MikeDunnAuthor (@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social)
Attached: 1 image Did Zionists collaborate with Nazis? Yes, they did. In one example, the Haavara Agreement between Nazi Germany and German Zionists (1933), made possible the migration of 60,000 German Jews to Palestine between 1933 and 1939 and to bring with them a portion of their assets. Widespread persecution of the Jews had already begun in Germany by 1933. The mass migration was considered part of the ethnic cleansing the Nazis initiated against the Jews, but it also benefited the Yishuv (Jewish community under the British Mandatory Palestine) by bringing in needed immigrant labor and economic support, and increasing the numbers of Jews living there. It also saved the lives of thousands of Jews who would have likely been slaughtered in the concentration camps. Then there was Rudolph Vrba, who escaped from Auschwitz in 1944, along with Alfred Wetzler, and tried to warn the Hungarian Jewry of the Nazis’ plans to exterminate the last major surviving Jewish community in Europe. The Vrba-Wetzler Report (the VWR) that they wrote immediately after their escape revealed for the first time to the general public that Auschwitz was not, as was widely believed, simply a concentration and labor camp, but a death camp. The VWR was also so accurately detailed that it could be used to help liberate the camp. However, Vrba and Wetlzer were betrayed by European leaders of the Zionist movement, who silenced them and suppressed the report, putting at risk the lives of hundreds of thousands of Jews in exchange for the hope of getting Nazi support for the continued transfer of Zionists to Palestine. In 1961, The Daily Herald published the following from Vrba’s memoir: “I am a Jew. In spite of that, indeed because of that, I accuse certain Jewish leaders of one of the most ghastly deeds of the war. This small group of quislings knew what was happening to their brethren in Hitler’s gas chambers and bought their own lives with the price of silence … I was able to give Hungarian Zionist leaders three weeks’ notice that Eichmann planned to send a million of their Jews to his gas chambers … Kasztner [leader of Hungary’s Zionist movement] went to Eichmann and told him, ‘I know of your plans; spare some Jews of my choice and I shall keep quiet.’” #nazis #antisemitism #holocaust #zionism #palestine #israel #genocide #concentrationcamps #ruldophvrba #eichmann #hungary #auschwitz #hitler
Jamez Barrett 🜃 ॐ Ⓐ (@didgebaba@c.im)
Attached: 1 image "Female 'Samurai' While 'samurai' is a strictly masculine term, the Japanese bushi class (the social class samurai came from) did feature women who received similar training in martial arts and strategy. These women were called “Onna-Bugeisha,” and they were known to participate in combat along with their male counterparts. Their weapon of choice was usually the naginata, a spear with a curved, sword-like blade that was versatile, yet relatively light. Since historical texts offer relatively few accounts of these female warriors (the traditional role of a Japanese noblewoman was more of a homemaker), we used to assume they were just a tiny minority. However, recent research indicates that Japanese women participated in battles quite a lot more often than history books admit. When remains from the site of the Battle of Senbon Matsubaru in 1580 were DNA-tested, 35 out of 105 bodies were female. Research on other sites has yielded similar results."
Bad Memory. Die deutsche Vergangenheitsbewältigung am Scheideweg
Die Welt rühmt Deutschland für seine Aufarbeitung des Holocaust. Aber die Vergangenheitsbewältigung ist zu einem Instrument der Ausgrenzung geworden. – Dieser Text ist die etwas gekürzte Fassung der redaktionellen Kolumne „Responsa“ von Jewish Currents und erscheint zeitgleich in JC und auf GdG.
Henri Nannen: Antisemitische Propaganda im Zweiten Weltkrieg
Henri Nannen ist eine der großen Lichtgestalten des deutschen Journalismus. Der Verleger aus Emden hat das Magazin "Stern" gegründet und "Jugend forscht" aus der Taufe gehoben. Für seine Leistung wurde er mit dem Bundesverdienstkreuz ausgezeichnet. Doch jetzt werfen Recherchen des Online-Formats STRG_F ein dunkles Licht auf Nannen. Er soll im Zweiten Weltkrieg in leitender Position an antisemitischer Propaganda beteiligt gewesen sein.
Wer war Khalil Sakakini? Eine Tagebuchreise nach Palästina
Der Documenta wird Antisemitismus vorgeworfen. Angeblich sei Khalil Sakakini, der Namengeber des Khalil Sakakini Cultural Center, aus dem die eingeladene palästinischen Künstlergruppe hervorgegangen ist, Nazi-Anhänger gewesen. Aber stimmt das denn auch – und wie kommt ein solches Gerücht zustande?
Depression, Antisemitismus und Geschichtsschreibung: In Erinnerung an Evelien Gans
Die Historikerin Evelien Gans war eine profilierte Antisemitismus- und Holocaust-Forscherin. 2018 nahm sie sich das Leben. Das hatte viele Ursachen, fordert uns aber auch heraus, über die Zumutungen der akademischen Kultur nachzudenken.
Mein Freund Floh
West-Berlin Ende der 80er Jahre: Zusammen mit zwei Freunden gründet der junge, charismatische Floh eine Band. Doch kurz vor dem Durchbruch lässt Floh seine Bandkollegen sitzen und verschwindet. Er verlässt Berlin, wo er sich von Nazis bedroht fühlt. Der wahre Grund wird erst sehr viel später klar. Philip Meinhold erzählt die Geschichte seines Jugendfreundes Floh Roth, einer Band, die groß hätte rauskommen können – und einer psychischen Erkrankung, die viel zu lange nicht erkannt worden ist. "Mein Freund Floh" – eine vierteilige radioeins-Podcastserie von Philip Meinhold. Alle Folgen werden ab dem 21. Januar 2022 veröffentlicht.