Eric Striker
Daily Stormer
December 20, 2017
While some Italians and Irish (at least the younger wigger types) do romanticize their 1930s gangsters (thanks to Hollywood), it would be unheard of to sing glorifying sermons to Whitey Bulger or Al Capone in a house of worship during Christmas. On some level, even those who believe in their lionized myths admit that what they were doing was morally wrong.
But not Jews. Jews look to gangsters as archetypes of their race, the closest they get to “canonizing” saints.
Pimping shiksas (Weinstein), killing goyim with drugs (Sacklers), murder (everything from war to abortion to Mossad hits) – Jews today still do what (((Meyer Lansky))) and (((Bugsy Siegel))) were famous for, except on a much larger scale and out in the open.
In this case, a bunch of old Jews in New Jersey think it’s appropriate to honor mass murdering criminals in their Synagogue on Hanukkah.
On the second day of Hanukkah, a capacity crowd at the Chai Center of Chabad at the Shore heard about Jews and the Mob.
Myron Sugerman spoke at the orthodox synagogue, apologizing to Rabbi Avrohom Rapaport in advance for some of the language he brought to bear at the event.
Sugerman wrote a book about his life, called “The Chronicles of the Last Jewish Gangster from Meyer to Myron.”
He said he knew much of the history of Jews in American organized crime through his father, Barney “Sugie” Sugerman, who was in the coin-operated machine business. During his presentation, he mentioned many of the most infamous names of the Prohibition era, including Dutch Schultz, Meyer Lansky and Bugsy Siegel, as well as Italian Mafia figures such as Lucky Luciano.
Far from condemning these men, Sugerman described them as heroic, saying in the early days, they banded together to protect Jewish neighborhoods from anti-Semites and to provide economic opportunity in tough times.
Rapoport opened the event more traditionally, lighting the menorah candles for the second night of Hanukkah and leading those gathered in prayer.
While most of the talk was about gangsters, Rapoport offered an uplifting message. The eight-day holiday celebrates an ancient miracle, when there was only enough oil to light the lamps in the temple for one day, and it burned for eight. He said sometimes someone might feel tired or overwhelmed, and may not feel like they have much to offer.…
Later, when the pro-Nazi Bund movement grew in strength and numbers in New Jersey in the 1930s, members of these gangs went after them in no uncertain terms. He said groups would go armed with sticks, pipes, bats and brass knuckles. They would drive Bund members from their meetings at beer gardens with smoke bombs and beat them on the street, he said, in a movement organized through the Jewish mob and calling themselves the Minutemen.
“This went on nonstop through the 1930s,” he said.
…
In his talk, Sugerman compared the Jewish crime figures to the Zionists fighting in Palestine for what would eventually become the state of Israel, saying they had much the same outlook and attitude. He called them heroes.
I did an episode of Fascism Now! that was about how the so-called “Antifa” that attacked the German-American Bund (which was a German ethnic advocacy organization with no actual ties to the Third Reich) was actually a bunch of Jew mobsters encouraged by local New York Jewish politicians and “community leaders.”
It’s not surprising that this Synagogue would draw parallels between Bugsy Siegel and the “Zionists fighting in Palestine.”
The brutality Jews bring to organized crime is the same stuff they bring to all other facets of life.
Fitting that this would be part of their Hanukkah festivities. “Jewish Christmas” is nothing but a celebration of mass racial violence against the Hellenic Seleucids just because their culture was different. They were especially brutal towards the few Jews that embraced the superior Greek culture.
Are Jews part of the West? The Maccabean revolt is your answer. The fact that serial killers and pimps are honored as heroes in their “holy” spaces is just a contemporary reminder.