It's not right to think about all of Jewish-German history as shrouded by the smoke of the crematorium.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I want to remind people that the Nazis weren't able to take the Jews to the crematoriums immediately. The German people wouldn't have allowed for it. Instead, the Nazis had to change public opinion. They marginalized the Jewish people, disparaged them, and made them objects of contempt.
No person with a sense of the dignity of mankind can condone the persecution of the Jewish race in Germany.
The risk of the Holocaust is not that it will be forgotten, but that it will be embalmed and surrounded by monuments and used to absolve all future sins.
The sad and horrible conclusion is that no one cared that Jews were being murdered... This is the Jewish lesson of the Holocaust and this is the lesson which Auschwitz taught us.
In taking action we must remember that the things which are happening to the Jews today are but a part of the general disintegration anticipated by philosophers and historians of different schools for almost half a century.
Only through acknowledgment of the erasure and void of Jewish life can the history of Berlin and Europe have a human future.
It seems unavoidable that history will always link the reestablishment of the State of Israel with the tragedy of the Holocaust.
I find it very hard to write about Jewish history.
Indeed, the field of Holocaust studies is replete with nonsense if not sheer fraud.
I've said before that I am not a historian and that when it comes to speaking of the dimensions of the Holocaust, it is the historians that should reflect on it.
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