Chilling Memories in a Warmer Clime

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A boy learns a lesson in cold reality.
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This story is the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help me God.

THE WINTER OF 1946-47 was long and cold in northern Montana. On Christmas Day my father pulled me on my brand-new sled to a neighbor's house, where we borrowed a load of firewood that we stacked on our back porch. I seem to remember that the thermometer read --55 that day, but childhood memories are notoriously suspect. Nonetheless, it was very cold. Flathead Lake froze so thick people drove across the ice for two months to save a 30 or 40 mile trip.

That two-week Christmas break turned into three weeks, thanks to a blizzard that left a 15-foot snowdrift across the road to the school. (We exultant students would have tempered our celebratory mindset had we known that we would have to attend school five Saturdays that spring to make up for those missed days.)

That winter probably seemed even longer and colder to my father, not long home from his Army Air Corps service on Canton Island in the South Pacific. He was superintendent of schools in our tiny sawmill town, and often brought home the school's 16mm sound projector on weekends—our television and movies. As 7-year-olds do, I learned to thread, project, and rewind that old Bell & Howell. Dad brought home a collection of films for that Christmas holiday, mostly Castle Films—cartoons, comedies, and his beloved westerns: Bob Steele, Tom Mix, Hoot Gibson.

And a silent, black-and-white U.S. Army Signal Corps film that showed the entry of U.S. Army units into a death camp. I can never forget those images. The approach to the camp, hundreds of impossibly thin men in filthy striped uniforms, hands clinging to the wire fence, staring with huge, hollowed, unblinking eyes. Seventy years later I can see those eyes without shutting my own.

Then through the gates. The ghostly figures parted, the cameraman entered the buildings. Beds were nothing more than shelves. Shadowy light slanted through tiny windows. More staring eyes in the faces of people too weak to leave their bed.

Finally, deep into the camp, the trenches. Men standing there also, staring vacantly, standing at the edge of these vast trenches filled with bodies. Hundreds of bodies, thousands of bodies, naked bodies that were little more than bones with skin stretched over them, bodies stacked helter-skelter like jackstraws. The men standing at the trenches were as thin as the bodies in them; my 7-year-old mind couldn't understand how anyone could be so thin and still be alive, couldn't understand how there could be so many bodies.

Over and over I watched that Signal Corps film that long Christmas holiday, sitting in a cold, dark living room lit by flickering images on a sheet tacked to the wall, the only sound the whirring and clicking of the projector. My mother finally made me stop.

Fast forward 25 years. My wife and I are on the train from Munich to Salzburg, the Orient Express. Not far out of Munich, a woman asked if she could join us because her compartment was noisy and smoky. She wore a tweed suit and sensible shoes, spoke English with a plummy RP accent. We assumed she was British, but she told us she was German and learned English when she spent several years in England between the wars.

She and her husband and daughter lived in East Prussia. Her husband was killed at Stalingrad, and when the Russian army marched into Poland she and her six-year-old daughter fled. They walked hundreds of miles, to Munich. It was a harrowing tale of a frightful trip, filled with cold and hunger and fear and exhaustion and a near-rape.

They survived. She found a job with the U.S. Army as a translator, worked at the Nuremberg trials as a simultaneous interpreter. The trials, she informed us, were a sham, nothing but distortions and lies concocted by the Jews who controlled the American government and news media. We sat stunned, unable to trust ourselves to respond. We completed the trip to Salzburg in strained silence, too late regretting our failure to object.

Fast forward another 45 years. In Israel, Holocaust survivors are dying and taking their stories with them. Israel still struggles for a secure life. Palestinians, bitter and angry about their dispossession, carry violence into Israel's stores and cafes and homes, killing indiscriminately. Once again Israel faces hatred and violence from forces that have, for 70 years, vowed their determination to drive Israel into the sea.

But now I am told by my fellow Democrats to believe that Israel is at fault. The Israel Lobby—especially AIPAC—controls U.S. Mideast policy. Israel's occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip inevitably inspired violent reprisal. Israel is equally, if not even more responsible for what U.S. mainstream media erroneously labels terrorism. Palestinians have been so humiliated and persecuted that they have no choice but to strike back in whatever manner they can.

Never mind that Israel turned the Gaza Strip over to Hamas, I am told. The responsibility for the deaths of so many Palestinian women and children in assaults by the Israeli Defence Force lies not upon the Palestinians who used them as shields, but with the far right-wing zealots of Likud and its minions in the Israeli government and the settlers who have stolen the homes and livelihoods of Palestinians in the West Bank.

Divest all investments in the oppressive state of Israel, they cry, equating Israel's treatment of Palestinians with apartheid in South Africa. Never mind the Palestinians who live in Israel, who not only vote but hold office and serve as judges, who live middle-class lives. Some of my fellow Americans have gone so far as to compare the actions of Israel in the Middle East to the actions of Nazi Germany before and during World War II. They are quick, however, to insist that they are not anti-Jewish or even anti-Israel, but rather anti-Zionist, because Zionism is a credo based on hatred and subjugation of the true indigenous people of Palestine. Ground Zero for propagation of this chilling instance of newspeak is the U.S. college campus.

I cannot, I will not accept this perversion of truth, whose primary motivation seems not to be grounded in reality, but in ideology. I pray for peace, pray that a homeland can be found for the Palestinians who have paid so dearly for the existence of the state of Israel. It's time for the Arab nations to finally contribute to the solution rather than to continue their cold game of realpolitik by ruthlessly refusing to assimilate the Palestinians and using them as pawns in a PR war against Israel. It's a long-term strategy that has worked quite well.

If Hamas, Hezbollah, Fatah, and predecessor Palestinian groups such as the PLO, are to be believed, no one can doubt that were today's situation reversed—if Palestinians were granted the unchallenged military superiority enjoyed by Israel (with all that implies about the unwavering support of the U.S. Government)—that Israel would cease to exist, that its men, women, and children would be consigned to rot in hastily bulldozed trenches. When I hear the impassioned pleas to divest, to ostracize and stop supporting Israel, I hear the click-click-click of that 16mm projector and see those flickering black-and-white images in a cold, dark Montana living room 70 years ago.

Despite the increasing warmth brought about by climate change, I am chilled by my sisters and brothers who would abandon Israel to the tender mercies of those who long since made clear their solution to their Jewish Problem.

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LanmandragonLanmandragon3 months ago

"The bombing of The King David Hotel, July 1946" - worth thinking about

AnonymousAnonymous7 months ago

Palestinian woman deported by force from her house: "You are stealing my house."

"Honorable and productive member of human civilisation" jewish settler: "If i don't steal it someone else is going to steal it"

ChopinesqueChopinesquealmost 2 years ago

Five stars for telling the truth. Jordan was created to be a Palestinian homeland. Why do they deserve to have two? If they got two, would they want three? Four?

Under the conditions in effect, as bad as they might be, the Palestinian population has exploded. How is that possible under all that adversity?

AnonymousAnonymousalmost 2 years ago

4. During World War II, Amin al-Husseini allied with Hitler to eliminate the Jews in Israel. He was later defined as a war criminal.

In 1948, the UN decided to define Israel as the Jewish state.

The Arabs who lived in Israel and all 7 Arab countries around - refused to make the decision - within hours! Went to war to murder all the Jews. {The headline was "Throw them into the sea"}

The Arabs who lived in Israel - were not deported! But fled according to the announcement of the commanders of the Arab armies - "Get out .. come back after we are conquered and defeated"

7. In an extraordinary way, Israel won.

Apologies for the translation and I wrote a lot ..

AnonymousAnonymousalmost 2 years ago

I read responses of incredible ignorance ...

I will mention facts only:

1. Before 1948, there were a small number of Arabs and Jews living in Israel.

There was no Palestinian state, no Palestinian currency and no flag.

There were Arabs who immigrated to Israel to look for work - from Egypt, Jordan and neighboring countries.

During this period, Jews came from Europe and bought land for the purpose of establishing a new life without anti-Semitism.

3. From time to time the Arabs would attack and murder the Jews - because they are Jews.

This is a religious war! Of hatred and murder of anyone who is not a Muslim.

AnonymousAnonymousalmost 3 years ago

Well put. One is a western style democracy where all lifestyles are allowed and one is ruled by people who abuse and kill gay people and only allow one way of thinking. Amnesty international report below.

The Palestinian authorities in the West Bank and the Hamas de facto administration in the Gaza Strip continued to crack down on dissent, including by stifling freedoms of expression and assembly, attacking journalists and detaining opponents. Security forces in both areas used unnecessary and/or excessive force during law enforcement activities, including when imposing lockdown measures in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Torture and other ill-treatment of detainees were committed with impunity. Women faced discrimination and violence, including killings as a result of gender-based violence. Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex (LGBTI) people continued to face discrimination and lacked protection. In the West Bank, authorities made widespread use of administrative detention without charge or trial. In Gaza, civilians continued to be tried before military courts. Courts in Gaza handed down death sentences. Palestinian armed groups in Gaza occasionally fired rockets indiscriminately into Israel. Two Israeli civilians were killed after lone attacks by Palestinian individuals.

AnonymousAnonymousalmost 3 years ago

The history of Jews and Palestinians in the 20th century is complex. Simplistic schemes of “this side is good and that side is bad” do justice to neither. Persecution of Jews throughout Europe grew during the late 19th and early 20th century. Many (Jews and others) recognized the problem and tried to find a solution; at one point there was a proposal to develop a Jewish homeland in Uganda (not kidding, look it up). Jews began emigrating in increasing numbers to what we now think of as Palestine, then populated primarily by Arabs under the Ottoman Turkish empire, until Britain and France divided the Middle East after defeating the Turks in WWI. After the Holocaust and WWII, Jews emigrated to Palestine in increasing numbers. Arab and British attempts (some violent) to enforce limits on immigration were met with a Jewish guerilla/terrorist campaign that resulted in the deaths of numerous people (including civilians not involved in the hostilities). In 1948 Israel declared itself an independent state with authority over both Jewish immigrants and the long-time Arab residents. War broke out and with both the local population and surrounding Arab states. Jewish settlers claimed more and more of the territory, evicting The long-time Arab residents. Since 1948 there has been an endless cycle of provocation and response from both sides: it is impossible to paint either party as “the one who started it,” retaliation often seems to exceed provocation, and neither party is wholly innocent or guilty. It is true that there never was a nation of Palestine, but the mostly Arab population had lived there under various overlords for centuries. (Until the late 1800s, the Jewish population was very, very small.) The world wanted/needed to find a safe place for the persecuted Jews of Europe, but it seems that this has come largely at the cost of the long-time Arab population. It seems to me that both sides have been badly treated at different points over the past hundred years and it seems impossible now to imagine how to justly make both sides whole.

AnonymousAnonymousalmost 3 years ago

Look if Israel stopped taking over the West Bank land and giving it away to Israelites, a long term peace could occur! Hamas are idiots! They should be throw out by the Palestinians.

AnonymousAnonymousalmost 3 years ago

Being from Ireland we get only the ISRAEL oppressor side too. I explain to my friends that we too would defend ourselves if we were surrounded by countries whose only wish was our destruction. When I was 20 I wore a PLO scarf . Now in my 50s I shudder at my stupidity.

Schwanze1Schwanze1almost 5 years ago
Yeah

As the Cajuns say, “you right”.

I like very few Republican politicians and absolutely no Democrats. If you like totalitarian government, vote Democratic. If you like freedom, fight to get and keep the Republican Party out of the hands of those complicit with the Democrats.

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