While in Prague, I went with a group of about 25 people to visit Terezin. I wasn’t sure what to expect. I had seen a book of drawings created by the children of Terezin. Years ago, I had visited Auschwitz, which was an extermination camp, with gas chambers and huge ovens for incinerating bodies. The displays of luggage, hair, and other reminders of those who were gassed were gruesome and horrifying.
Terezin was not an extermination camp, though thousands of people died there. Most people sent to Terezin were later shipped to Auschwitz to be killed. I recalled reading that the Nazis used it as a propaganda showplace, where they demonstrated to Red Cross officials that the Jews there were living in a place similar to a resort, under idyllic conditions.
Terezin is one hour outside Prague. There were two parts to it. First was an all-male prison where members of the Czech resistance were held, as well as Jehovah’s Witnesses, homosexuals, and others whom the Nazis hated. This facility was a centuries-old fort with high walls and abysmal living conditions. Many prisoners died of malnutrition or disease.
Then we went to the other part of Terezin, about a mile away. Also known as Terezinstadt, it is a picture-perfect town of colorful houses surrounding a park. The Nazis evicted all its inhabitants and used the town to house Jewish families from Czechoslovakia and Germany and eventually from other countries. There was no barbed wire, though every entrance into the town was guarded.
The town originally had 3,000-5,000 inhabitants. After it was turned into an internment camp for Jews, as many as 60,000 people were crammed into the same buildings. Nazis sent out flyers in Germany and Czechoslovakia portraying Terezin as an idyllic town. Wealthy Jews from Germany paid to go there and were allowed to bring a few pieces of luggage.
Once there, all their possessions were taken away, and they were assigned to a crowded dormitory. Men and women lived in separate dormitories, as did children. Families, of course, were separated. Adults were required to work, and children were mostly confined to their dormitories. Workers were paid in scrip, which they could use to buy clothing that had been confiscated from new arrivals.
Food was scarce, and many died of malnutrition and disease. There were regular transports from Terezin to Auschwitz. Somehow the Jews in Terezin knew that it was very bad to be shipped East, so the Nazis compelled some of those who arrived at Auschwitz to write their friends in Terezin to assure them that Auschwitz was a swell place.
In 1944, the King of Denmark asked the International Red Cross to inspect Terezin because Danish Jews had been sent there. The IRC let the Nazis know that there were coming, and the Nazis selected a date that gave them time to clean up the camp and stage a performance. The chiildren played soccer before an enthusiastic audience. A well-known Czech conductor led an orchestra of imprisoned musicians. The Red Cross issued a report praising conditions at the camp.
A few days after the Red Cross inspection, the orchestra conductor was deported to Auschwitz, along with many of the musicians.
The Terezin museum was fascinating, and I regretted that we had only an hour there. One room was filled with names of children who passed through Terezin. There were 15,000, but only 8,000 names. Names are added whenever anyone is identified. There was a wall of children’s drawings. And there were beautiful poems written by children who knew they were doomed.
The museum also contained a graphic chronology of anti-Semitism in Hitler’s time—such as the Wannsee Conference, where Nazi leaders agreed on the necessity of a “Final Solution” to the Jewish problem: to kill every one of the 11 million Jews then living in Europe.
The architect of the Final Solution was Rudolph Heydrich, who was the deputy head of the Nazi “Protectorate” that included Czechoslovakia. He was assassinated by partisans in 1942.
In retaliation, the Nazis made an example of the towns of Lidice and Lezaky, believing the assassins came from there. The Nazis murdered every man in Lidice and sent the women to the Ravensbruck concentration camp, where most died. Lezaky was totally destroyed, and its inhabitants killed.
In the midst of great beauty and art that we see today in Central Europe, it’s hard to imagine these horrific events. So much death and destruction. Unthinkable. Unimaginable. But true.
As I left the Terezin museum, I saw a copy of a diary written by one of the children who survived both Terezin and Auschwitz: Helga’s Diary. But the shop was closed. I was the last person to exit. I got on the bus and ordered a copy online.

Kinda seems to me that the people who suffered through such atrocities themselves shouldn’t be inflicting the same on the Palestinian people, but here we are with 2.5 million people confined in an area the size of Philadelphia, half of them being told to move into the other half, while water and electricity are shut off and food and medical supplies are being withheld and 600 ton bombs are raining down, including white phosphorus. Meanwhile, Israelis are referring to those people as “animals”, “vermin” and “cockroaches” and making videos mocking their lack of water and electricity.
This is indeed Israel’s 9/11 – an act of violence that was allowed to happen despite warnings in order to respond with grotesquely disproportional force against people who had no part in the original act.
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Dienne,
I have been so shaken by the barbarism of Hamas that I cannot write about it yet. Babies decapitated, young people at a concert slaughtered, people of all ages butchered and burned beyond recognition. Your smug response disgusts me. I disapprove of Bibi and hope this debacle ends his career. But I think it’s sick to find joy in terrorism. Hamas knew that their actions would lead to more killing. They don’t care about the deaths of Gazans. They revel in it. They actually encouraged people to stay in place before the bombs fly, hoping that more of their own people would die. The cycle of violence should have ended decades ago. The only solution is to have two states. Hamas believes there are no civilians in Israel, so beheading a baby is like beheafing a soldier. Abhorrent. The killing should stop.
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BTW, the only solution is a truly democratic single state. Why is Israel afraid to grant all the Palestinians full citizenship rights?
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A single state is a ridiculous idea. It would never be acceptable to Israel. Why should Jews be the only people in the world denied a homeland? Israel has become a center for high technology, medical advances, and scientific inquiry. Why should it be obliterated?
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Why should any state be a religious “homeland”? Should the U.S. be a “homeland” for Christians? And why does it matter whether it’s acceptable to Israel? They are the ones invading another people’s country. They still make up the minority. What do you have against democracy, Diane? I thought Israel was the bastion of democracy in the Middle East? Yet here you are opposing democracy. Hmm. Odd, that.
You really, really need to start questioning what you’re told.
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Dienne,
You probably don’t know this, but hatred of Jews goes back over more than 1,000 years, even longer. In York, England, all the Jews were forced into a single building and burned to death c. 1100.
Many Jews died in Pogroms in Europe, because they weren’t Christian.
All Jews were expelled from Spain in 1492. Other countries expelled or placed them under severe restrictions—eg, not allowed to enter a profession, not allowed to own land, not allowed to go to school or university, required to pay a tax for being Jewish.
And then came the Final Solution. Six million Jews gassed and burned.
The idea grew that Jews needed a homeland where they would not be persecuted for being Jewish. The Zionist movement encouraged many to settle in Palestine, the ancient home of the Jews.
At the end of World War 2, huge numbers of Jews were displaced persons with nowhere to go. The state of Israel—promised by the British in the Balfour Declaration in 1917–was proclaimed in 1948 and immediately attacked by every surrounding Arab nation. The ragtag nation survived. It remains the only nation in the world where Jews know they will not be expelled or persecuted simply because they are Jews.
That’s why Jews need a homeland. It’s a tiny nation but has made the desert bloom with desalination and innovative techology. If the Arab states ever accepted Israel, they would enjoy the benefits of advanced technology.
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Diane, I am abundantly familiar with the history of the Jews. It’s irrelevant as this has nothing to do with Jews. It’s about the state of Israel. If anything, the fact that Jews have been so persecuted makes it even more despicable for them to do the same to any other group. And, in fact, most Jews recognize that, which is why Jews make one of the loudest groups speaking out about Israel’s genocide of the Palestinians.
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Dienne, you said you did not understand why there was a Jewish state. I explained. Why don’t you ask why the Arab nations —with the exception of Egypt—have refused to accept Israel’s existence? Why should Jews alone be singled out for extermination? Why has Egypt closed its doors to the residents of Gaza? What about Jordan? Why is no Arab nation helping to solve the problem? Why is the only solution the final solution?
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So, Bob, what do you think of the opinions on Israel of Dienne77?
ME: Dienne77 defends Putin and Hamas–mass murderers of random civilians, including babies and grandmothers. I think that pretty much says all that need be said.
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Austrian and German Jews were assimilated into their societies in the late 1890s and early 20th century. They enjoyed great success as scholars, artists, doctors, scientists, philosophers, etc. Think Freud, Einstein, Chagall. Until Hitler came to power.
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Reinhard Heydrich who is referenced in the post was a Catholic altar boy who “attended masses every week.”
Taxpayers have made Catholic organizations the nation’s 3rd largest employer. The Catholic majority SCOTUS decision in Biel v. St. James Catholic school exempts religious schools from civil rights employment law. The law includes tax-funded religious schools.
Sixty-three percent of White Catholics who attend church regularly voted for Trump in 2020, a 3% increase from 2016.
Gays were seen as deviants in Nazi Germany. The Catholic Church spends in the nation’s public squares to deny gay rights.
The nation’s turn to the hard political right was planned by Paul Weyrich, a conservative Catholic who was funded by Charles Koch. Leonard Leo who is a right wing Catholic is the man most responsible for the appointments of right wing judges during the Trump administration. Weyrich was a co-founder of the secretive, religious Council for National Policy located in Wash. D.C.
The Jones Day law firm represented 38 Catholic organizations in 12 lawsuits. One can infer from Bloomberg Law’s reporting that a significant part of Jones Day’s efforts may have been pro bono. Twelve Jones Day lawyers worked in the Trump administration.
Rhetorically, does the study of history have an obligation to inform the future?
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For the sake of all that’s decent and good, Dienne, stop defending baby murders like Putin and Hamas.
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For the love of all that’s decent, Bob, please stop defending far more horrific murders by Israel and ukranian nazis. The rest of the world sees. It’s only western liberals like you who refuse to.
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Europe is strongly supportive of Israel. Right now. Europeans know barbarism when they see it. There have been many horrifying incidents of Islamist terrorism in Europe. Just the other day, a French teacher was stabbed to death by an Islamic terrorist. The killing came two years after a horrific murder of a French civics teacher. He was decapitated by a student because he was giving a lesson on free speech and freedom of conscience, and he showed a caricature of Mohammed. The whole country was shocked and still remembers that vile act of terror. The videos of Hamas terror in Israel have caused revulsion in Europe.
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a slight correction to your note, Dienne:
“the rest of the world sees” s/b “a few Islamic extremists, Putin toadies, and crazy Western Communists think that they see or pretend that they see”
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This is France. People are still out in force even though the police are now attacking them. Demonstrations like this are happening all over the world. The one in New York as I type this is over 10,000 people. The counter protests are miniscule in comparison. The world is waking up to what Israel is doing. You’re on the wrong side, but there’s still time for you to wake up too.
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I was in Prague and Berlin during the terrorist attack on civilians and in the days after. There were no pro-Hamas demonstrations.
On the other hand, the Brandenburg Gate, the symbol of Berlin, was draped in a huge Israeli flag.
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France has admitted many Muslims. There have been many horrific terrorist attacks in France. Think Charlie Hebdo. Or the massacre in a theater. Or the beheading of a teacher. The French are not sympathetic to the cause you support.
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Does it get lower than defending the murderers of babies like these Hamas terrorists? I don’t think so. My heart is with Israel tonight. Success to them in rooting out the monsters who did this.
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Dienne-
Don’t lie and say the Ukrainian cause is the same as the WWII Nazi campaign.
Coupling that libelous statement with any point you are making about Israel’s atrocities confirms that you are nothing but a propagandist.
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Good gosh Dienne77! Just stop your nonsense! This attack was not to “Free Palestine” or to “Decolonize Palestine”….this was a purposeful attack to kill Jews just for hate. Hamas is a terrorist organization and one of their main pillars is to kill the Israeli State and the Jews that live within that state.
Muslims and Jews have been fighting over this land for centuries and BOTH have a right to be there and to live peacefully and worship free from hate and harm. The devil is in the details (the Strongmen who have Authoritarian rule) in how to get to a peaceful existence.
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May I also suggest the book I Never Saw Another Butterfly? It’s a record of poems and artwork created by the children of Terezin camp. Their bios, including whether they survived or not, is provided at the end of the book. When I taught Elie Wiesel’s Night, I used the children’s poems as an auxiliary text. Borrowing an idea from other teacher, I also had my students create butterflies to honor specific children from the book; I hung the butterflies from the ceiling at the beginning of the unit and took down all the ones who had died at the end of the unit. It made an indelible impression.
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Ah, I see, intrepid, indefatigable troll, that you have captured, perfectly, what lesser mortals might have thought of as my inimitable style–the periodic syntax; the broad vocabulary; the command of niceties of grammar, usage, and mechanics; the satirical and even sardonic wit; the eclectic references; the occasional typo. It’s truly uncanny. I’m sure that people are saying, yep, that’s the Bob we know and love. Keep up this brilliance, and it will be as if every other reader of this blog has Capgras syndrome.
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I can’t help but reflect on this, Diane, through the lens of Hamas’s attack and Israel’s retaliation. Jews diverge on the lessons of the Holocaust.
Some concluded that Jews have no friends in the world and will never be safe and turned to Zionism and the Europe-assisted creation of Israel, along with the displacement of Palestinians who already lived there. The guiding principle has been to hit enemies harder than they hit us and show no mercy.
As a Jew, I take a different lesson. No one is safe or protected unless we all are. In the words of the old union slogan, “An injury to one is an injury all.” Once we adopt the monstrous inhumanity of our enemies, we become them.
The former, which tries to protect by oppressing others, is losing proposition and ultimately a death wish. I reject it as a Jew and human being.
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Thank you Arthur. I needed your post on this hellacious day, in these hellacious times.
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Beautifully stated Arthur.
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Wow. These places need to be maintained, but visiting them must be almost unbearable.
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Just visiting The Holocaust Museum in New York City made me feel ill. It is difficult to see, but necessary to accept, particularly now that certain groups are trying to deny it even existed.
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The Holocaust Museum in St. Petersburg, Florida, is a treasure.
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I remember seeing some powerful scenes in High School speech tournaments from the play “I never saw another Butterfly” back in the late 70s. The play begins “My name is Raja. I was born in Prague. I am a
Jew—and I survived Terezin.”
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Diane,
I cannot tell you how much I appreciate the sharing of your observations and reflections that you’ve been doing lately. Thank you.
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Thank you, Terryl.
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We were visiting the old synagogue in Prague, the guide was explaining in the Orthodox faith women stood behind a wall and listen to the service through slots in the wall, a school group was behind us, one of the students pointing to the slots, “Is that where the send in the gas?” The students laughed, my wife understood the students who were speaking German, confronted the teacher, who shrugged … sad … we all have a duty to stand up to racism…
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Peter,
I visited the old-new synagogue in Prague. In Regensburg, Germany, all the Jews were killed by the Nazis. Since the war, Jews trickled back and have built a new synagogue. Interestingly, it was built with bullet-proof glass.
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Peter,
Thanks for adding the comment. Were you making a point that religions have a long history of denying equal status to women?
Did the translator/teacher think the term, “racism,” was a catchall word that includes discrimination against women?
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Racism, bigotry, misogyny are deeply rooted and we should never turn away, .. especially as teachers
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Peter, I agree, adding, as long as men use religion to maintain patriarchy, women will not be viewed as equal. And, as long as women support and take their children to patriarchal churches, women will be treated as lesser.
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Yes. Blessings on those who
a) throw off the ancient superstitions and primitive morality deriving from those but
b) maintain a sense of wonder and
c) cultivate openness to speculation about ultimate matters.
The last, to be done well, depends upon the first.
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Especially as teachers. Well said, Peter. Teaching about this stuff is a moral imperative. Essential.
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If the Holocaust taught the Jews anything, I hope they learned to “fight fire with fire,” instead of waiting for the butchers to stop butchering them.
This poem says it all:
First They Came
Pastor Martin Niemoller
First they came for the Communists
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a Communist
Then they came for the Socialists
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a Socialist
Then they came for the trade unionists
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a trade unionist
Then they came for the Jews
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a Jew
Then they came for me
And there was no one left
To speak out for me.
For an update, “speak out” in that poem should be replaced with “fight”!
Never ever again should anyone that is innocent of real crimes go peacefully into the night when fascists show up knocking at their doors to take them away, no matter their religion or beliefs.
Fight back!!!!!! Don’t bother to speak out first. Just start shooting.
So far, Israel’s modern history indicates they did learn to fight fire with fire instead of with voices that are ignored or go unheard.
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They say it is easy to die as a Jew but difficult to live as one . For Israelis, every issue is an existential issue of life and death . Unfortunately, as history has amply demonstrated through
pogroms , massacres, expulsions and genocide , Jews have to ultimately depend on themselves and themselves only .
I abhor the death and destruction that is occurring on both sides and what do you do when each side views each step by the other as a step to an Armageddon?
Marc
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Marc,
The situation is awful and I believe Bibi has been a terrible leader. I believe that the best chance for peace is a two-state solution. Israelis turned to him because he promised to keep them safe. He failed.
The biggest obstacle to peace has always been the refusal of terrorist groups to accept Israel’s right to exist. How do you negotiate with a group that believes the only outcome is to see you die? Hamas acted in its core belief that no Israeli should be considered a civilian. They—and Iran—want Israel extinguished as a state.
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I had the chance to go to Terezin 10 years ago. The Secret Synagogue was especially poignant. Thank you for your powerful descriptions.
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Peter’s comment at 11:03 is worthy of note.
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Dr R, I recommend Inge Auerbacher’s book I Am a Star re her time in Terezienstadt. She was one of few survivors, became a chemist in US. She’s still alive at 88. I heard her speak at a Holocaust Remembrance service.
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