ed note–again ladies and Gentile-men, it cannot be stressed enough that within OpEds such as this, one can see clearly the seeds of Armageddon which have sprouted and are now as we speak, growing to ‘full Blum’, no pun intended.

 

It is this–the institutionalized narcissism, self-worship and utter disregard/contempt for all forms of Gentilism that makes Judah-ism the apocalyptic, global danger to all life on earth that it is.

 

Yes, history is replete with individuals, who either because of bad genes or bad rearing, grew up and lived their individual lives believing that the earth revolved around them, but due to their being mere individuals, were thus limited in the damage that they were/are able to do.

 

Not so with a group of them however whose ‘identity politics’ revolves around the notion of their ‘chosen-ness’.

 

Like farmers, ranchers and others involved in the business of animal husbandry, the followers of Judah-ism who view the rest of us unwashed Gentile smellies–the ‘Goyim’–as beasts of the field created for the purpose of pulling their plows, bearing their burdens and then, at some point, filling their bellies, underscores exactly the danger which these people and their institutionalized narcissism pose to the rest of us. 

 

Now as far as some of the ‘particulars’ contained in the piece below, nota bene the following–

 

‘This–making comparisons to the plight of others to the Passover story–would be fine if the literary device were employed to discuss the condition of modern-day Jews. It would be appropriate, for instance, to caution against collective amnesia in the face of contemporary anti-Semitism, Iran’s threats to annihilate Israel and Arab riots on the Temple Mount, the holiest site in Judaism, where only Muslims are at liberty to pray.’

 

In other words, to ‘universalize’ the silly story surrounding Passover to highlight the suffering of others–I.E. GENTILES, MUCH OF WHOSE PLIGHT IS THE RESULT OF VIOLENT, AGGRESSIVE AND RAPACIOUS JUDAIC BEHAVIOR–is not ‘kosher’.

 

Passover, just like the Hollerco$t, belongs to the Jews, the Jews ONLY, for it is a weapon whose purpose is to heel Gentiles and make them compliant to the violent, aggressive and rapacious demands on the part of the followers of Judah-ism, the ‘children of Israel’, as they love to refer to themselves.

 

Nexto–

 

‘More often than not the ‘freedom of bondage’ mantra has the opposite aim: to warn Jews not to forget that the rest of the human race (Gentiles) might need rescuing and is used as a rhetorical weapon to blame Jews for engaging in the very subjugation that we escaped in the past and stop to remember each Passover…’

 

As if this–

 

And this–

 

And this–

 

And this–

 

And this–

 

And this–

 

And millions of other examples weren’t modern-day representations of that same tall-tale of Passover as a real-deal/real-time Holocaust.

 

Nexto–

 

‘The manipulation of the theme isn’t new. The tendency of Jews to over-empathize with the plight of others has been around since time immemorial.’

 

As if this–

 

And this–

 

And this–

 

–And millions of other similar examples WEREN’T prima facie examples of the degree to which the followers of Judah-ism, the ‘children of Israel’ as they just LOVE to refer to themselves, did not/do not/never will ‘over-empathize’ with the plight of others.

 

And, finalmente–

 

‘No, Passover is not a universalist story. It is utterly particular to the Jewish people and must be honored only as such…’

 

And despite the fact that, as we note here on this humble little informational endeavor on a regular basis the tried-and-true truism that is as incontrovertible/irrevocable as the sun rising in the East and setting in the West the fact that–

 

FISH SWIM, BIRDS FLY AND JEWS LIE… 

 

…Nevertheless, as Gentiles, we can take that statement on the part of our Hebraic author to the bank…

 

Gentiles do not matter to them. They, the followers of Judah-ism, the ‘children of Israel’ as they love to refer to themselves, are yahway’s ‘chosen’ and, as infamously stated a few years back by none other than Israel’s chief Sephardic rabbi, Ovadiah Yosef–before he died and went to hell–we Gentiles were created only for one purpose–to serve the Jews as ‘donkeys’ and to make their lives better.

 

 

By Ruthie Blum for The Jewish Press

 

In an op-ed in The Jerusalem Post on Friday, Israeli Diaspora Affairs Minister Nachman Shai described visiting the Poland-Ukraine border, where he witnessed a ‘never-ending stream of refugees fleeing the savage war that has torn apart their lives.’

 

The aim of his article, published on the eve of Passover, was to draw a parallel between Pharoah, a ‘brutal and rapacious tyrant, who put his personal and national interests above those of the people he oppressed,’ and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

 

‘The Passover message of freedom could not be more relevant to the current war being waged by Russia against Ukraine, which sees the forces of oppression and despotism arrayed against the ideas and values of liberty and democracy,’ he wrote.

 

Shai is by no means alone in his use of the Israelites’ exodus from ancient Egypt to talk about current events. On the contrary, as soon as the holiday rolls around, pundits in Israel and abroad dust off the old analogies.

 

This would be fine if the literary device were employed to discuss the condition of modern-day Jews. It would be appropriate, for instance, to caution against collective amnesia in the face of contemporary anti-Semitism, Iran’s threats to annihilate Israel and Arab riots on the Temple Mount, the holiest site in Judaism, where only Muslims are at liberty to pray.

 

A spiritual metaphor about freeing ourselves from internal chains and enslavement to all social-justice causes other than our own would also be welcome.

 

More often than not, however, the ‘freedom of bondage’ mantra has the opposite aim: to warn Jews not to forget that the rest of the human race (Gentiles) might need rescuing.

 

That’s in the best case. In the worst, it’s used as a rhetorical weapon to blame Jews for engaging in the very subjugation that we escaped in the past and stop to remember each Passover.

 

The manipulation of the theme isn’t new. The tendency of Jews to over-empathize with the plight of others has been around since time immemorial.

 

To justify the aversion to championing our own causes over those of outside groups (Gentiles) many of ‘the chosen’ point to the Jewish people’s role as a ‘light unto the nations.’

 

This biblical phrase, mentioned three times in the book of Isaiah, has been distorted beyond recognition. The first reference is to God telling the Israelites that he has ‘called unto you in righteousness and has taken hold of your hand and submitted you as the people’s covenant, as a light unto the nations.’ (Isaiah 42:6)

 

The second appears in chapter 49, verse 6. In it, Isaiah quotes God as saying, ‘It is too light a thing for you to be my servant, to establish the tribes of Jacob and to restore the scions of Israel, and I shall submit you as a light unto the nations, to be my salvation until the end of the earth.’

 

In the third passage (Isaiah 60:3), God explains to the Israelites that ‘towards your light, nations shall walk and kings unto the brightness of your rising.’

 

The prophecy here is that the tribes of Israel will unite, return to their land—Israel—and serve as an example for the rest of the world to emulate. Yet somehow, this concept long ago got lost in translation, even by native Hebrew-speakers.

 

Indeed, it has come to be wantonly applied to the ‘progressive’ notion that Jews are responsible for fixing all global problems, whether genuine crises or those concocted for political purposes and hefty research grants. That it’s most frequently invoked ahead of and during Passover is no accident.

 

The weeklong celebration marks our exodus from evil Egyptian bondage and deliverance to the Promised Land. It is a yearly reminder to thank God for the blessing and the privilege.

 

What it is not, or at least shouldn’t be, is an opportunity to bemoan the lack of fortune experienced—or imagined—by all human beings everywhere.

 

No, Passover is not a universalist story. It is utterly particular to the Jewish people and must be honored only as such.

 

As Israel’s diaspora affairs minister ought to know, it’s when we let ourselves shine that we are able to serve as a beacon for others. Minimizing what is specific to our past and our present has the opposite effect.

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