• The Necessity of Zionism | Opinion, MENACHEM Z. ROSENSAFT

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    The Necessity of Zionism | Opinion
    MENACHEM Z. ROSENSAFT , GENERAL COUNSEL AND ASSOCIATE EXECUTIVE VICE
    PRESIDENT OF THE WORLD JEWISH CONGRESS
    ON 4/17/23 AT 6:55 AM EDT

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    OPINION
    HOLOCAUST
    ISRAEL
    JEWS
    WORLD WAR II

    Exactly 78 years ago on April 15, when British troops entered the Nazi concentration camp of Bergen-Belsen not far from the German city of
    Hanover, they came face-to-face with human misery for which they were
    totally unprepared. Upward of 10,000 emaciated corpses lay scattered
    about the camp and more than 55,000 prisoners, the overwhelming majority
    of them Jews, were suffering from a combination of typhus, tuberculosis, dysentery, extreme malnutrition, and countless other virulent diseases.

    In addition to their dire physical condition, the survivors, both my
    parents among them, were forced to confront a sense of utter isolation
    and abandonment. "For the greater part of the liberated Jews of
    Bergen-Belsen," my mother recalled many years later, "there was no
    ecstasy, no joy at our liberation. We had lost our families, our homes.
    We had no place to go, nobody to hug. Nobody was waiting for us
    anywhere. We had been liberated from the fear of death, but we were not
    free from the fear of life."

    This fear of life was in large part due to the realization by many of
    the survivors that they indeed had nowhere to go after the end of the
    war. While the liberated Jews from western Europe and Czechoslovakia
    were repatriated in a matter of months, most of the survivors from
    eastern Europe—especially those from Poland—were unwilling to return to their countries of origin. Their homes there, their communities, had
    been destroyed. Most if not all of their families had been murdered.
    With only a very few exceptions, their Christian neighbors had, at best,
    been indifferent to their suffering. What they wanted now was a new
    beginning in a place that was not filled with ghosts, that did not evoke nightmares.

    Marking the Holocaust
    Israel's President Isaac Herzog looks on during a visit to the
    Gedenkstaette Bergen-Belsen Memorial, site of the Bergen-Belsen Nazi concentration camp in September 2022.
    RONNY HARTMANN/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES
    NEWSWEEK NEWSLETTER SIGN-UP >
    To their dismay, they discovered that they were stranded. The British
    only allowed a miniscule number of them to enter Palestine, and
    restrictive immigration laws kept the gates of the United States,
    Canada, Australia and other Western countries closed to them.

    Yet the Jewish survivors in Displaced Persons camps throughout Germany, Austria, and Italy did not give in to despair. They had been freed from
    the persecution and oppression they had endured under the Nazis and
    their accomplices, and now they were determined to claim and affirm
    their own separate Jewish national identity in the form of a politically
    and spiritually redemptive Zionism. The creation of a Jewish state in
    what was then still British-Mandate Palestine was far more than a
    practical goal. It was the one ideal that had not been torn from them
    and that allowed them to retain the hope that an affirmative future,
    beyond gas chambers, mass-graves and ashes, was still possible.

    In the Bergen-Belsen DP camp, where I was born in 1948, a popularly
    elected Jewish leadership headed by my father, Josef Rosensaft, made
    Zionism the order of the day. At the first Congress of Liberated Jews in
    the British Zone of Germany, convened in September 1945 in Belsen by my
    father and his colleagues without permission from the British military authorities, the survivors formally adopted a resolution calling for the establishment of a Jewish state in Palestine.

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    Two months later, my father denounced the British government's stifling
    of "Jewish nationalists and Zionist activities" at Belsen in the pages
    of The New York Times. He further charged "that the British exerted
    censorship over the inmates' news sheets in that the Jews are not
    allowed to proclaim in print their desire to emigrate to Palestine."

    In December 1945, my father told representatives of American Jewry
    assembled at the first post-war conference of the United Jewish Appeal
    in Atlantic City, New Jersey, that the survivors' sole hope was
    immigration to Palestine, the only place in the world "willing, able and
    ready to open its doors to the broken and shattered Jews of war-ravaged Europe." The following week, he declared at an emergency conference on Palestine in New York City: "We know that the English are prepared to
    stop us with machine guns. But machine guns cannot stop us."

    In early 1946, he told the Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry on
    Palestine that if the survivors would not be allowed to go to Palestine,
    "We shall go back to Belsen, Dachau, Buchenwald and Auschwitz, and you
    will bear the moral responsibility for it."

    Small wonder, then, that the British authorities considered my father to
    be an "extreme Zionist" and a "dangerous troublemaker."

    My father, who taught me that love of the Jewish people and love of the
    State of Israel are the most important elements of Jewish leadership, understood that the goal of a Jewish state was a spiritual lifeline that
    gave the survivors of Auschwitz, Treblinka, Belsen, and all the other
    centers of horror a sense of purpose and a basis for hope.

    Today, the State of Israel remains a refuge for imperiled Jews across
    the globe, whether from Ukraine, Russia, Ethiopia, or elsewhere. It is
    not perfect. No state is. But disagreement with the policies of any
    nation's government cannot be a reason for calling that nation's
    fundamental legitimacy into question. And the massive peaceful
    demonstrations of the past four months throughout Israel have
    demonstrated beyond any doubt that it is indeed the only democracy in
    the Middle East.

    At a time when Israel's right to exist is challenged in many parts of
    the world on an almost daily basis, we must remember that just as the
    road to the establishment of Israel 75 years ago led through and past
    the mass-graves of Bergen-Belsen, the defiant Zionist spirit of the
    Jewish DPs of Belsen is and must always be an integral part of Israel's
    own national identity.

    Menachem Z. Rosensaft, the son of two survivors of Auschwitz and
    Bergen-Belsen, was born May 1, 1948, in the Displaced Persons camp of Bergen-Belsen. He is the associate executive vice president and general
    counsel of the World Jewish Congress and the chairperson of the Advisory Council of the Lower Saxony Memorials Foundation. He teaches about the
    law of genocide at the law schools of Columbia and Cornell Universities.

    The views expressed in this article are the writer's own.

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    Fabian Terracciano
    2 hours ago

    You and I and Most religious people would use logic, reason, statistics, probabilities, the scientific method, evidence, etc, to solve any
    problem or generally "think" EXCEPT when it comes to religion.

    With religion, all cognition goes out the window. The indoctrination
    people are exposed to at yo...

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    Fabian Terracciano
    2 hours ago

    The only proven benefit of faith is to posture delusional happiness in
    those cases which happiness is otherwise not present. That is, it's
    better to be happy and delusional than to be unhappy while living in
    reality.


    Reply

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    Fabian Terracciano
    2 hours ago

    People are religious for at least one of ONLY four reasons:

    Indoctrinated by their parents (the overwhelming majority),

    “Born Again” Syndrome, a psychological survival mechanism alternative to suicide to due depression, drugs, prison, alcohol, etc,

    Stone Age Thinking Disorder such that they actually r...

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    whosonfirst
    2 hours ago

    NewsWeek needs a way to report spam posting from folks like Terracciano
    without having to do every one of their spam posts one at a time.


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    Fabian Terracciano
    2 hours ago

    Genesis 19:31 "The next day the older daughter said to the younger,
    “Last night I slept with my father. Let’s get him to drink wine again tonight, and you go in and sleep with him so we can preserve our family
    line through our `.” So they got their father to drink wine that night
    also, and the youn...

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    whosonfirst
    2 hours ago

    """My father, who taught me that love of the Jewish people and love of
    the State of Israel are the most important elements of Jewish leadership,"""

    When racial nationalism takes priority over the commandments of a
    religion, the result is generally not just genocide but the corruption
    of the religion...

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    whosonfirst
    2 hours ago

    Victims of European Ethnic Cleansing want to do it again, this time to
    the Palestinians (Syrians, Lebanese's, Iraqis.)

    Being the victims of n azis does not give you the right to be n azis.
    That would never end.

    And as "Your Other Left" demonstrates in his comment, these new european
    n azis would ra...

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    Fabian Terracciano
    2 hours ago

    We don't even know who killed JFK. How do we know what happened 2000
    years ago when 99.999% of people were illiterate and information
    transfer was no more valid than gossip or no more accurate than a game
    of telephone?

    SOURCES: Ancient Literacy, William V. Harris, 10/01/1991; Literacy in
    Ancient Ev...

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    Fabian Terracciano
    2 hours ago

    Tell me the GPS coordinates of where someone was born and raised and
    I’ll tell you what religious indoctrination they most likely would have
    been victimized by.


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    Aber Al
    3 hours ago

    "it is indeed the only democracy in the Middle East."

    Israel ensures this is the case because it is frightened of having
    democracies around it! Netanyahu met with El-Sissi of Egypt six times
    when the later was an intelligence officer to plan for the coup that
    toppled the first democratically elected...

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