Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
February 27, 2014
I continue to see people in nationalist circles posting about the great victory of nationalism in the Ukraine, and continue to be shocked. Surely these people are seeing my articles. I guess people like being sucked into a fantasy. It makes them feel good about themselves, perhaps.
It is nauseating. And highly telling about the actual consciousness of this movement. What does it mean, to say “yeah, everyone running the entire thing is a Jew, and the first thing they did when they took over the government was call for loans from the IMF to push the Ukraine into Jewish debt, but it is good because I saw some nationalist symbols, and one of the guys said in 2007 that he didn’t like Jews”?
How can people be so irresponsible to openly voice support for a Jewish coup?
It is not as though your support for these Jews matters, but it surely demonstrates a total lack of discernment. Or maybe none of you read. But I am here doing the reading for you.
Here’s some reading I did today. The Jews are bragging about their key role – which included IDF soldiers – in running the coup.
From the Jewish Daily Forward:
Other Jewish leaders, such as Vadim Rabinovich, president of the All-Ukrainian Jewish Congress, didn’t take sides and issued pleas for reconciliation. Rabinovich is an interesting case. An oligarch with close ties to Russia, who made his millions under the previous regime, he gradually inched toward the opposition, and then toward acceptance of the new regime.
This Monday, with the revolutionaries in power, he issued a statement that “even in this complicated time of civil conflict, there is no basis for saying that there have been serious cases of anti-Semitism in Ukraine. I categorically reject the statements in the foreign press that there has been massive anti-Semitism and xenophobia in Ukraine.”
…
Younger Jews are more integrated into Ukrainian life and culture. They yearn to see the country become a modern European democracy, and many of them participated in the demonstrations at Independence Square. One Jewish newspaper in Kiev published an interview with a young Modern Orthodox man who joined the opposition’s paramilitary organization. He considered his activity in defense of the demonstrators a sanctification of God’s name. The young man reported that his unit had four other Jews in it, all with Israeli military training, and that he had experienced no anti-Semitism in his dealings with fellow fighters.
The most ardent Jewish supporter of Maidan has been Joseph Zissels, chairman of the Va’ad—Association of Jewish Organizations and Communities in Ukraine. Since his days as a young dissident in the 1960s, Zissels has worked to bring together the Ukrainian and Jewish movements. He spent six years in the Soviet Gulag, and went on to found the Va’ad in 1989. Zissels argues that Jews and Ukrainians need to turn a new page in their relations, and overcome old grudges, suspicions, and stereotypes. Maidan represents integration with Europe, he says. That is good for Ukraine, and is especially good for its Jews.
Here’s another really great and heroic backer of the Ukrainian nationalists who are having this super great Nationalist-IMF-EU revolution.