descent, published King Leopold's Ghost, bringing to light previously obscured atrocities committed in Central Africa by Belgian colonizers. Virtually no one talked about these atrocities before Hochschild published this book. He, one man, opened up a hidden history and began an important conversation about Belgian crimes against Africans.
Anne Applebaum, of Jewish descent, has published numerous books about Communism's crimes, including the Pulitzer Prize winning Gulag, a History.
Lawrence Wechsler, of Jewish descent, wrote Poland in the Season of Its Passion, a book that completely enchanted me with its vivid, warm description of every day Poles in the Solidarity era.
My own work, Bieganski, the Brute Polak, was not published in part or in whole by Polish journals or by Polish publishers, to whom I offered it, but who passed, often telling me quite frankly that they were afraid to be associated with my potentially controversial work.
Rather, the first chapter of the book to appear in print appeared under the direction of Jewish editors, and the book itself was published by Jewish publishers.
I could go on. There are hundreds of books, articles, and media materials, produced by Jews, on the suffering of non-Jewish persons. There are martyrs, as well. The most famous in this country are the two Jewish men, Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner, who gave their lives in the Civil Rights Movement.
At this moment, Robert Bowers, the synagogue shooter, is being treated in a hospital whose president is Jewish. He is being treated by nurses and doctors who include Jews in their number.
From the New York Post:
"'He’s taken into my hospital and he’s shouting, ‘I want to kill all the Jews,' Dr. Jeff Cohen, the hospital’s president and a member of the Tree of Life Synagogue, told ABC.
'The first three people to take care of him are Jewish.'
A nurse whose father is a rabbi also treated Bowers, Cohen said.
'We have a very simple mission at [Allegheny General Hospital] and I imagine it’s exactly the same at the other hospitals in the area: We’re here to take care of sick people. We’re not here to judge you,' Cohen said."
In short, I reject the poster's allegation that Jews care only about Jews, and that public education on the Holocaust necessarily eliminates education on other atrocities. In fact, in many cases, the very texts we rely on to learn about and understand other atrocities have been written, edited, or published by Jews. That is the case when it comes to my own work.
Tuesday, October 30, 2018
Sunday, October 28, 2018
In Solidarity with the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
On
October 27, 2018, an anti-Semite murdered eleven people at the Tree of Life
Synagogue in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. This horrific assault has been called
the worst attack on worshipping Jews ever to occur in the US.
Good
people of every faith stand in solidarity with the Tree of Life congregation
and with Jews everywhere.
***
Some
assume, without reading it, that my book Bieganski
the Brute Polak Stereotype is an anti-Semitic book. Some assume that Poles
and Jews are destined to be at odds.
These
assumptions are false. There is a long tradition of Polish-Jewish cooperation
and mutual affection. That tradition is cited in the book and documented on
this blog, for example in this
series of blog posts entitled "Poland's Importance to Jews; Jews'
Importance to Poland."
Rather,
there are people who monger hatred. Such people can come from any ethnicity.
One such person is Donald Trump. In a 2016 blog post entitled "My
Top Twelve Reasons for Not Voting for Donald Trump," I gave as my very
first reason Trump's hate-mongering. Another reason was his evident personality
disorder. People with personality disorders see themselves in combat with the
world. They recreate around them situations of chaos and conflict. They monger
hatred of one for the other, in order to create chaos and hostility. Trump does
this with his words. He encourages Americans to hate each other.
The synagogue
shooter voiced disapproval of Trump online. The shooter said that Trump did not
go far enough.
But
Trump did allow anti-Semites to support him. Three times, on camera, in an
interview with Jake Tapper, Trump declined to disavow David Duke of the KKK.
Trump's closing
campaign ad was a video of an anti-Semitic fantasy, a dystopian American
where George Soros and other Jews made life impossible. Trump supporters condone
his hate-mongering.
One
of my most anti-Trump acquaintances is Otto, who wrote Ripples
of Sin about growing up with a father who served, with distinction, in the
Wehrmacht during WW II. Because Otto is acutely aware of the forces that
contribute to the rise of evil, he feels it necessary to speak out about
Trump's hate-mongering. I feel the same way. To write Bieganski I spent years of
my life studying hate, atrocity, and WW II. It's my duty to apply my knowledge
and speak up against hate-mongering.
Scholars
far more prominent than I feel the same way. Christopher R. Browning, author of
Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion
101 and the Final Solution in Poland has just published "The
Suffocation of Democracy" in the New
York Review of Books. In this article, Browning writes, "As a
historian specializing in the Holocaust, Nazi Germany, and Europe in the era of
the world wars, I have been repeatedly asked about the degree to which the
current situation in the United States resembles the interwar period and the
rise of fascism in Europe. I would note several troubling similarities and one
important but equally troubling difference."
Yes,
decent people everywhere extend their sympathies to the congregants of the Tree
of Life synagogue. But we must do more. We must speak out against the
hate-mongering of America's current president. We must speak up when Facebook friends
insist that the synagogue shooting never happened, that it is a false flag,
that it was orchestrated by George Soros to manipulate the masses.
We must
speak up when friends engage in that Soviet propaganda topic,
"Whataboutism." Rather than address Trump's hate-mongering, they
attempt to render speech impossible with endless changes of subject. What about
this or that hateful thing that Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama allegedly said?
We
must be brave to do this. Our courage is the least we can offer. My father's
courage was exercised in risking his life, fighting fascists and racists in
World War II. I should be at least as brave as he when confronting liars and
hate-mongers on social media.
Thursday, October 18, 2018
"Kler" or "The Clergy" 2018 Film about Polish Priests Is Controversial
Polish film Kler sparks hundreds of abuse allegations: The Guardian
Kler breaks box office records Hollywood Reporter
Movie Depicts Polish clerics as drunken fornicators and pedophiles Naijanews
Kler shows clergy as much victims as villains The Guardian
Kler turns mirror on audience Irish Times
PiS tries to ban Kler The Telegraph
Kler sparks debate Deutsche Welle
Kler at Rotten Tomatoes
Kler at IMDB
Tuesday, October 9, 2018
Radio Maryja Journalist Calls Clerical Rape Survivor a Whore
Stanisław Michalkiewicz, whose work has appeared on Radio Maryja, called a survivor of clerical abuse a whore. Read more here.
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