Daily Slave
September 24, 2014
A piece published by the Jewish Daily Forward is suggesting that the ridiculous Jewish Holocaust hoax should get special treatment at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights.
I would actually agree with this. It should definitely get special treatment, considering that it is one of the most ridiculous hoaxes of the 20th century. Unlike the other atrocities mentioned, the alleged Jewish Holocaust never happened.
The museum should explore all the Jewish lies surrounding Jews being gassed in shower rooms, Jews being turned into soap, Jews being turned into lampshades and the many questions surrounding the stories of Anne Frank and Elie Wiesel. It can also get into how there is no physical evidence proving that 6 million Jews were killed in German concentration camps, the swimming pool and theater used by Jews at Auschwitz and so forth and so on.
Below is a section from the Jew propaganda article.
On the fourth floor of the new Canadian Museum for Human Rights, visitors will find a gallery called “Examining the Holocaust,” which is devoted entirely to the story and lessons of the Shoah. On the same floor, in a smaller, adjacent space, a gallery called “Breaking the Silence” examines a cluster of five genocides officially recognized by the Canadian government: the Srebrenica massacre in Bosnia; the Armenian and Rwandan genocides; the Holodomor, or the starvation of millions of Ukrainians in the early 1930s; and, once again, the Holocaust.
“Examining the Holocaust” is just one of 11 galleries at the $351 million human rights museum that opens in Winnipeg, Manitoba, on Saturday. It is also the museum’s thorniest.
The permanent gallery has long been a source of controversy for the institution, which has fought accusations from a handful of Canada’s ethnic communities, ranging from Ukrainians to Armenians, that allowing the Holocaust its own space downplays the significance of the other human rights atrocities confined to a single room.
In interviews with JTA, museum officials defended their decision by asserting that the Holocaust is in fact exceptional, both as an act of 20th-century genocide and a pedagogic tool. As the trigger for international human rights legislation in the aftermath of World War II, the Holocaust is deserving of its own gallery, the officials said.
“It’s one of the most studied, most well-documented atrocities,” said June Creelman, the museum’s director of learning and programming. “One of the ways to educate is to start with something familiar and move to something unknown.”