Gość: A.D.
IP: *.mco.bellsouth.net
17.06.03, 04:55
>>> W Rumuni maja teraz problem z zydami. Nie, nie z tymi co zyja, ale z
tymi co zgineli, czy tez zagineli w okresie II Wojny Swiatowej. Zydzi, ci
ktorzy zyja, chca aby ci zydzi, co zyli w Rumuni, a ich tam nie ma, zeby
byli niezywi w jakis sposob, ktory moznaby podciagnac pod znany zydowski
gesheft, na codzien zwany 'Holokaustem'(pisze o tym Zyd, Norman
G.Finkelstein w "The Holocaust Industry). Tak wiec zydom w tym Holokaustu
geshefcie brakuje koniecznie 3/4 miliona zydow, ktorzy koniecznie musza byc
zamordowani, bo tak twierdza jacys zydzi, ktorych ten zydowski los ominal i
teraz musza po zydowski kasowac za to. Za co? Bo sie w tym wszystkim
zagubilem, ale kazdy moze sobie przeczytac o tym ponizej...
>>P.S. Jak nie bylo gdzies 'Holokaustu', to sie go dorabia, jak mialo to
miejsce z Jedwabnym. No bo musi byc!!!!
Last Update: 16/06/2003 19:20
Israel-Romania ties strained by Holocaust disclaimer
By The Associated Press
JERUSALEM - Israel-Romania relations have been
strained by Romania's declaration that there was
no Holocaust on its territory during World War II,
a Foreign Ministry official told the Romanian
ambassador on Monday.
The Romanian ambassador, Valeria
Mariana Stoica, was summoned to
the Foreign Ministry after her
government issued a statement
Friday denying that mass murder
of Jews took place in
Romanian-controlled territory,
while agreeing to allow
historians to examine the
nation's archives.
David Peleg, the Foreign Ministry's deputy
director general for central Europe and
Eurasia, told Stoica that Israel took a "grave
view" of the Romanian government position,
"which is at odds with the historical truth,"
according to a Foreign Ministry statement.
Peleg added that "Romania must find a way to
correct this unfortunate statement, in order to
return the bilateral ties to the right path,"
the statement said, employing unusually harsh
diplomatic language.
On Sunday, Israel's leading Holocaust research
institute, Yad Vashem, also rejected the
Romanian government's assertion that "there was
no Holocaust inside the Romanian borders,"
saying that hundreds of thousands of Romania
Jews were killed in World War II.
A leading Israeli expert on the Holocaust in
Romania, Jean Ancel, said that of the 760,000
Jews who once lived in Romanian-controlled
territories during World War II, 420,000 were
killed. Yad Vashem recently published a
two-volume book by Ancel on the subject.
Documents discovered by Ancel also show that the
Romanian government was directly involved in
the extermination. "Romania was the only ally
of Germany that had its own plan of destruction
and used its own army to exterminate Jews,"
said Ancel, charging that some of the crimes
were even more savage and more barbaric than
those committed by the Germans.
The German Nazis and their allies killed 6
million Jews during World War II, gassing many
to death in extermination camps and shooting
others after forcing them to dig their own mass
graves. Ancel said that in the Ukraine,
Romanian soldiers also burned Jews alive.
Romania has been criticized for its reluctance
to come to grips with its role in the
Holocaust. On Thursday, the government signed
an agreement allowing the Washington-based
Holocaust Memorial Museum to study Romanian
archives about the Holocaust.
Despite that agreement, the Romanian Ministry of
Public Information claimed that "within the
borders of Romania between 1940 and 1945 there
was no Holocaust."
Today, about 6,000 Jews live in Romania.