Chapter 17: Race, Christianity and Judaism, Pg. 9 of 15 ORDER NOW!

As a younger man I reacted to this hidden Jewish racism first with shock and then with anger. How could the liberal Jewish pundits and media moguls condemn Southerners who simply wanted segregation, while their own Holy Writ taught hatred and violence against us, the non-Jews. When I began to talk publicly about the hatred that was in the Talmud, I was branded a hater, a bigot, and an anti-Semite by the media and by groups like the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith (ADL). The ADL is a multimillion-dollar, worldwide organization whose whole purpose is to defame and discredit those who simply tell the truth about Jewish supremacism and hatred against Gentiles.

I became very angry, not only at the hatred that I saw in the traditional Jewish writings, but also in the Jewish leadership's hypocritical attacks on those who exposed that hatred. They attacked me for simply quoting the Talmud publicly, when I did nothing but simply read directly from their holy books. Yet, they called me the "hater."

Ultimately, the unjust and hypocritical attacks I faced only sharpened my resolve to stand up, no matter how alone, for the cause I believed in. Unexpectedly, I found that there are a number of Jews who dare to speak out about the truth about Zionism and Jewish supremacism. A much-persecuted and slandered group, they were just as appalled as I was about the intolerant and hateful strains of Judaism that had arisen in the Jewish community and the Zionist State. They included Americans such as Alfred Lilienthal, Noam Chomsky, and a courageous Jew in Israel, Dr. Israel Shahak. These scholars had dared to stand up against Jewish intolerance.

Dr. Israel Shahak risks all to bring what he calls "decent humanity" to Judaism and the Zionist State. Professor Shahak was born in Warsaw in 1933 and was liberated from the Nazi concentration camp at Bergen-Belsen; therefore, by the Jews' own definition, he is a Holocaust survivor. He immigrated to Israel, served in the Israeli army, and became a respected chemistry professor. Dr. Shahak is a lifelong human rights activist who has written on aspects of Judaism in both Hebrew and English. He has written many books, his latest in 1994 being Jewish History, Jewish Religion.1 Gore Vidal wrote an excellent foreword in the current American edition. Here are some excerpts from Shahak's book exposing the attitude of the Jewish religion toward Christianity:

     Judaism is imbued with a very deep hatred toward Christianity, combined with ignorance about it. This attitude was clearly aggravated by the Christian persecutions of Jews, but is largely independent of them. In fact, it dates from the time when Christianity was still weak and persecuted (not least by Jews), and it was shared by Jews who had never been persecuted by Christians or who were even helped by them...
     According to the Talmud, Jesus was executed by a proper rabbinical court for idolatry, inciting other Jews to idolatry, and contempt of rabbinical authority. All classical Jewish sources which mention his execution are quite happy to take responsibility for it; in the [talmudic account the Romans are not even mentioned...
     The very name Jesus was for Jews a symbol of all that is abominable, and this popular tradition still persists. The Gospels are equally detested, and they are not allowed to be quoted (let alone taught) even in modern Israeli schools.
2


  1. Shahak, I. (1994). Jewish History, Jewish Religion. Boulder, Colorado. Pluto Press.
  2. Shahak, I. (1994). Jewish History, Jewish Religion. 97-98.

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