Western double standards
“Jewish Holocaust” vs “Gaza Genocide” … There Is a Difference!
“Holocaust” is a term that emerged to describe the types of extermination Jews faced under the Nazi regime. For Jews—and most Westerners—it is an unquestionable truth and doubting it is a punishable crime. They claim the remaining photos and documents are beyond dispute. Yet a fair-minded researcher does not rely on the exaggerations of deceitful people and knows that much of what they claim is exaggerated—or at the very least, filled with assertions lacking proof. He is not blind to their deception, using images and materials that are not authentic. The Nazi party was indeed racist, but it did not distinguish between many ethnicities it deemed hostile or nationalities it considered enemies.
Still, the root of the matter—Hitler’s animosity toward Jews, especially
German Jews—is supported by various indications. Hitler
had his justifications, which are arguably stronger than those Jews present
today to justify their “Holocaust” in Gaza.
Hitler’s main justifications centered on Jewish
betrayal during Germany’s time of crisis, and their corruption within
German society. After studying the Social Democratic movement, he found—as he
wrote in his memoirs—a strong link between it and the principles promoted by
Jews. Over time, he realized that the long-term goals of the Social Democrats
were the same as those of the Jews as a people, of Judaism as a religion, and
of Zionism as a nationalist political movement. He wrote: “I realized
there were two driving dangers threatening the German people: Judaism and
Communism.”
Some researchers said: “Hitler found that the Jewish creed,
expressed through Marxist teachings, denies individual human value and the
importance of national and racial identity—thus stripping humanity of the
elements necessary for its survival and the continuity of its civilization. He
came to believe that in defending himself against the Jews, he was defending
the Creator’s work and the survival of the human race.”
Moral Corruption As for the moral
corruption within German society and the persistent descent into vice
and lust, Hitler wrote in his memoirs: “It became clear to me that Jews
were not Germans, but a separate people! Once I began studying the matter, I
started noticing them. Their behavior, ethics, and appearance were completely
different from ordinary Germans! I even discovered a movement among them called
Zionism, which affirms they are a distinct people.”
He added: “I also noticed their role in cultural life. Is there any
form of moral or cultural corruption without one of them behind it? I saw their
influence in journalism, art, literature, theater, etc. All I had to do was
read the names behind every work that sought to destroy the moral fabric of
society. In every field—if there was one Goethe, there were thousands of these
people spreading poison into souls. It seemed as if Jews were created to carry
out such filth. Nine-tenths of the filth in literature and theater was produced
by the ‘chosen people,’ who made up only 1% of the population!”
Palestinian
Holocausts. Upon witnessing their actions, Hitler is attributed with the famous
quote: “I could have killed all the Jews, but I left some alive so the
world would know why I killed them.”
No one denies that Hitler was a tyrannical dictator who harmed children,
women, and the elderly of various races and religions. But he was not more
oppressive than the Jews, whose remnants and behavior today explain why Hitler
did what he did. Their holocausts in Palestine stand as testimony against them.
Anyone who observes them is reminded of what they claim God commanded them: “Now go and strike Amalek and devote to
destruction all that they have. Do not spare them, but kill both man and woman,
child and infant, ox and sheep, camel and donkey.” (1 Samuel
15:3) And so they do today in Gaza.
Muslims are a people who remember. Old history books still record the number of Muslims killed during the Crusader invasion of the land of Isra and Mi’raj. And today, sincere Muslims have not—and will not—forget the massacres committed by Jews in Palestine, nor the number of their victims there.