The discussion around the fandomization of the I/P conflict is so fucking relevant because why did I just see someone in a discord for a reaction channel that reacts to musicals and cartoons suggest them to react to the Columbia ""protests"" with a heart emoji as if it's another episode of their favorite show and SIX other people agreed with that
Polish people made themselves the cities of their minority Jewish population and told Jews to go back to Eretz Y'Israel. At least they knew where the Jews were indigenous to.
Since England controlled and blocked immigration of Jews to Palestine, the Jews were literally sitting ducks.
The Poles then abetted the Nazis in murdering 2.25 million of the 2.5 million Polish-Jewish population.
When I saw a tweet from Israel and how they called a Pole a Nazi and Adolf Hitler's emissary, it made me so angry
This is disgusting and deceitful, but clearly Israel believes the lies
What's missing is that they put a "Swastika" on the photo of his face, because this post has such a vibe that I wouldn't be surprised if they did it to this bastard
But this is not the first time I see a "Jew" (in quotation marks for a reason) writing such things about Poles, no matter how many bad Poles there were, there were a lot of good ones who risked their lives or even their loved ones, so it is so disgusting that I can't describe it + This other photo next to the body doesn't help in this situation
my maternal great-great grandma was born in Warsaw in the late 19th/early 20th century. When she was a little girl, her family emigrated to the United States to escape violence and for better opportunities.
3 million polish Jews were killed in the shoah. I know for almost a fact that if my family had not left, I wouldn't be here writing this right now.
Even after the holocaust, Jews still faced violence in Poland. In 1946, (yes, that's only one year after the shoah) a pogrom in Kielce ended with 37 murdered Jews.
Picture of an amateur Yiddish Troupe from a Polish shtetl in mid-1920s. The poster in the back describes a circus that was previously in town. The woman's headband is in Hebrew and reads "a wicked woman."
Meet Salwa, a resilient 9-year-old unaware of the heartbreaking loss of her mother. Facing her medical condition that ended up with amputation of her leg and facing her father’s injuries, Salwa dreams of healing beyond Gaza.
Thus it will be with pride, mournful pride, that we shall count ourselves of that glorious rank which will outshine all others – the rank of the Polish Jew, we who by miracle or by chance have remained alive. With pride? Let us rather say: with contrition and gnawing shame. For it was bestowed upon us for the sake of your torment, your glory, Redeemers! …And so perhaps I should not say “we Polish Jews,” but “we ghosts, we shadows of our slaughtered brethren, the Polish Jews.”