Millennials and the Jewish holocaust

Gilad Atzmon writes:

What is it that causes some to constantly measure how much they are hated? What kind of people demands its host nation be intimately familiar with its past? We learned this week that once again, some Jews are upset by the fact that a considerable segment of the American people refuses to see the past exactly as they themselves see it.

The Jewish Forward reported over the weekend that “survey results on holocaust knowledge in America are in, and the findings are terrifying. Not only do they show a shocking level of ignorance, but they reinforce findings about all adults, as well as trends throughout Western Europe.” Those Americans who worry that Americans are uniquely ignorant should be relieved. Americans are only just as “ignorant”, or maybe as “rebellious”, as Europeans. 

It seems that despite intensive holocaust indoctrination and the fact that holocaust museums and monuments have mushroomed all over the USA, fewer Americans are interested in their Jewish neighbours’ historic suffering, and the question is: what can be done about it? Perhaps they will have to erect a holocaust museum on every American street corner. Maybe they can solve this acute educational problem by attaching a large and heavy iron Star of David to the back of every millennial.

How many Jewish millennials know about the Sabra and Shatila massacre? Or the Kafr Qana massacre?

The Forward reports that two thirds of young Americans didn’t know how many died in the holocaust. For some peculiar reason it is very important to most Jewish institutions that everyone parrots the “six figure’. This is peculiar, as the notion of a genocide is within the realm of the categorical rather than the numerical. But if these institutions insist upon reducing the holocaust into a materialist, quantified figure, I am inclined to ask how many Jews know the exact number of Ukrainians who were starved to death in the Holodomor? How many Jews have even heard of the Holodomor? Which Jews know about Stalin’s Jews as leading Israeli columnist Sever Phlocker identifies them. Do contemporary Jews know about the impact of the Yiddish Speaking Spanish International Brigade on Catholic Spain in 1936? How many Iraqis died in the neocon “war against terror”? I ask because Haaretz writer Ari Shavit wrote in 2003 that “the war in Iraq was conceived by 25 neoconservative intellectuals, most of them Jewish”. If Jewish institutions want everyone else to understand the holocaust in numerical terms, maybe it would be reasonable to expect Jews to know the numbers of colossal crimes against humanity perpetrated largely or partially by Jews. 

The Forward is upset by the fact that nearly half of millennial goyim [gentiles] couldn’t name a single death camp. In return I ask how many Jewish millennials know about Deir Yassin or can name a single Zionist massacre in Palestine in 1948 or before? How many Jewish millennials know about the Sabra and Shatila massacre? Or the Kafr Qana massacre? What do they know about the malnutrition in Gaza caused directly by years of blockade imposed by the Jewish State?

Apparently, “11 per cent of respondents harbour ‘intensely’ anti-Semitic views by agreeing to six or more anti-Jewish statements. That’s 28 million Americans,” the Forward writes. I was curious to find out what are those “intensely” anti-Semitic views. The survey refers to the following list produced by the “Anti-Defamation League” (ADL) in early 2020.

ADL questionnaire

According to the ADL, back in January “44 per cent of respondents agreed with the statement that ‘Jews stick together more than other Americans’, 25 per cent agreed that ‘Jews always like to be at the head of things’ and 24 per cent believed that ‘Jews are more loyal to Israel than to America’”.

Americans should be thrilled by the ADL’s findings and the recent study of millennials’ attitude to Jews. These studies suggest that despite the tyranny of correctness, Americans at large and millennials in particular aren’t blind to the reality in which they live. They still think independently and authentically. Yet, despite the fact that almost half of Americans admit to being aware of Jewish clannish exclusivist culture, America is kind to its Jews as peace and harmony are embedded in its Christian ethos. Yet one issue must be raised. If the ADL and the recent holocaust study represent Jewish American attitudes to their gentile neighbours, it may reveal that 2 per cent of the American population disapprove of the legitimate views of 44 per cent of Americans as “anti-Semitic”. Nearly half of Americans are castigated as “racists” for noticing the generally accepted notion that “Jews stick together”. By doing so, the ADL and its ilk actually confirms that from a Jewish perspective, it is “all about the few not the many”.

Admittedly, the situation is potentially volatile. Still, if fighting anti-Semitism is so important for American Jews, maybe people like Alan Dershowitz, who is struggling desperately to clear his name of underage sex allegations, are not the best candidates to preach to Americans about who they should read and what history and education are all about.

Watch Alan Dershowitz preaching to the American people about history and morality:

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