The
Banality of Jewish Symbolism: A License To Kill Yet Common
Amongst Jews And Zionists
14 March 2010
By Gilad Atzmon
In a remarkable exposé of the Mossad operation in
Dubai, The Times happens to refer to Meir Dagan’s (the
Mossad chief) ‘philosophy’. “The tone of Dagan’s
directorship is set by a photograph on the wall of his
modest office in the Tel Aviv headquarters. It shows
an old Jew standing on the edge of a trench. An SS
officer is aiming his rifle at the old man’s head.
‘This old Jew was my grandfather’ Dagan tells
visitors”. According to The Times, the picture
reflects Dagan’s belief: “We should be strong, use our
brain, and defend ourselves so that the Holocaust will
never be repeated,”
Dagan’s interpretation of the photographic symbolism
as a license to kill is rather banal yet common
amongst Jews and Zionists in particular. However, this
interpretation is far from being the only
interpretation available. I haven’t seen the
Photograph on Dagan’s wall but I guess that it must
depict a devastatingly intense situation between a
murderer in Nazi uniform and an oppressed Jewish man
facing his death. However, Dagan and to a certain
tragic extent, far too many Jews, are clearly
fascinated by the role of the man with a rifle rather
than with the ordeal of their collective grandfather,
a defenseless venerable victim. Instead of grasping
the Holocaust as a universal message against racism or
oppression of any kind, Dagan and his Jewish State
interpret the holocaust as a license to execute.
Though the photograph can be realised as a simplistic
symbolic binary opposition between the innocent (Jew)
and the evil (Nazi) there is a further element in
these photographs that is totally dismissed by Jewish
post war political, intellectual and ideological
discourse namely universalism. Unlike the Zionist or
in our case Dagan, who draws some immediate murderous
‘operative’ conclusions that are there to serve the
Jewish tribe and that tribe only, a humanist would
stare at such a photograph and try to come up with
some ideas that may present us all with some positive
prospects of a better future for humanity as a whole.
In the late 1940’s a few sporadic Jewish thinkers
insisted that after Auschwitz the Jews should position
themselves at the forefront of the battle against
evil. Not only has this never happened, the Jewish
state is now established as the leading danger for
world peace. Moreover, Jewish lobbies enthusiastically
support racist ideologies (Zionism) and push for
colonial expansionist and interventionist conflicts
around the world.
“This old Jew was my grandfather” says the Mossad’s
chief. Indeed, after the big war many Jews wanted to
believe that the Holocaust provided them with an entry
card into humanity for the Holocaust redeems the Jews
from the original sin of Crucifixion. The Iconic image
of the persecuted venerable collective ‘grandfather’
provides the Jew with a suffering symbol that could
easily have stood a competition with Christ or any
other emblem of religious persecution. In 1979, Pope
John Paul II called Auschwitz the "Golgotha of the
modern world." Yet, along this line of thinking,
something went horribly wrong. While Jesus’ suffering
is interpreted by his followers as a call for mercy
and compassion, Dagan’s grandfather’s shoa experience
is interpreted by the national Jew as a call for
retribution and vengeance. As disastrous as it may
sound, the holocaust religion that was recognized by
Israeli Philosopher Yeshayahu Leibowitz as the new
Jewish religion, is nothing less than a crude and
sinister call for murder. It is probably the most
resentful religion known to man.
In 1844 Karl Marx argued that for humanity to liberate
itself it first must emancipate itself of Judaism*.
Karl Marx was not at all a racist, he was probably
referring to Jewish ideology (Jewishness) which he
knew closely. I would maintain that if we want to find
the road to humanism we must liberate ourselves of the
Holocaust religion. The Holocaust as a message failed
to become a universal call. Instead it matured into a
tribal religion that opposes every value humanity and
humanism have ever stood for.
Many of us including me tend to equate Israel to Nazi
Germany. Rather often I myself join others and argue
that Israelis are the Nazis of our time. I want to
take this opportunity to amend my statement. Israelis
are not the Nazis of our time and the Nazis were not
the Israelis of their time. Israel, is in fact far
worse than Nazi Germany and the above equation is
simply meaningless and misleading.
In the past I mentioned that unlike totalitarian Nazi
Germany, the Jewish State is a ‘democracy’. In other
words, the entirety of its Jewish population is
complicit in IDF crimes against humanity. As if this
is not enough, the fact that 94% of Israel’s Jewish
population supported the IDF genocidal attack in Gaza
just over a year ago makes the case against Israel
solid like a rock.
But there is another point that must be mentioned
here. As we all know very well, Nazi Germany didn’t
like its Jews. It introduced racial laws, it aimed to
cleanse Germany and even the rest of Europe of its
Jewish population. It didn’t want to see Jews in
politics, in the workplace, in shops, in the media, in
the banks and in the streets. As resentful as Nazi
policies were, one thing was clear. Germany did it all
in the open. It didn’t hide a thing. It was racist and
it was proud about its bigotry. Israel and its Jewish
lobbies on the other hand, are doing it all in a
deceiving method. Rather than saying we hate Arabs, we
want Muslims out or even dead, rather than admitting
its ethnic cleansing policies and practices, Israel
always kills in the name of a grand ‘progressive’
ideology: in the name of democracy, pluralism, ‘moral
interventionism’, ‘war against terror’ and so on.
Israel’s supporters around the world are doing very
much the same, they preach for war in the name of
‘noble motives’, they always want to ‘liberate’ other
people, and to teach them about the greatest values of
the ‘democracy’ through military expansionist
interventionism.
The legendary Israeli humanist Israel Shahak wrote in
the late 1980’s about his experience as a Jew under
Nazi occupation: "if you enter a square from which
there are three exits, one guarded by a German SS man,
one by an Ukrainian and one by a Jewish policeman,
then you should first try to pass the German, and then
maybe the Ukrainian, but never the Jew."
I must say it loudly. I take Shahak’s advice very
seriously. If I ever enter a square from which there
are two exits, one Guarded by a Nazi officer holding a
rifle and the other blocked by Meir Dagan holding a
pillow, I will certainly go for the Nazi with no
hesitation.
* On The Jewish Question-Karl Marx 1844 http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1844/jewish-question/