🧵🧵Thread: Before the Jewish return, the land of Israel was a land without industry or infrastructure, ravaged by neglect and poverty under Ottoman rule. Visitors dismissed it as barren, lifeless, and forgotten.
In 1867, Mark Twain saw it with his own eyes and called it barren, lifeless, and hopeless.
This thread breaks down what he saw, what it meant, and why Zionists were right to quote him 🧵🧵
1/10
Twain’s visit to Palestine in 1867, documented in The Innocents Abroad, was part of a luxury cruise through Europe and the Ottoman Empire. He wasn’t on a political mission. He was writing for an American audience hungry for satire, travel commentary, and biblical reflection.
But his words left a deep impression: he called Palestine “a desolate country,” a place where “we never saw a human being on the whole route,” with “barren hills,” “unsightly deserts,” and “no solitary village for thirty miles.”
Zionists have rightly cited these words to show that the land was far from flourishing before Jewish pioneers arrived to revive and rebuild it.
Jul 8 • 13 tweets • 13 min read
🧵🧵Thread: How Newspapers Helped Kill 6 Million Jews🧵🧵
The Holocaust didn’t begin with Auschwitz, cattle cars, ghettos, or death marches.
It began years earlier, with headlines, street posters, and newspapers displayed in glass cases for children to read on their way to school.
Before Jews were hunted or deported, they were redefined and dehumanized.
Day by day, word by word, the German society was trained:
🔹 To fear their neighbors
🔹 To laugh at their suffering
🔹 To feel nothing when they vanished
This wasn’t hidden rhetoric. It was state-sponsored journalism.
And it happened in broad daylight on every street corner.
The goal wasn’t just to hate the Jew.
It was to unsee the Jew as human.
This thread is about how Nazi newspapers like Der Stürmer and Völkischer Beobachter made genocide not just possible but actually popular.
And why their methods still matter today.
1/12 – How Nazi Newspapers Paved the Road to Genocide
Joseph Goebbels, head of the Ministry of Propaganda, understood that public opinion could be shaped long before violence ever began. He knew that if people saw Jews not as individuals, but as threats to society, it would become easier to justify discrimination, exclusion, and eventually mass murder.
To achieve this, the Nazi regime used newspapers as a primary tool for dehumanization. The two most influential publications were:
1 – Der Stürmer, a weekly paper filled with crude antisemitic cartoons, conspiracy theories, and inflammatory headlines. It appealed to emotion, fear, and hatred.
2 – Völkischer Beobachter, the official newspaper of the Nazi Party. Unlike Der Stürmer, it presented itself as a serious and intellectual publication, using political and economic arguments to portray Jews as a danger to Germany’s future.
Together, these two papers reached millions of Germans each week. They didn’t simply report events—they shaped how those events were understood. Through constant repetition of antisemitic themes and moral framing, they slowly shifted the public’s perception of Jews from citizens to enemies.
This was not passive information. It was active indoctrination.
So yes, before the physical destruction came the psychological one.
Jul 4 • 10 tweets • 5 min read
🧵This July 4th, let’s honor the Jewish patriots who helped secure America’s independence.
Though only 2,000–3,000 Jews lived in the colonies, they made huge contributions, from financing the war, fighting on the front lines, to advocating for liberty, and helping lay the groundwork for religious freedom.
Here are some of the Jewish heroes of the American Revolution 🇺🇸👇1/ Haym Salomon – The Financier of the Revolution
Born in Poland in 1740, Haym Salomon was a Sephardic Jew who immigrated to New York. Fluent in several languages, he used his skills to work as a broker and translator for foreign merchants, and later for the Patriot cause.
During the war, Salomon became a prime financier for the Continental Congress. He helped sell war bonds and raised personal loans from wealthy French and Spanish Jews to support Washington’s army when Congress lacked funds.
He personally gave over $650,000, more than $14 million in today’s money, including $20,000 for the final campaign at Yorktown, without which the decisive victory may not have happened.
Captured twice by the British as a suspected spy, he bribed his way out of prison and resumed his efforts, even helping British-held prisoners escape.
Despite his immense contribution, he died in 1785 nearly penniless, having sacrificed everything for the American cause. His gravestone reads: “An American patriot.”
Jun 30 • 12 tweets • 7 min read
🧵Zohran Mamdani’s NYC Agenda: A Blueprint for Collapse
New York City stands at a crossroads — and Zohran Mamdani’s radical agenda threatens to push it over the edge.
Most people know him for defending the intifada. They think that’s the controversy.
But that’s just the tip of the iceberg
His platform is a fantasy-world checklist that would bankrupt the city, dismantle public safety, and drive out the working and middle class that keeps New York alive.
Here’s exactly how Mamdani would wreck the city — thread below 🧵👇1. Rent Freeze on Rent-Stabilized Apartments
Policy: Freeze rents on ~1 million rent-stabilized apartments to shield low- and middle-income tenants from rising costs — especially during inflation.
Why It’s Flawed:
Freezing rents may sound tenant-friendly, but it devastates property maintenance. Landlords can’t afford rising costs (repairs, taxes, insurance), and buildings deteriorate — just like they did in 1970s NYC.
A 2019 Manhattan Institute study found that San Francisco’s rent control policies led to reduced housing quality and decreased supply.
Private investment dries up. Developers walk away. Market distortions cause non-stabilized rents to skyrocket, squeezing the middle class.
This isn’t affordability — it’s slow-motion collapse.
Jun 27 • 23 tweets • 17 min read
🧵🧵No, the Jews didn’t “come” to Israel—because they never left.
Jews have lived in the Land of Israel every single century since the destruction of the Second Temple.
This is not a claim. It’s a fact.
In this thread, I’ll give you a full timeline—
A century-by-century account of uninterrupted presence.
📍 One community
👤 One leader or scholar
📜 Every century
Buckle up—this is a long one.
Let’s begin. 🧵🧵
1️⃣ 1st Century CE (70–100 CE)
📍 Locations: Yavne, Galilee (Tzippori, Gush Halav), outskirts of Jerusalem
👥 Community: Following the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE by Rome, Jewish religious leadership moved to Yavne where Rabban Yochanan ben Zakkai reestablished the Sanhedrin (Jewish court). This was critical in transforming Judaism from Temple rituals to Rabbinic Judaism centered on Torah study and prayer. Communities in Galilee, including Tzippori and Gush Halav, thrived as centers of learning and agriculture despite Roman restrictions.
👤 Key Figure: Rabban Yochanan ben Zakkai, who pioneered the transition of Judaism to a post-Temple reality.
🏛️ Historical Context: Roman repression continued, with Jews barred from Jerusalem but maintaining a strong presence throughout Galilee and central Israel.
🏺 Archaeology: Synagogues and mikvaot (ritual baths) found in Galilee from this period reveal sustained religious activity.
May 28 • 10 tweets • 8 min read
🧵THREAD🧵: Elite, Educated, and Entitled: Harvard Has Always Had a Jewish Problem.
What’s happening to Jewish students at Harvard right now—being harassed, cornered, intimidated, and even blocked from going to class—isn’t new at all.
Harvard has spent over a century finding new ways to exclude Jews. In the 1920s, they called it “character.” In the 1930s, they called it “neutrality.” Today, they call it “justice for Palestine.”
But the result is always the same: Jewish students feel unsafe. Unwelcome. And alone.
This thread walks through how we got here—from quotas and Nazis to Hamas and Title VI investigations.
Because if we don’t understand the history, we’ll never stop it from repeating 👇
1. Harvard’s First “Jewish Problem” — Quotas in the 1920s.
In the early 1920s, Jews made up about 20% of Harvard’s student body. These were poor immigrant kids, many of them the children of Eastern European Jews who had fled pogroms — earning their place at Harvard not through legacy or wealth, but through academic brilliance and determination. And Harvard panicked.
President A. Lawrence Lowell saw the rise in Jewish students as a threat. Not an academic threat. But a cultural one. He didn’t want Harvard to lose its elite, white Protestant image — so he proposed a quota to cap the number of Jews at 15%.
To do that, Harvard overhauled its admissions process. They began judging students on “character,” “personality,” and “background” — vague codes for identifying Jews. They examined names, asked about religion, looked at extracurriculars, and suddenly, brilliant Jewish applicants were being turned away.
These policies didn’t just hurt individuals. They institutionalized the message: You don’t belong here.
May 25 • 10 tweets • 9 min read
🧵THREAD: Meet the Jewish immigrant who built America’s Nuclear Navy.
These days, some people are trying to question and challenge the place of Jews in American life—What we’ve contributed, what side we’re on, or if we even belong here.
So here’s just one story. One man.
A Jewish kid from a Polish shtetl…
Who ended up building the most powerful Navy in the world.
They called him a tyrant. A genius. A lunatic. A prophet.
But without him, America would’ve lost the Cold War underwater.
This is the unbelievable story of Admiral Hyman G. Rickover —The father of the nuclear Navy. 🧵1. From the shtetl to the sea.
Rickover was born in 1900 in a one-room shack in Maków Mazowiecki, Poland. His father was a tailor. They were Jews—poor, persecuted, and always one step away from disaster.
When Hyman was 6, the family fled to America to escape antisemitism. They arrived in Chicago with almost nothing.
He barely spoke English.
By 9, he was delivering ice. By 14, he was shining shoes and working in a hardware store.
But he was sharp. Tough. Relentless. And no one—no one—would outwork him.
The Talmud—the backbone of Jewish thought—has been attacked, censored, and destroyed more than almost any other book in history. To Jews, it is the foundation of law, morality, and identity. To its enemies, it was a threat, a conspiracy, a danger to the world order.
For centuries, Christian Kings, popes, and rulers demonized the Talmud, accusing it of blasphemy, treason, and corruption. Entire copies were burned in public squares, and Jewish communities were persecuted for studying it. But what made the Talmud so feared? Why did the world wage a relentless war against Jewish knowledge?
Let’s dive deep into the history of these attacks, why they happened, and why the Talmud remains at the heart of Jewish life. 1. What is the Talmud, and Why Has It Been Attacked for Centuries?
To understand why the Talmud has been targeted throughout history, we need to understand what it represents. The Talmud is the vast compendium of Jewish law, ethics, philosophy, and debate. It is not just one book but a collection of over 2,711 double-sided pages, composed of two primary parts:
▪️The Mishnah (compiled in the 2nd century CE), a written record of Jewish oral law.
▪️The Gemara (completed between the 4th and 6th centuries CE), which expands, debates, and analyzes these teachings with rigorous intellectual discussion.
The Talmud’s unique nature sets it apart from other
religious texts, because it is not a fixed, unquestionable doctrine but a living, evolving conversation between rabbis spanning centuries. The text is filled with disagreements, counterarguments, and multiple perspectives, showing that Jewish learning is based on critical thinking and dialogue, not blind obedience.
This made the Talmud dangerous to those in power. Unlike Christian teachings, which emphasized centralized authority, the Talmud encouraged questioning and debate. It made Jewish scholarship independent of kings and popes, reinforcing Jewish identity in exile.
As Christianity gained dominance, church leaders saw the Talmud as a threat. It kept Jews from converting, challenged religious control, and contained ideas they did not understand. Because the Talmud is vast, complex, and filled with figurative language, it was easy for outsiders to misinterpret, distort, and weaponize.
I’ve held back from posting this thread out of respect for the Ukrainian people. Despite Ukraine’s long history of antisemitism, I refrained from bringing it up given their current struggles.
However, after President Zelensky’s utter disrespect toward President Trump, Vice President Vance, and ultimately the United States, I can’t hold back anymore.
Some will say I’m Russian-paid for writing this bla bla bla. That’s nonsense. I’m not taking any stance on the current war in Ukraine. I am simply stating the history of my people—a history of persecution, massacres, and betrayal in a land that was once their home.
Ukraine’s history of antisemitism is long and brutal. From the Khmelnytsky massacres to pogroms, from collaboration in the Holocaust to modern-day neo-Nazi units, the Jewish people have suffered immensely on Ukrainian soil.
Let’s begin.1/ The Khmelnytsky Uprising.
The Khmelnytsky Uprising (1648-1657) marked one of the earliest and most brutal episodes of antisemitism in Ukraine. Led by Bohdan Khmelnytsky, Ukrainian Cossacks sought independence from Polish rule. Amid their struggle, they targeted Jews, whom they saw as agents of Polish landlords. An estimated 50,000 Jews were massacred in the most horrific ways—burned alive, dismembered, and tortured. Entire communities were wiped out, with survivors left destitute or enslaved. Khmelnytsky remains a national hero in Ukraine today, despite his role in these atrocities, highlighting the lasting tension between Ukrainian nationalism and Jewish memory.
Feb 5 • 13 tweets • 11 min read
🧵🧵🧵When 850,000 Jews Were Expelled and No One gave a beep: A Lesson for Today. 🧵🧵🧵
Thread: Over the last couple, President Donald Trump proposed a couple of times that the United States should "take over" the Gaza Strip, suggesting the relocation of its 1.7 million residents to neighboring countries like Egypt and Jordan. He proposed transforming Gaza into the "Riviera of the Middle East".
This proposal has ignited widespread outrage. The irrelevant UN Secretary-General António Guterres warned against potential "ethnic cleansing." Countries including Germany, Brazil, and China and many Arab nations, particularly Egypt, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia, have firmly rejected the idea, emphasizing the rights of Palestinians to their homeland.
Setting aside the questionability of this plan's implementation, the global outrage it has caused is striking. Yet, it's worth reflecting on a historical similarity: between 1948 and 1970, over 850,000 Jews were expelled from Arab and African countries. Their displacement was not due to uninhabitable conditions but stemmed from systemic anti-Semitism and hatred. The international community's response at that time was markedly muted, no one gave a beep.
In this thread, we’ll dive into the stories of these Jews, who lived for hundreds, sometimes thousands, of years in these lands, only to find themselves on the other side of the door.1/ Iraq: From 2,600 Years of History to Forced Exodus.
Ancient Roots: Jews lived in Iraq since the Babylonian exile in 586 BCE, with a vibrant community that helped shape Jewish law (Talmud Bavli was written there). By the early 20th century, Iraqi Jews made up 40% of Baghdad’s population. with Jews thriving as merchants, bankers, scholars and many other fields.
But this long history came to a cruel end in the mid-20th century. In 1941, the Farhud pogrom swept through Baghdad. Inspired by Nazi propaganda, local mobs murdered 180 Jews, injured hundreds more, and looted homes and businesses. This shattered the trust between Jews and their neighbors.
The situation worsened after Israel’s independence in 1948. Iraq’s government passed laws banning Zionism, freezing Jewish bank accounts, and removing citizenship from the Iraqi Jews. A 1950 law allowed Jews to emigrate—but only if they renounced their nationality, leaving them stateless.
By 1951, under Operation Ezra and Nehemiah, nearly 120,000 Jews, - 90% of Iraq’s Jewish population, were airlifted to Israel. These families left behind property worth $200 million (over $2 billion today). Today, fewer than three Jews remain in Iraq.
Jan 28 • 18 tweets • 6 min read
🧵Remembering the Holocaust on Remembrance Day🧵
Thread: On this Remembrance Day, we pause to reflect on the unimaginable horrors of the Holocaust. The images shared below are not meant to shock, but to serve as a solemn reminder of the atrocities endured by millions of Jews. These are the faces of those who suffered, and we owe it to them—and to humanity—to ensure that such darkness is never repeated.
The horrors of the Holocaust are too often forgotten or minimized by those who seek to distort history. Today, we look back at some of the most disturbing images as a warning of what hatred and bigotry can lead to.
⚠️⚠️Viewer discretion is advised⚠️⚠️
A child in the Warsaw Ghetto collapses on the street, weakened beyond measure by starvation.1/ A German soldier shooting a Ukrainian Jew during a mass execution in Vinnytsia, Ukraine, sometime between 1941 and 1943.
⚠️⚠️Viewer discretion is advised⚠️⚠️
Dec 15, 2024 • 19 tweets • 7 min read
🧵Meet 15 Jewish Nobel Prize Winners Who Changed History🧵
The Jewish population constitutes just 0.18% of the world (15.3 million out of 8.2 billion), yet approximately 20-30% of Nobel Prize winners in fields like Physics, Chemistry, and Medicine are Jewish. This incredible fact highlights the Jewish community's historic contributions to humanity.
Let’s meet just 15 of the over 200 Jewish Nobel Prize winners.1/ Albert Einstein (1921, Physics).
Einstein was born in Germany to a secular Jewish family. His groundbreaking discovery of the photoelectric effect laid the foundation for quantum mechanics, earning him the Nobel Prize.
▪ His theory of relativity (E=mc²) reshaped our understanding of gravity and spacetime.
▪In 1933, Einstein fled Nazi Germany to the U.S., where he became a vocal advocate for civil rights and Zionism.
▪He helped inspire the Manhattan Project but later became an advocate for nuclear disarmament.
Dec 8, 2024 • 22 tweets • 6 min read
🧵Thread: Events since October 7, 2023, that led to the collapse of the Assad regime.1. The horrific massacre on Oct 7th by Hamas terrorists.
🧵Thread: The story of Jews in America goes beyond just history; it is deeply personal. It is about Jewish families who, escaping persecution and arriving with nothing, poured everything into creating a better future. It’s about standing alongside their neighbors in times of war, during civil rights struggles, and through cultural revolutions. But today, that's all under attack: antisemitism is on the rise and, with it, an attempt to erase centuries of resilience and contributions.
Let me take you on a brief journey through the amazing story of Jewish Americans, their achievements, their triumphs, and why their fight is one we all must share.1/ Arrival in the New World (1654):
In 1654, 23 Jewish refugees arrived in New Amsterdam (now New York City), fleeing the Inquisition in Brazil. They faced hostility from Governor Peter Stuyvesant, who wanted to expel them. But their determination, and appeals to Dutch authorities, ensured their place in the New World.
These early Jews established America’s first synagogue, Congregation Shearith Israel, in 1655. Despite being a tiny minority, they thrived by trading, contributing to the local economy, and building a foundation for Jewish life in America. Their story reflects the broader Jewish narrative: persistence in the face of exclusion.
Thread: The idea that Arabs loved Jews until the creation of Israel is a widespread and untrue myth. Many believe that Jews were welcomed and lived peacefully among Arabs until the establishment of the modern state of Israel in 1948. This view is not only historically inaccurate but dangerously overlooks the long and painful history of Jewish suffering in the Middle East. Long before Zionism, Jews faced massacres, forced conversions, and expulsions in regions once ruled by the Arabs. In fact, Jews in the Arab world endured centuries of persecution under both Muslim and Ottoman rulers. Here’s a look at some of the most significant massacres and pogroms throughout this period, revealing the true story of Jewish life in the Middle East.1. The Massacre of the Banu Qurayza (627 CE).
Long before Zionism, Jewish communities in the Middle East endured persecution, including one of the earliest and most harrowing incidents: the massacre of the Banu Qurayza in Medina during the time of the Prophet Muhammad.
The Banu Qurayza, a Jewish tribe in Medina, had entered into a pact with Muhammad under the Constitution of Medina, which allowed Muslims and Jews to coexist. However, during the Battle of the Trench, the tribe was accused of conspiring with Muhammad’s enemies, the Quraysh. After the Muslim victory, Muhammad and his forces besieged the Banu Qurayza’s fortress, forcing their surrender.
What followed was brutal. A tribunal led by Sa’d ibn Mu’adh sentenced all adult males of the tribe to death and enslaved the women and children. To determine who qualified as an “adult male,” boys were subjected to inspections for signs of puberty, specifically the presence of pubic hair. Those deemed adults were executed alongside the men. Historical sources, such as Ibn Ishaq and al-Tabari, report that between 600 and 900 men and boys were killed, their bodies dumped into trenches.
The Banu Qurayza’s women and children were sold into slavery, marking the total destruction of the tribe. This event illustrates the precarious and often deadly position of Jewish communities in the early Islamic period, long before the creation of Israel or the modern conflict in the region.
Thread: In today’s political rhetoric, the term “Nazi” is thrown around very casuall by those looking to smear their opponents without fully understanding or ignoring the weight of the word. It’s now almost commonplace for Democrats to label Trump and his supporters as “Nazis.” But do these people actually understand the unspeakable crimes and inhumane actions that the Nazis committed, or the irreversible scars they left on the world? What happened in Nazi Germany was a methodical, calculated genocide that reduced human lives to numbers on a spreadsheet and embraced cruelty as policy. Let’s remember the real Nazis—not as some empty insult, but as the masterminds of one of history’s darkest chapters. 1/ Adolf Hitler – Leader of the Third Reich.
Hitler’s name is synonymous with genocide, war, and hatred. As dictator of Nazi Germany, he led the world into World War II and crafted the policies that ignited the Holocaust. Hitler’s ideology centered around the belief in Aryan racial superiority, which fueled his ambition to eradicate Jews, Romani people, disabled individuals, and countless others he deemed “undesirable.” His orders led to the systematic murder of six million Jews and millions of others in gas chambers, ghettos, and mass shootings. Beyond the Holocaust, Hitler’s war set the globe on fire, causing unspeakable suffering and loss. His legacy is one of absolute brutality—a vision that sacrificed humanity for his twisted ideals. He is considered as the worst person to walk on our planet.
𝐓𝐡𝐫𝐞𝐚𝐝: As we are getting closer to the elections, the stakes have never been higher for Jewish people. Antisemitism is on the rise, from the streets where Jews are attacked outside restaurants and on the subway, to our universities, where hate toward Jews has run amok. And Kamala Harris who said that some of the antisemites have a 'valid' point, yet has done nothing to counteract this rising hate. Her treatment of Israel, as it faces an existential fight, has been nothing short of a betrayal.
Meanwhile, political opponents have tried to paint Donald Trump as sympathetic to Nazis, going as far as comparing him to Hitler. Yet millions of Jewish Americans know the truth. Trump’s actions tell a different story—a story of clear support for the Jewish people, unwavering defense of Israel, and personal connections that prove his commitment. Jewish voters at this historic crossroads should examine Trump’s record for themselves.
In this thread, we will review Trump’s powerful support for Israel and the Jewish people and his longstanding relationships within the Jewish community.1. Recognizing Jerusalem as Israel’s Capital:
One of Donald Trump’s most significant actions as president was his decision to officially recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel in 2017. For decades, U.S. presidents had promised this recognition but never delivered. Trump broke that cycle. By making this declaration, he did more than making a symbolic statement—he corrected a historic injustice. Jerusalem has been at the heart of the Jewish people for thousands of years, and Trump’s recognition of this fact was a powerful affirmation of Israel’s rightful sovereignty. This move wasn’t just a fulfillment of a campaign promise—it was a testament to Trump’s understanding of Israel’s deep historical and spiritual ties to the land.
Thread: Given that the French President Macron has called for a weapons embargo against Israel in the context of the Gaza war, it's essential to recognize the deep hypocrisy of such a move. While Macron presents himself as a champion of human rights, his call to cut off Israel’s defense while facing a terrorist threat reveals the same anti-Jewish bias that has been present in France for centuries. France has a long history of turning on its Jewish population. Today, that pattern is driving French Jews to leave their homeland in alarming numbers. Let's take a journey through that troubling history.1/ Medieval Expulsions and Restrictions.
France's relations with her Jews was always inconsistent. She talked the talk of revolutionary ideals of "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity," yet Jews were considered continually as outsiders, not good enough for those ideals. As early as the Middle Ages, Jewish communities in France were strictly controlled, their religious practices restricted, and their opportunities limited. Jews were forbidden from owning land, holding public office, or intermarrying with Christians. The easiest solution, as King Philip IV decided in 1306, was to expel them altogether, taking their property in the process. The greed of the king and the hostility of the Church combined made Jewish life in France impossible to sustain.
Oct 6, 2024 • 24 tweets • 9 min read
🧵Thread: This will not be easy to read or view, but it’s essential as we approach the first anniversary of the horrific October 7th massacre. We must remember what the Palestinians who entered Israel that day did to men, women, the elderly, children, and babies.
These are just a few of the thousands of images and footage from that day, showing the true face of genocide.
⚠️🚨 WARNING: The following photos are extremely graphic, depicting the brutal reality of genocide. Viewer discretion is strongly advised. ⚠️🚨
1/ We are here with the girls" 💔 Horrific documentation from Facebook Live that Hamas terrorists opened from the phones of the abductees documenting the moments of horror when they were wounded and scared before being taken captive by Hamas. Such cruelty that the whole world should watch. These are not "free fighters",
These are bloodthirsty monsters.
Aug 28, 2024 • 19 tweets • 6 min read
🧵Thread: Throwing around the word "genocide" can be easy, but not every war is a genocide, and not every conflict is a slaughter. Here are just a few of the thousands of photos from the Holocaust to show what genocide truly looks like.
⚠️🚨 WARNING: The following photos are extremely graphic and depict the horrors of genocide. They may be deeply disturbing. Viewer discretion is strongly advised. 🚨⚠️
1/ April 12, 1945 - A portion of the bodies found by U.S. troops when they arrived at Nordhausen concentration camp in Germany.
Enough is enough, Let’s set the record straight: the claim that Arabs welcomed Jews to Israel after the Holocaust is a false narrative and just a lie. The reality is that it's a much more complex and challenging history. Here’s a comprehensive look at the real dynamics of Jewish immigration and the reception in Israel.1/ An Ancient Bond: Jews and the Land of Israel.
Let me first say that The idea that Jews arrived in Israel only as Holocaust refugees disregards their ancient and continuous connection to the land. Jews have maintained a consistent presence in Israel for thousands of years, documented in ancient texts and archaeological findings. Cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, and Safed were significant centers of Jewish life long before the 20th century. This deep-rooted connection shows the significance of Israel to the Jewish people throughout history.