Further to the previous...
“Background and Precursors to the Holocaust”. Good find. I’ll read that with interest.
“The roots of Romanian antisemitism are intertwined with the origins of the modern Romanian state and the emergence of the rich national cultural tradition that accompanied unification of the principalities, independence, and the creation of Greater Romania. The antisemitism that manifested itself in Romania between the two world wars grew directly from seeds sewn at the major turning points of the country’s development starting in the mid-nineteenth century. For reasons that may have differed from person to person or group to group, strong antisemitic currents were present in various forms and with varying intensity in the political, cultural and spiritual life of Romanian society for most of the century that preceded the accession to power of the National Christian Party in 1937, the installation of the Royal Dictatorship in 1938, and the Antonescu-Iron Guard National Legionary State in 1940—that is, for most of the century that culminated in the Holocaust.”
Blah, blah, blah…
“Nichifor Crainic (1889-1972) was another theoretician of religion whose work had an important influence on Cuza and on the younger generation that would assume the radical antisemitic banner in the interwar period. Crainic was Professor at the Faculty of Theology, University of Bucharest, which became a hotbed of antisemitism among university students. Crainic advocated creation of a Romanian spirit that was “antisemitic in theory and antisemitic in practice.” He applied his theological and rhetorical skills to breaking the Judeo-Christian relationship by arguing that the Old Testament was not Jewish, that Jesus had not been Jewish, and that the Talmud, which he saw as the incarnation of modern Jewry, was, first and foremost, a weapon to combat the Christian Gospel and to destroy Christians.
Crainic’s influence on his generation was substantial, as he was able to tap into the appeal of the mysticism and nationalism of Romanian Orthodox Christianity and use it to sway intellectual, student, and ordinary Christian citizen alike in favor of the racist, antisemitic movements that he saw as essential to secure the existence of Romania and the Romanian nation.”
Well, there you have it. Aside from the “National Christian Party”, the term isn’t used in the document except in relation to the warped theology that “Jesus wasn’t Jewish”, and similar nonsense. Baptists and missionaries are absent as well.
If you like these guys, you’ll love the Mufti of Jerusalem, Muhammed Amin al-Husseini, and his muslim Waffen SS divisions that operated in Yugoslavia. Wait a second! Christians and muslims persecuting Jews? And what about those Serbs going all holocaustal on the poor Bosnian muslims. I’ll bet they’re “Christians” too.
No, you didn’t. Nor did I say that you did. What I said was “The KKK had zero, nil, nada to do with any church or Christianity.” What you said was…
“I've never conversed with a KKK member”, but “they all (or most I guess) were blatantly members of various Christian churches. They were Christians, they were extremists…”. I have never talked to a Martian, but I’m absolutely certain they’re all green.
For me, it was the “lunatic” part. Again, I used to work a few blocks down Geary Blvd from said lunatics. Knew them well.
Africa? I think “lunatic” is the operable word there as well. Was that racist of me?
The Crusades? You may recall that the Crusades were launched to take Jerusalem back from the muslims. Recorded history frames them as the offenders, a theme still with us.
The inquisition, or more correctly inquisitions? The terms “Christian” and “Catholic” don’t always coincide, but I will defer to any Catholics that may want to comment.
I’ll see your “blah, blah, blah”, and raise you a “nanny nanny boo-boo”.
I hate politics with a passion. I intensely dislike politicians. But politics exist in anything people are involved in, including families, neighborhoods, schools, churches, blah, blah, blah. I told our sons from the time they could understand “If three people are involved, there are politics. Master the politics and you master the situation.”.
But back to the original point of the thread, which is the poignant message of the video. Ground Zero exists because of islam. Put another way, if there was no islam, there would be no Ground Zero. Regardless of your ideology or political disposition, I would hope you could make that behavioral distinction. muslims have no business building anything remotely representing islam anywhere near Ground Zero. And shame on us if we allow them to.
Is that statement suggesting the ban of islam? No, but if history teaches us anything, that is probably a consideration.




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