They did. Tens of thousands of Zionist Jews moved to Palestine decades before WWII began such that nearly half a million lived in Palestine by 1939. If your question regards why more Jews didn't go to Palestine, the answer is that most Jews had no interest in Zionism.borjastick wrote: ↑Thu Jan 23, 2025 7:43 pm Just a thought.
If the 'jewish problem' existed as claimed and was accepted by the European jewish communities in the many decades prior to WW2 to the point that Theodor Herzl discussed it at the first zionist congress in 1897 what stopped them simply leaving Europe for Palestine? After all we are told by the same Zionist liars that Palestine was a land without people for a people with land.
If a group of people genuinely feared for their lives why would they not just go? Why wait for the Balfour Declaration during WW1 and then continue to wait until they were 'exterminated'.
But you don't need to be interested in an ideology to do something. To this day, there are more Jews outside than inside Israel, even though they say that anti-Semitism is exploding everywhere.Numar Patru wrote: ↑Thu Jan 23, 2025 9:15 pmThey did. Tens of thousands of Zionist Jews moved to Palestine decades before WWII began such that nearly half a million lived in Palestine by 1939. If your question regards why more Jews didn't go to Palestine, the answer is that most Jews had no interest in Zionism.borjastick wrote: ↑Thu Jan 23, 2025 7:43 pm Just a thought.
If the 'jewish problem' existed as claimed and was accepted by the European jewish communities in the many decades prior to WW2 to the point that Theodor Herzl discussed it at the first zionist congress in 1897 what stopped them simply leaving Europe for Palestine? After all we are told by the same Zionist liars that Palestine was a land without people for a people with land.
If a group of people genuinely feared for their lives why would they not just go? Why wait for the Balfour Declaration during WW1 and then continue to wait until they were 'exterminated'.
Back then, you did, especially if it meant uprooting your life and putting down whatever profession you'd be practicing to become a farmer.But you don't need to be interested in an ideology to do something. .
Most people prefer not to leave their homes. Most Jews outside Israel likely believe their security is better where they live. I'm unsure what your point is.To this day, there are more Jews outside than inside Israel, even though they say that anti-Semitism is exploding everywhere
A special status? Like what?Jews do not need Israel, they can be Jews anywhere but they want a special status within these countries, a status that their religion did not allow to opposing peoples when they were autonomous there, this roughly explains anti-Semitism.
Most people don't act because they believe in something, in fact people act out of necessity and not because they believe in something, even believing in something is because there is a need behind it. Perhaps the religious sentimental factor spoke louder for some Jews at the beginning of the last century, especially if they had relatives there or even hearing rumors of an arms race for fear of being involved in this conflict, there are always catalysts.Numar Patru wrote: ↑Thu Jan 23, 2025 9:34 pmBack then, you did, especially if it meant uprooting your life and putting down whatever profession you'd be practicing to become a farmer.But you don't need to be interested in an ideology to do something. .
Most people prefer not to leave their homes. Most Jews outside Israel likely believe their security is better where they live. I'm unsure what your point is.To this day, there are more Jews outside than inside Israel, even though they say that anti-Semitism is exploding everywhere
A special status? Like what?Jews do not need Israel, they can be Jews anywhere but they want a special status within these countries, a status that their religion did not allow to opposing peoples when they were autonomous there, this roughly explains anti-Semitism.
Such as?
They being Jews?Wherever they are, they infiltrate to tip the balance towards their own interests and not those of the community, something unthinkable if the opposite were possible.
See, ultra-Orthodox and anti-Israel groups accuse their own of having risen up against the nations they went to and that this resulted in extreme persecution, all to live as a separate entity from the collective of that country instead of obeying the laws locals preferred to conspire to obtain advantages, to obtain advantages whether through financial or political means is to create a special status, it is the same as what Jehovah's witnesses seek, to live comfortably refusing the recruitment laws of their countries, that is what? I'm from Brazil and here on Saturdays you couldn't sell or buy slaves at the time, just to give an example.Numar Patru wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 12:07 amSuch as?
They being Jews?Wherever they are, they infiltrate to tip the balance towards their own interests and not those of the community, something unthinkable if the opposite were possible.
Well, not anarchists, but certainly atheists. Trotsky definitely was an atheist, but according to the government of the USSR, he was Jewish because his father was. In that country, it was an ethnic/national designation.
Most Jews are perfectly aware that the mere denial doesn’t render them not Jewish anymore.How many Jews actually perished in the Holocaust according to this strategy of denying they were Jews according to convenience?
A small percentage is what you mean. Good for them for leaving. But you are missing my point, perhaps deliberately, about the majority of jews who if they thought they were in mortal danger would have left when they could Instead they stayed put and only after their holocaust did they rush out the back door. Doesn't make sense to me.Numar Patru wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 1:21 pm They did. Fully a million to the US, plus thousands more to places outside of Eastern Europe. Beginning in the 19th century, Jews went to the US, Palestine, Latin America, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, and even Western Europe, where they believed they were safer from arbitrary violence.
I mentioned this is another thread, but Raul Hilberg made the point 60+ years ago that resistance by Jews to the Nazis was mostly nonexistent because most Jews did not believe extermination was among the possibilities of things that might happen to them. Jewish history had taught them that they would experience hardship, and many might die, but the Jewish people as a whole would survive. The circumstances under the Nazis were unprecedented, Hilberg argued, and thus a certainly complacency among Jews persisted even as proof of extermination mounted.borjastick wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 6:21 pmA small percentage is what you mean. Good for them for leaving. But you are missing my point, perhaps deliberately, about the majority of jews who if they thought they were in mortal danger would have left when they could Instead they stayed put and only after their holocaust did they rush out the back door. Doesn't make sense to me.Numar Patru wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 1:21 pm They did. Fully a million to the US, plus thousands more to places outside of Eastern Europe. Beginning in the 19th century, Jews went to the US, Palestine, Latin America, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, and even Western Europe, where they believed they were safer from arbitrary violence.
As I think Hannover once said here 'the holocaust is all about 6m jews who didn't exist being killed in gas chambers that cannot be shown'.