Wednesday 1 July 2009

Nazis or Zionists ?

I am glad you asked...


Moses Hess coined the term national socialism, commonly shortened to nazism, which he intended to use for Jewish nationalism - and this as early as 1862.

The connection between Zionism and German Nazism thus already existed from the beginning and would later on be developed further, both ideologically and politically.

Documents found by the German historian Klaus Polkehn, reveal an extensive co-operation between the leading Nazis and Zionist leaders.

This information was published by the Israeli Professor Israel Shahak in the Israeli newspaper Zo Haderekh on 2 September 1981.

The Nazis and the Zionists had a common interest to frighten European Jews to emigrate to Palestine. The leading Zionist organizations in this close co-operation were Lohamei Harut Israel (later infamously known as the Stern Gang) and Irgun Zvai Leumi. Among the leaders were also Yitzhak Shamir and Menachem Begin, who later both became Israeli prime ministers.

Lenni Brenner divulged in 1984 in his book "The Iron Wall" that the Stem Gang in 1940 delivered a memorandum to a German diplomat in Beirut. It was suggested that the Jews in Poland should receive military training to fight against the British in Palestine.

After the victory, a Jewish State - "a Hebraium" (Hebrew national home) - should be set up, which then should enter into a treaty with Nazi-Germany and be ruled according to the same totalitarian principles. Many Jewish extremist politicians, for example the members of the Revisionist Party in Palestine, were dressed in brown shirts in the 1930s (Donald Day, "Forward, Christian Soldier!" / "Framat, Kristi stridsman!", Helsinki, 1944, pp. 139-140).

The Betar Logo
The Zionist terror organization Betar was organized like the SS. That is why today's Israel is using Nazi methods.

Heinrich Himmler's emissary Leopold von Mildenstein together with Zionist functionaries visited Palestine in 1933 and 1934.

Thereafter articles were published in Goebbels' newspaper Der Angriff that in the most excitable words hailed the Jewish struggle to build new settlements in Palestine.

The majority of the Jews who left or were forced to leave other European countries, preferred to move to Germany (Ingrid Weckert,"Feuerzeichen: Die Reichskristallnacht" / "The Kristallnacht: A Beacon , Tubingen, 1981).

On 23 December 1935, an interview with the German Zionist leader Georg Kareski was published in Der Angriff. He was satisfied with the new Nuremberg laws that strongly prohibited all sexual contacts between Jews and Aryans. In words of gratitude he hailed these laws as a fulfillment of the wishes of Zionism. More

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

They like to keep it in the family.