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51 Documents Zionist Collaboration With The Nazis LENNI BRENNER 1983 by onderkoffer

Book Information

Title51 Documents Zionist Collaboration With The Nazis LENNI BRENNER 1983
Creatoronderkoffer
PPI300
LanguageEnglish
Mediatypetexts
Subjectzionism, nazis, collaberation
Collectionopensource, community
Uploaderonderkoffer
Identifier51DocumentsZionistCollaborationWithTheNazisLENNIBRENNER1983
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Description

There are six selections re Zionism’s relationship to anti-Semitism and racism prior to Hitler. The 51 documents, including 35 letters, memos, articles, and reports by Zionists, are from the Hitler era and after. Seven are by Nazis, most notably Eichmann’s memoir, written in Argentina, on Hungarian collaborator RA< Zionism convicts itself. On June 21, 1933, the German Zionist Federation sent a secret memorandum to the Nazis: “Zionism has no illusions about the difficulty of the Jewish condition, which consists above all in an abnormal occupational pattern and in the fault of an intellectual and moral posture not rooted in one’s own tradition. Zionism recognized decades ago that as a result of the assimilationist trend, symptoms of deterioration were bound to appear, which it seeks to overcome by carrying out its challenge to transform Jewish life completely. “It is our opinion that an answer to the Jewish question truly satisfying to the national state can be brought about only with the collaboration of the Jewish movement that aims at a social, cultural and moral renewal of Jewry–indeed, that such a national renewal must first create the decisive social and spiritual premises for all solutions. “Zionism believes that a rebirth of national life, such as is occurring in German life through adhesion to Christian and national values, must also take place in the Jewish national group. For the Jew, too, origin, religion, community of fate and group consciousness must be of decisive significance in the shaping of his life. This means that the egotistic individualism which arose in the liberal era must be overcome by public spiritedness and by willingness to accept responsibility.”