Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Just a matter of (quasi) Semitic semantics, after all?

Just a matter of (quasi) Semitic semantics, after all?

Shlomo: It is not my Holocaust, it is the Holocaust! Six million! Think, six million!

…by Jonas E. Alexis and Gerard Menuhin


Gerard Menuhin is a British-Swiss journalist, writer, novelist, and film producer. He is the son of Jewish parents, the American violinist and conductor Yehudi Menuhin, who is considered “one of the greatest violinists of the 20th century.” Menuhim’s mother was a ballet dancer and died in 2003 at the age of 90.[1] He graduated from Stanford University and is the author of the new book Tell the Truth and Shame the Devil.
Jonas E. Alexis: If you have not read Gerard Menuhin’s Tell the Truth and Shame the Devil and you are interested in World War II, Nazi Germany, and other related subjects, then I would highly encourage you to get a copy of the book. In fact, he dedicated the book to “Germany,“ to “Germans who still want to be German,“ and to “humanity.“ It is well documented and the author pulls no punches. Just plain logical deduction and cool arguments. For example, Mehunin cites Israeli ambassador Moshe Leshem saying:
“Israelis and American Jews fully agree that the memory of the Holocaust is an indispensable weapon—one that must be used relentlessly against their common enemy. Jewish organizations and individuals thus labor continuously to remind the world it. In America, the perpetuation of the Holocaust memory is now a $100-million-a-year enterprise, part of which is government funded.”[2]
Jewish Holocaust historian Tim Cole of the University of Bristol agrees:
“‘Shoah [Hebrew for Holocaust] business’ is big business…[In] the twentieth century, the ‘Holocaust’ is being bought and sold. $168 million was donated to pay for the building of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum on a plot of Federal Land in Washington, DC. Millions of dollars have financed memorial projects throughout the United States, ranging from the installation of Holocaust memorials to the establishing of University chairs in Holocaust studies. Steven Spielberg’s movie Schindler’s List netted over $221 million in foreign box offices and even Academy Awards.”[3]
Menuhin takes the prevailing arguments from the Holocaust establishment and deconstructs them with historical facts and evidence, simple logic, and good-old common sense. In this article, he is going to approach the issue with a sense of humor. If you don’t like scholarly studies that much, then put your “sense of humor” hat on. If you do like scholarly studies, you will have a good laugh as well. Menuhin will not disappoint.


Continue

No comments:

Post a Comment