Zitat von
herberger
Es gibt ja noch den Ausdruck "Perlen vor die Säue schmeißen"!
Stimmt.
Deine so oft einfach hingeschmissenen Behauptungen , ohne Quellenangabe etc , meistens contraer der Wahrheit und zusammengesponnen ; kann man wohl kaum als 'Perlen' bezeichnen, eher als ......na ja....
Nun, war'st Du es nicht gewesen der hier kuerzlich - ohne Quellenangabe - behauptet hatte , dass die juedischen DP's (displaced persons) in deutschen Auffanglagern nach 1945 (bei Befragungungen) den Wunsch ausgedrueckt hatten NICHT nach Palaestina gehen zu wollen?
Das hatte ich als Luege bezeichnet.
Und stehe dabei denn :
" Die ueberwiegende Mehrheit der befragten Personen bestaetigte dass sie eine Umsiedlung in irgendein Land ausser Palaestina nicht in Betracht ziehen wuerden" - "The overwhelming majority of the persons questioned affirmed that they would not consider resettlement in any country except Palestine."
Der Beweis dafuer, dass die grotesque Behauptung heimatlose Juden haetten nicht nach Palaestina einwandern wollen eine krasse Luege darstellt ist im Text eines Berichts der Befrager, einer U.N.O. Untersuchungskommission, zu finden , der als Anhang im September der UNGV als 'Annex 18' zugestellt wurde:
ANNEX 18
Report of Sub-Committee 3 on its visit to certain assembly centres for Jewish refugees and displaced persons in Germany and Austria
(Document A/AC. 13/SC. 3/5)
[Original text: English)
20 August, 1947
D. BRITISH ZONE OF GERMANY
Hahne Camp, near Bergen-Belsen
An assembly centre for approximately 9,000 Jewish refugees and displaced persons, some 85 per cent of whom are of Polish origin.
In addition, Mr. Mohn and Mr. Spits, who stayed behind while the rest of the Sub-Committee proceeded to Vienna, visited the following assembly centres in the United States Zone of Germany: Fohrenwald, Alluring and Neu Freimann Siedlung; United Slates Zone of Austria: Franz Joseph Kaserne in Salzburg.
During the visits to the above assembly centres, the Sub-Committee questioned in private 100 persons of both sexes and from all age groups and nationalities found in the centres.
Although the number of persons interviewed was necessarily limited, the conditions under which the questioning was carried out and the representative nature of the assembly centres visited suggested that the results obtained could fairly be regarded as typical of all the centres of Jewish refugees and displaced persons in Germany and Austria. This opinion was corroborated by that of the various military and other authorities with whom the Sub-Committee came into contact. We were told that the sentiment in favour of immigration to Palestine was perhaps slightly less marked in the Brit .t zone than in the American, but we had no time to check on this view. At the only assembly centre visited in the British zone, namely, Bergen-Belsen, which is the largest centre in Germany, the results of questioning were uniformly similar to those noted elsewhere. Further, various persons who were in a position to compare the state of feeling as between this year and last were all disposed to agree that there had been an intensification of sentiment in favour of immigration to Palestine since, for example, the time of the visit of the Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry. Taken over all, it seems to us fair to say that practically all the persons in the Jewish assembly centres in Germany and Austria wish, more or less determinedly, to go to Palestine.
The alternatives to resettlement, namely, repatriation or absorption into the German or Austrian communities were investigated. The prevailing reaction among the persons questioned, many of whom had returned to their former place of residence in order to trace relatives and property, was a refusal to repatriate, The reasons given were based on a fear of growing anti-Semitism, in spite of admitted efforts by the Governments concerned to check such a development, and an incapability to start life again in places haunted by memories of endured horrors. During talks which we had with high representatives of the occupation authorities we got the impression that any large-scale absorption of the Jewish displaced persons into the German or Austrian communities was impossible. The feeling of anti-Semitism is strong among the native population, especially towards the Jews now living in assembly centres.
The question arises whether the determination to go to Palestine would change substantially if real prospects of resettlement in other countries were offered. The overwhelming majority of the persons questioned affirmed that they would not consider resettlement in any country except Palestine, declaring that they would rather wait indefinitely until the opportunity to go to Palestine came or attempt illegal passage.
[///]
The situation might be different if there were some counteracting force working against the motives which impelled those whom we saw to declare so emphatically their determination to go to Palestine. For example, a main reason given for this wish to go to Palestine was that Palestine was a Jewish country, "our country". Others added that they feared a future growth in anti-Semitism in Europe and even in countries outside Europe; others again, as they had lost everything in Europe, were convinced that at least life in Palestine could present nothing worse. When questioned on how they expected to get on with the Arabs in Palestine, the persons seen replied that the Yishuv was quite able to look after itself, and that in any case they felt sure that the future relationship with the Arabs could be made to work smoothly once the Jews and the Arabs were left to themselves. It is obvious that convictions of this kind, which are the common stock of talk among the inmates of every centre and of which even the children in the schools are fully acquainted, carry, in the absence of any countervailing influence, a progressive effect leading to an ever-increasing emotional tension. For these reasons, it has seemed to us our responsibility at least to convey to the Special Committee our own feeling of the urgency of the existing situation.
[///]
We also feel it essential to make special mention of the situation which we found in Vienna. We learned there that during the last six to eight weeks a steady influx of Jews from eastern Europe, mainly from Bessarabia and Roumania, had been in progress at the rate of about 1,000 weekly. These people declare that they have left their places of abode for fear of a revival of active anti-Semitism, and with the single-minded intention of going on to Palestine. [///].