Copyright (c) 1998 - Ingrid A. Rimland


September 23, 1998

Good Morning from the Zundelsite:

 

Ever since I read Ben Weintraub's "Keystone to the New World Order: The Holocaust Dogma of Judaism", I have been fascinated by the question of the "Holocaust" as having to be properly defined as either "history" or "religion."

 

Here in America, the answer to that question, I believe, will sooner or later be settled in court, which will have practical implications:

 

If the courts decide that the "Holocaust" is "history", then it must be open to full investigation without fear of criminalization, like any other part of history. If, on the other hand, it is "dogma" or, paraphrased, a "religion", then it has no business in public schools being taught as part of the regular curriculum and should not be financed on taxpayers' backs.

 

I caught the following from a discussion strand around a book, "Judasim" by Jacob Neusner, a small segment of which is excerpted below - a bit of a mouthful of paragraph which I am breaking up for ZGram readability:

 

"Is the Judaism of Holocaust and Redemption a religion? Of course it is, because it has the power to turn "being Jewish" into a mode of transcendent and mythic being.

 

What that means is that things are not what they seem, and "we" are more than what "we" appear to be. Specifically, "we" were there in Auschwitz, which stands for all of the centers for the murder of Jews, and "we" share, too, in the everyday life in that faraway place in which we do not live but should, the State of Israel.

 

So the Judaism of Holocaust and Redemption turns things into something other than what they seem, teaches lessons that change the everyday into the remarkable. The Judaism of Holocaust and Redemption tells me that the everyday -- the here and now of home and family -- ends not in a new Eden but in a cloud of poisonous gas, that salvation lives today, if I will it, but not here and not now.

 

And it teaches me not to trouble to sanctify, but also not to trust, the present circumstance. ...A mark of importance of this other Judaism is that it has the capacity to draw more people into public activity than the synagogue and its Judaism.

 

Most of the organized and collective life of the Jews as an ethnic group appeals to the myth and symbols of this Judaism of Holocaust and Redemption. That is why it is important."

 

To which a well-known, highly articulate Internet revisionist gives this cogent commentary for our reflection:

 

The vast majority of Jews are no longer Creationists; nor do they . . . believe literally in the other supernatural elements of the Torah. The modern scientific worldview of the Enlightenment, Darwin, etc., to which Jewish intellectuals, as with almost all other intellectuals, have become committed, has caused the Torah to lose most of its persuasiveness for most Jews as well as for non-fundamentalist Christians.

 

We are not longer able to accept as historical fact miracles such as the Passover of the firstborn of Israel, plagues against Egypt, the parting of the Red Sea, etc. Most Jews strive to find a scientifically plausible substitute for the exile/restoration way of explaining their culture to themselves.

 

In the nineteenth century, for many ethnic Jews this took forms such as Jewish Socialism, the eschatological political visions of Marxism, the Jewish racial theories of D'Israeli et. al., and early Zionism. As with many Jewish ideas throughout history, these ideas or elements of these ideas which were not too specifically Jewish proved highly popular outside the Jewish community as well as within.

 

In the late twentieth century the need for a scientifically justified Judaism takes the form of Holocaust and Redemption. In addition to the elements described by Neusner, it is interesting to observe some other, less important but indicatively improbable details from Jewish religious tradition found in the theology and vision of Holocaust and Redemption:

 

Numerology:

 

The number six has long been held by Jews and Jewish spinoff religions as a symbol of evil. A well known example is 666, "The Number of the Beast", but the Evil Six is ubiquitous in Jewish literature from the Bible to the Kabalah. The number "6 million" is recorded related to Jewish persecution in stories circulating in the Jewish community dating back to WWI, and again of course in WWII.

 

Fire:

 

The term "holocaust", before the Jewish encounter with Nazi Germany, was a term used exclusively to refer to fire. For Jews it brought to mind visions of being sacrificed in a fire. Fire was the traditional Hebrew method of sacrificing animals. There is a long tradition of stories of Jews being burned at the stake during the Middle Ages; this was a common way in which the Catholic Church punished religious heretics. So, for Jews, persecution has traditionally been been associated with and visualized as fire. When stories circulated in the Jewish community about mass murder persecutions in WWI, fire was again invoked, and the term "Holocaust" used. This term was again used in WWII, and remained in use as a compelling, horrific-sounding word even after visions of gas chambers replaced visions of fire in Holocaust and Redemption Judaism.

 

Hiding the Innocent:

 

_The Diary of Anne Frank_ is one of the main canonical works of the Holocaust and Redemption literature. It echoes the emotion-packed theme of hiding children to avoid persecution that figures prominently in several other important works of Jewish origin: the Torah story of Moses being released into the fens of the Nile Delta to avoid a genocidal Pharoah, the story in the Gospel of Jesus' parents fleeing to avoid Herod's murder of children, and so on. _Anne Frank_ combines this basic, powerful theme with sophisticated twentieth century Freudian psychoanalytic themes to produce a compelling account of an innocent, good Jewish child doomed by evil Gentiles to die in horror.

 

Evil Despot:

 

Pharoah takes off his robe and dons a brown shirt; shaves off his beard and grows a short mustache.

 

Selective Editing:

 

Neusner well noted the effective condensation of Israel's historical experiences to fit the self-perpetuating cultural paradigm of exile, alienation, and return. In the twentieth century Jews can witness their cultural paradigm of persecution (WWII stock concentration camp footage) and redemption (Israel on the evening news) brought to vivid life in the mass media.

 

The compelling nature of the Holocaust/Israel story overwhelms mere scientific or historical debate. The horror and pathos of this story, like the pathos of many other Jewish religious masterpieces, is indeed compelling for Jew and Gentile alike, albeit with positive effects on Jews (who are the innocents of the story, and so can participate in Redemption) and negative effects on Gentiles (those who believe are left with feelings of guilt and moral inferiority).

 

Essential for Holocaust and Redemption believers is that this compelling belief system be backed by an account more scientifically and historically plausible than the miracles of the Torah. Generating such accounts, and debunking deniers of the belief who make counter-arguments to such accounts, is a critical, and thus highly motivated part of believing and practicing the religion of Holocaust and Redemption, and thereby preserving the function and cultural effects of Judaism in a scientific age."

 

 

Thought for the Day:

 

"Fifty years of the same gabble becomes excruciatingly boring. During WWII our soldiers never gave 10 seconds to Jews. After the war we heard nothing else."

 

(A Letter to the Editor, Instauration)


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