Gary Lineker’s Crime was Comparing the Tories Refugee Policies to the Nazis – We Must Compare, Compare and Compare Again
On Wednesday March 15 at 7.30 pm I will be holding the Brighton Book Launch for Zionism During the Holocaust. This will be the first physical meeting around my book that I’ve held in Britain.
On Thursday
March 16th at 5 pm British time there will be a Zoom meeting where I will be speaking with others at a PSC South Africa. Please do register.
You are invited to a Zoom webinar.
When: Mar 16, 2023 07:00 PM Johannesburg
Topic: Zionism During the Holocaust
Register in advance for this webinar:
https://tinyurl.com/3sf9dyxc
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.
https://www.facebook.com/palestinesouthafrica
South Africa PSC was formed as part of an initiative for the (World Conference Against Racism) in 2000 as a secular initiative to promote the Palestinian cause in South Africa and to lead an international anti-apartheid movement against Apartheid Israel. The aims of PSC-SA include the establishment of a secular democratic state in Palestine.
When Gary Lineker
spoke out against Cruella Braverman’s attack on refugees, what angered his
opponents was the comparison between Cruella’s policies and those of Nazi Germany.
For the ruling class and Zionists the Nazis represent a holocaust divorced from
history. The holocaust began in June 1941 and Lineker referred to the 30s yet
these ignoramuses tied everything into Auschwitz.
From 1933 to June 1941
the policy of Hitler was not extermination but expulsion of the Jews. The ruling
class and the Mail forgets that large
sections of the ruling class supported Hitler’s
anti-Semitism .
In
Nazi Youth in Control [Daily News 4.9.33] Lord Rothermere, the owner of
the Daily Mail wrote that
‘Of all the
historic changes in our time, the transformation of Germany under Hitler has
been the swiftest, most complete…’
'There has
been a sudden expansion of their national spirit like that which took place in
England under Queen Elizabeth. Youth has taken command. On a visit, which I am
paying to Northern Germany I find-, the signs of the new Hitler spirit as
manifest in the most out of-the-way villages as in the largest cities.'
Like
most bourgeois apologists for Hitler Rothermere considered the reports about
Nazi brutality were irrelevant.
‘They have
started a clamorous campaign of denunciation against what they call 'Nazi
atrocities,' which, as anyone who visits Germany quickly discovers for him
self, consists merely of a few isolated acts of violence.’
It
was merely
‘The
administration of a few doses of castor oil to Communist adversaries.’
For
Rothermere the concentration camps of Sachsenhausen and Dachau did not exist.
Support for Hitler extended deep into the Tory Party but today anyone who
points this out or the comparison between
the demonisation of refugees and Hitler’s demonisation of the other,
including Jews, is beyond the pale.
Lady Nugent (Emily Thornberry)
Emily
Thornberry attacked
Lineker saying that
Some of the
language Gary Lineker has used in the last 24 hours has been really very
unfortunate… I just think there is a special place in hell and for the Holocaust
and I don’t think you should be making comparisons… I think he went too far but
what the BBC does about it is frankly not my business…. It’ll be up to them if
they want to do anything about it.
Yvette
Cooper also preferred to attack Lineker
than the Tories.
Asked
whether she supported what Lineker had said Cooper stated:
‘No
I don’t. No I don’t. That was wrong. I think he was wrong to say that.’
Asked
to elaborate Cooper said
‘I just don’t think you should make comparisons with the
1930s… I just don’t think you should make those sorts of comparisons.’
Asked
if he should be sacked Cooper responded that it was ‘a matter for the BBC.’
Contrary to Cooper and Lady Nugent aka Emily Thornberry we should
compare, compare and compare again. When Israel uses the holocaust to justify ethnic
cleansing and pogroms we should point out that the Nazis also started with
ethnic cleansing and pogroms before moving on to extermination.
Hitler’s sterilisation
and murder of the Disabled were modelled on similar laws in the United States,
Sweden and elsewhere.
Of course Zionists
hate comparisons with the Nazis but they are more than happy to make such
comparisons themselves.
Former Israeli Foreign Secretary, Abba
Eban when arguing against withdrawal from the Occupied Territories, referred to the 48 armistice lines as ‘the Auschwitz borders.’ Norman Podhoretz of the American Jewish Committee
paper Commentary, accused Jewish
critics of the Lebanese War of granting Hitler a ‘posthumous victory’ Deputy Defence Minister Matan Vilnai threatened to give ‘Gaza a taste of the 'shoah’. Menachem Begin portrayed ‘Arafat in
Beirut as Hitler in his bunker in Berlin’ as a reason for bombing Beirut.
In Israel every enemy is a reincarnation
of the Nazis. In the lead up to the Six Day War:
the newspapers continually identified Nasser
with Hitler. The proposals to defuse the crisis by any means other than war
were compared with the Munich agreement. [Tom Segev, The Seventh Million, pp. 390-391].
The Nazi period is a seminal event in world
history. It is the ultimate in capitalist barbarism. It is not surprising that
it is the benchmark by which subsequent events are judged.
Zionist concerns about
a high Arab birth rate in Israel mirror
the Nazis’ racial obsessions. Ideologically Zionism and Nazism drink from the
same poisoned well.
Relationships between Jews and Arabs are
seen as a threat to the racial purity of the Jewish nation/race. More than half
of the Jewish population in Israel believes
intermarriage to be national treason.
In Israel like Nazi Germany opposition
to miscegenation is strong. The Nuremberg Laws outlawed ‘inter-racial’ sex. In
Israel opposition to such relations is a strong social taboo. 75% of Israeli
Jews oppose intermarriage. A
particularly egregious case involved an Arab who was gaoled for 18 months for
rape. The Jewish woman believed that ‘Daniel’ was a Jewish man and thus she had
been raped by deception. In Nazi
Germany a common theme was that Jewish men concealed their Jewish identity in
order to seduce Aryan women.
Israelis often see themselves in the
role of Nazis. Before the massacre in Jenin, an Israeli officer said that:
it is justified
and in fact essential to learn from every possible source…. the commander’s
obligation is to … analyse and internalise the lessons of earlier battles –
even, however shocking it may sound, even how the German Army fought in the
Warsaw Ghetto.
When 41 Israeli Arabs were mowed down
with machine guns at Kafr Kassem in 1956 one of the killers, Shalom Ofer,
proudly proclaimed that ‘We acted like
Germans, automatically, we didn’t think.’
There
is a wider identification with the Nazis in Israeli society. ‘We are no longer Jews today,’ one Israeli wrote. ‘Today we are Nazis.’ He was trying to organise vigilante groups to
attack Israeli Palestinians in mixed cities during Israel’s 2021 attack on Gaza.
The comparison of ‘assimilation’, marrying out or having relationships with non-Jews, to the
Holocaust is a common Zionist theme. Avraham Greenbaum of Bar-Ilan University,
expressed ‘concern that Jewry’s losses
through assimilation were greater than the losses sustained in the Holocaust.’
For Zionism the Holocaust was not a human tragedy but a loss to the Jewish
race.
Assimilation is
frequently described as a ‘quiet’ ‘silent’ or ‘bloodless’ holocaust. Norman Lamm, President of
the Yeshiva University, wrote that with a diminishing Jewish birth rate and
intermarriage exceeding 40 %, ‘Who says
that the holocaust is over?’ Chief Rabbi, Immanuel Jakobovitz believed that
abortion in Israel was comparable to the Holocaust. Lehava’s slogan is ‘Intermarriage is a holocaust.’
Marriage between a Jew and non-Jew in
Nazi Germany after 1935 was forbidden. The same is true in Israel where a Jew
and non-Jew cannot marry. Hannah Arendt observed that:
Israeli citizens, religious and non-religious
seem agreed upon the desirability of having a law which prohibits
intermarriage… there certainly was something breathtaking in the naiveté with
which the prosecution denounced the infamous Nuremberg Laws of 1935, which had
prohibited intermarriage and sexual intercourse between Jews and Germans. [Eichmann
in Jerusalem, p.7].
Far from comparisons between Israel and Nazi
Germany being anti-Semitic, the exact opposite is the case. Such comparisons
constitute a powerful warning against the direction in which Israel is heading.
The only question is whether they are true.
Comparing a country to Nazi Germany
doesn’t mean that they are the same but that they have certain features in
common.
Today there are demonstrations in Israel where the main
slogan is ‘Death to the Arabs’. How
is it anti-Semitic to compare this to similar demonstrations in Europe in the
1930s?
When Culture Minister Miri Regev described African refugees as ‘a cancer in the body of the nation’
this was a Nazi-like statement. Deputy
Defence Minister Rabbi Eli Ben-Dahan explained
that ‘[Palestinians] are beasts, they are not human.’ He also explained the racial hierarchy of
souls: ‘A Jew always has a much higher soul than a gentile, even if he is a
homosexual.’
Professor Amos Funkenstein, former head
of the Faculty of History at Tel Aviv University, explained why comparisons
with the Nazis are valid. Referring to the refusal of soldiers to serve in the
Occupied Territories, Funkenstein compared them to soldiers in the German army
who refused to serve in concentration or extermination camps. Funkenstein explained:
As a historian I know that every comparison
is limited. On the other hand, without comparisons, no historiography is
possible. Understanding a historical event is a kind of translation into the
language of our time. If we would leave every phenomenon in its peculiarity, we
could not make this translation. Every translation is an interpretation and
every interpretation is also a comparison.
Idith Zertal described how:
‘The transference of the holocaust situation on to the Middle East
reality… not only created a false sense of the imminent danger of mass
destruction. It also immensely distorted the image of the holocaust, dwarfed
the magnitude of the atrocities committed by the Nazis, trivializing the unique
agony of the victims and the survivors, and utterly demonizing the Arabs and
their leaders. [Zertal, Israel’s Holocaust and the
Politics of Nationhood, p. 100].
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