A Day in Jewish Tears: Art Displays and T-Shirts

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
February 11, 2015

Goyim... if you could only take one step back and ask yourself: what would it feel like to be turned into a lampshade?
Goyim… if you could only take one step back and ask yourself: what would it feel like to be turned into a lampshade?

 

I’m sure that the Jews are crying about all sorts of different things today that I’m not aware of, but here are a couple fun ones.

In Estonia, the Holocaust is coming again in the form of an art display.

Times of Israel
:

Prominent Jewish rights group the Simon Wiesenthal Center on Monday condemned an Estonian modern art exhibition for making light of the Holocaust, claims the curator denied.

The “My Poland: On Recalling and Forgetting” exhibition in eastern Estonia features eight works of contemporary art — ranging from photography to video to installation — that address the aftermath of World War II in Poland, 70 years on.

One staged video shows a group of naked adults playing tag in the gas chamber of a concentration camp. Another artist restages a photograph from the camp’s 1945 liberation by replacing the survivors with random smiling people.

“While the exhibition attempts to deal with trauma through humor, the result is a sickening mockery of the mass murder of European Jewry and the important ongoing efforts to commemorate the victims’ memory and impart the lessons of the Holocaust,” Efraim Zuroff, director of the Center’s Jerusalem office, said in a statement.

Exhibition curator Rael Artel told AFP that it was not the artists’ intention to make jokes: “These are not humorous works.”

“They (the Wiesenthal Center) have totally missed the point. I think these statements are emotional …

“I was hoping that, maybe through these works, we could have a kind of starting point to approach this very unpleasant and uncomfortable historical event,” she added.

And another Holocaust, this time in the form of a t-shirt.

Urban Outfitters is preparing for a second Holocaust, yet again.
Urban Outfitters is preparing for a second Holocaust, yet again.

Business Insider:

Urban Outfitters has been urged by the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), an anti-Semitism organization, to cease selling a gray-and-white-striped tapestry that the group calls “eerily reminiscent of Holocaust” garb that gay male prisoners were forced to wear in Nazi concentration camps.

The gray-and-white striped pattern features a pink triangle. This is similar to the the pink badge Nazi concentration camp prisoners were forced to wear to identify they were gay. The pink triangle has since been reclaimed as a symbol of the international homosexual rights movement.

ADL has sent Urban Outfitters a letter, expressing its concern over the “insensitive design and the company’s periodic use of products within the realm of Holocaust imagery.”

ADL national director and Holocaust survivor Abraham H. Foxman says in a press release on the organization’s website: “Whether intentional or not, this gray and white striped pattern and pink triangle combination is deeply offensive and should not be mainstreamed into popular culture. We urge Urban Outfitters to immediately remove the product eerily reminiscent of clothing forced upon the victims of the Holocaust from their stores and online”

An issue that the Jews don’t seem to understand is that eventually, even people who believe in their stupid hoax are going to become fed-up with their daily whining.  And once a person develops negative feelings towards the concept of Jewish whining about the Holocaust, they are then in a state where the idea of “what if these whining bastards just made the whole thing up?” becomes much less offensive.

And all we need is an in.  Once the question is asked: “did it happen?”  There is only one conceivable answer, which is: “of course not.  This is so absolutely ridiculous I cannot believe a single person ever in history believed it.”