[EUROPE] exchanged culture for fanatical hatred, creative skill for destructive skill, intelligence for backwardness and superstition. We have exchanged the pursuit of peace of the Jews of Europe and their talent for a better future for their children, their determined clinging to life because life is holy, for those who pursue death...
ONLY MASS DEPORTATION AND EXPULSION CAN SAVE EUROPE FROM ISLAMIZATION AND MASS DEPORTATION IS NOT LIKELY TO HAPPEN -
THEY CAN'T EVEN KEEP TRAINED JIHADISTS FROM RETURNING FROM SYRIA!
IT IS NO LONGER SAFE TO LIVE WHILE BEING OPENLY JEWISH IN EUROPE. JEWS ARE TARGETED.
MUSLIMS IN PARIS ARE OPENLY GLOATING OVER THE HEBDO/DELI ATTACKS.
SURE: HOLLANDE, FRANCE'S PM, IS DEPLOYING THE MILITARY TO PROTECT JEWISH SITES.
BUT IT'S TOO LITTLE TOO LATE.
THEY NEED TO DEPLOY THEIR MILITARY TO ATTACK THE JIHADISTS - ABROAD AND AT HOME.From McClatchey:
BERLIN — Eighty years ago, Jael Botsch-Fitterling’s parents decided something was very wrong in Germany, the nation they called home.
Chancellor Adolf Hitler had just named himself fuhrer, and anti-Semitism was becoming national law.
Her parents and other relatives packed up and fled. Because of that move, six years later she was born in Jerusalem in what was then Palestine.
When she was 7, the land beneath her feet became Israel, making her one of the original Jews in a new Jewish homeland. All because her parents had sensed in time that Germany was becoming very dangerous for Jews.
Then, in the 1950s, they trusted their instincts again and returned to Germany. Botsch-Fitterling has never left. But today, in the wake of the Charlie Hebdo terror attacks in Paris, she’s been thinking about that first decision to leave – thinking about it quite a bit, in fact.
The Charlie Hebdo attacks ended in a bloodbath inside a Jewish market in Paris with four Jewish men slaughtered.
And there’d been other attacks: In 2012, a so-called “lone wolf” killed three students and a teacher at a Jewish school in Toulouse, France; last May, an attacker with links to the Islamic State killed four people at the entrance to the Jewish Museum in Brussels.
Botsch-Fitterling finds the pattern deeply distressing.
“I love my life in Berlin,” she said. “I love my home, and my children and grandchildren are here. But we can’t escape history. I just wonder, as I look around Europe today, about those who stayed until it was too late the last time.”
She’s hardly alone in wondering if there will again come a time when Jews won’t be able to remain in Europe.