Przemas
14 Jan 2008
History / Jews...and their Polish experience [520]
I read this and thought of a certain post I just recently read on another message board.
"The reason why the Jews were unable to revolt is because no one was on their side.
When the Germans came to Poland to take away the Jews, the Poles LET THEM. They helped round them up. They helped make it all happen. Same in Czechoslovakia. Same in Russia. Same thing everywhere the Nazis went.
What you fail to understand - all of you - is that NOBODY CARED ABOUT THE JEWS.
Well...not nobody....but nobody big enough to be willing to fight for them.
It was only when the real atrocities started to be known that anyone started to care. Or rather, should I say, once the faint outline of the atrocities came to be known. In truth, I believe that very few people actually knew what was going on in the camps until after they were liberated."
A brief history of "ww2 history":
1939-45 Germans attacked Poland and killed Jews
1950 - German Nazis attacked Poland and killed Jews
1960 - Nazis attacked Poland and killed Jews
1970 - Jews were killed in Nazi occupied Poland
1980 - Jews were killed in Poland
1990 - Poles killed Jews
2000 - Poles like killing Jews
1939-45 Germans attacked Poland and killed Jews
1950 - German Nazis attacked Poland and killed Jews
1960 - Nazis attacked Poland and killed Jews
1970 - Jews were killed in Nazi occupied Poland
1980 - Jews were killed in Poland
1990 - Poles killed Jews
2000 - Poles like killing Jews
I read this and thought of a certain post I just recently read on another message board.
"The reason why the Jews were unable to revolt is because no one was on their side.
When the Germans came to Poland to take away the Jews, the Poles LET THEM. They helped round them up. They helped make it all happen. Same in Czechoslovakia. Same in Russia. Same thing everywhere the Nazis went.
What you fail to understand - all of you - is that NOBODY CARED ABOUT THE JEWS.
Well...not nobody....but nobody big enough to be willing to fight for them.
It was only when the real atrocities started to be known that anyone started to care. Or rather, should I say, once the faint outline of the atrocities came to be known. In truth, I believe that very few people actually knew what was going on in the camps until after they were liberated."