The Nuns Of Auschwitz |
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stooge number one
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- Wednesday, November 14 2007, 21:38:51 (CET) from 12.199.144.42 - mail.shpl.org Non-Profit Organizations - Linux - Mozilla Website: Website title: |
Carrol’s book, “Constantine’s Sword” begins with an incident back in the 1980s when a group of nuns tried to build a chapel on land they bought just outside the gates of that infamous death-camp created by Christians to kill and cook hundreds of thousands of Jews for “killing Christ” 1,939 years earlier(never forget!) and anyone else they didn’t like. The nuns said they wanted to pray for the salvation of the poor Jews murdered across the road and, no doubt, for the souls of their enthusiastic Christian murderers. A loud cry of protest went out from Jews world-wide. This, they said, was adding insult to injury. The monumental cross the nuns wished to set up by the entrance to their property, a symbol to them of Christ’s whatever, was seen by the Jews as the supreme symbol(an instrument of torture and execution) of the Christians who’d murdered their relatives…a reminder that its shape is nothing more than the shape of the swords Constantine and later Hitler used…and to have its shadow fall, once again, on the hallowed grounds of a Christian killing-field, now turned into a Holocaust memorial, was an insult to the memory of those whom Christianity had hounded for centuries, killing them in retail every few years until the conditions were right for a wholesale massacre. The Jews won their point and the nuns were sent off to play someplace else, although they received bad press for being “against” the free expression of religious sentiment, especially one of “forgiveness”. But they’d experienced enough of that sort of Christian charity and wanted no more of it. Christians having hounded Jewish bodies to death and burned them afterwards, Jews wanted to spare at least the souls of their ancestors from any more tender Christian mercies. If the Jews were going to down-play the role of modern Christian Europe in their slaughter, that didn’t mean they didn’t know damn well who did this to them…any reminder, no matter how well-intentioned, aimed at washing Christian responsibility clean and presented as a “service” was not going to be tolerated. Christians have this marvelous propensity to commit the most awful crimes, confident that they can be forgiven anything. Sometimes it’s better to never receive absolution but have to live with your crimes, forever and beyond. Amen. --------------------- |
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