In Ulysses James Joyce has his protagonist Stephen recite a vicious antisemitic nursery rhyme -a medieval blood libel-to Bloom, the Jew who's suffered a million antisemitic papercuts throughout the day.
The meaning of a bloodied baby as murdered by Jews depicted above is better grasped in all its gruesome detail and venomous hatred if we read the poem:
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Earlier in that day, there was this scene:
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Now read the article: how well James Joyce's captured the meanness of the Irish spirit when it came to Jewish suffering. It reads like a prophecy of his people's disgrace in WW2 from which they know not how to come back, except by more vicious blood libels.
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The greatly missed Norm Geras explained it once like this:
"It is part of human nature to hate the man you have hurt." ~Tacitus
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Now back to Ulysses, where a theoretical affinity between the two peoples is discussed. Note how it ends. What is that song, sung by Bloom in 1904 in Dublin, (which Joyce wrote between 1914-1921).
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Soon after the blood libel nursery rhyme is recited by Stephen, smiting any illusion that Ireland might want to or is capable of excising its pathological need for antisemitism to sustain its self-esteem.
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It directly reminded me of this quote from the greatest and most effective anti-Zionist in history:
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There's no language that can adequately encompass the sheer evil irony displayed in these two sinisterly-similar quotes whose intent is clear and declarative:
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1.Gaza is the most densely populated city in the world:
Gaza city is not even in the top 50. In fact, there are many cities in Europe and the USA that are denser than Gaza. For example, Paris.
2.Gaza is occupied by Israel:
Gaza has been 100% cleansed of Jews in 2005. Israel also formally declared an end to Israeli military occupation of the Gaza Strip. There is not even one Israeli soldier on Gazan soil. Israel doesn't fully control Gaza's borders either.
Gaza strip has a Southern border with Egypt, which fully controls at least one crossing, but chooses to keep it closed in support of the West Bank government.