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The Genocide Slur Is Not Just for Jews


The Genocide Slur Is Not Just for Jews

John Spencer


Judging Israel’s wartime behavior through epithets, TikTok clips, and faulty balance sheets poses a direct danger to American lives

A member of the Syrian Democratic Forces, backed by U.S. special forces, stands on a building near Raqa’s stadium as they clear the last positions on the frontline on October 16, 2017 in the Islamic State group’s crumbling stronghold. / BULENT KILIC/AFP via Getty Images

The casual use of the word genocide to target Israel is not only a slur—it is also dangerous to Americans. That’s because, if this ahistorical, amoral, and largely evidence-free way of judging war is allowed to take hold in public discourse and, worse, harden into international legal practice, it will not remain confined to one conflict or one ally. It will be turned on the United States and every other military that may have to fight and win in cities.

Israel is not the endpoint of the debate over the rules of war in the age of TikTok. It is the test case. If the rules are rewritten here, American soldiers will inherit them in the next urban war.

I hope we never see another Gaza war again, a war in which an enemy builds a strategy around civilian suffering not as the tragic cost of fighting that’s to be avoided whenever possible, but as the path to victory itself—a strategy of human sacrifice for political gain. These slogans of genocide and the normalization of lawfare risk stripping any law-abiding military of the ability to defend itself or protect innocent civilians from harm.

This matters because the legal and moral test is not whether the death toll in a given battle or conflict is high or low: That number can often be a measure of how determined an adversary is to keep fighting. The test is how a force fights. Proportionality is not a civilian death quota. It is an assessment of whether expected incidental harm would be excessive in relation to the concrete and direct military advantage anticipated—a judgment made under uncertainty, with imperfect information, against an adaptive enemy. Precautions are not a public relations checklist. They are measures that are feasible under the circumstances, balancing mission accomplishment and force protection.

The problem is the framework that is increasingly being normalized, in which lawfare replaces law, moral arithmetic replaces judgment, statistics replace intent, and civilian deaths become proof of illegality by default.

Genocide under international law requires intent to destroy a protected group in whole or in part. That intent is the defining legal element. Without it, the charge collapses. When genocide becomes a label applied whenever civilian casualties are high, the term loses meaning, and law becomes a weapon rather than a restraint.

There has been no genocide in Gaza. Israel has not intentionally targeted civilians. Its intent has been to return hostages, dismantle Hamas as a military and governing organization following the Oct. 7 mass casualty attack, and do so while sustaining civilian life under extraordinarily difficult combat conditions. Intent matters. Context matters. Law matters.

Israel has taken more measures to reduce civilian harm than any military in history operating in dense urban terrain against an enemy deliberately embedded among civilians. These measures include mass warnings before strikes, evacuation corridors coordinated at scale, daily humanitarian pauses, precision targeting based on layered intelligence, and operational restraints that deliberately increase risk to its own soldiers to reduce harm to civilians. No other military facing an enemy that systematically hides among the population has attempted civilian harm mitigation at this scale, over this duration, while under constant attack.

Hamas, by contrast, has openly declared and operationalized a strategy of using civilians as shields. It has tortured, sexually abused, starved, and murdered hostages. It has threatened civilians who attempt to leave combat zones or accept unauthorized aid. All of this constitutes war crimes. When international discourse erases this distinction and instead accuses the defender of genocide, it does not protect civilians. It rewards the most cynical and unlawful tactics in modern warfare.

The genocide accusation collapses further when measured against observable reality rather than slogans. Israel has conducted this war while facilitating a scale of humanitarian assistance, medical access, vaccination campaigns, and civilian protection measures unprecedented in a conflict where the defending force does not control the territory and the enemy does. Aid, food, water, fuel, medical supplies, and vaccines have entered Gaza throughout the war, even as Hamas retained territorial control and continued fighting. Israel coordinated humanitarian corridors, medical evacuations, and pauses in combat while under attack. No historical case of genocide includes a state feeding, vaccinating, providing medical care to, and sustaining the civilian population of the territory in which it is supposedly committing extermination.

Wanting to destroy your enemy is not genocide. It is war. War is not illegal, and in some cases, it is necessary. The aim of many of those accusing Israel of genocide is in fact to make it impossible for any law-abiding nation to defend itself against those who openly proclaim their desire to destroy us, and imagine that our adherence to law and to norms of conflict will assist them in achieving their aims.

I have watched this trap coming for years. Urban warfare is my profession. I have advised four-star generals and other senior U.S. Army leaders through strategic research groups from the Pentagon to the U.S. Military Academy. For more than a decade, I have researched, written, lectured, advised, and taught exclusively on how wars are fought in cities and what that means for strategy, law, and civilian protection. I designed and taught the only course built specifically to improve the ability of division and brigade commanders and their staffs to plan, conduct, and sustain large-scale urban operations. From Iran’s Fallujah and Mosul to Gaza, the pattern is consistent: As war becomes more urban, legitimacy becomes more contested, and adversaries increasingly weaponize civilian harm, information, and legal narratives to constrain democratic militaries.

Lawfare is not a slogan or a metaphor. It is the deliberate use of legal frameworks, legal language, and legal institutions as weapons to achieve military or political objectives that cannot be achieved on the battlefield. In urban warfare, where civilians, infrastructure, and combatants are inseparable, lawfare becomes especially potent. Legal accusations are used to delegitimize an opponent’s operations, constrain commanders’ decisions, fracture alliances, and shift attention away from enemy conduct and military necessity. At the same time, armed groups use those same narratives to legitimize their own tactics, including embedding among civilians, using protected sites for military purposes, and engineering humanitarian crises to generate international pressure.

Well-intentioned efforts to reduce civilian harm can often produce perverse incentives when they become political slogans rather than operational guidance grounded in the law of armed conflict. I warned years ago that the Political Declaration on Explosive Weapons in Populated Areas, while born of understandable humanitarian concern, would have exactly this effect if interpreted as a blanket condemnation of certain weapons or effects rather than a call for disciplined, context-based decision-making. I saw the same thinking embedded in much of the criticism of Israel’s use of 2,000-pound bombs in urban areas—criticism often stripped of the history and context of why such munitions might be required against Hamas fighters buried in tunnels and bunkers underground.

But doesn’t prohibiting the use of powerful weapons save lives? Very often, the answer is no, it does not. Vilifying a munition in the abstract, rather than assessing the legality and the necessity of its use in context, can prolong battles and ultimately cost more lives. When such initiatives become rigid political tests instead of legal standards applied to real battlefield conditions, they push fighting deeper into cities and put more civilians at risk. While the intent may be to limit collateral damage, the likely effect is to validate and encourage the very tactics that make urban warfare so deadly: human shields, the military use of protected sites, and the deliberate blending of fighters into the population.

That is why the current genocide discourse is so corrosive. Criticism of allies is not and has never been the problem. Democracies argue. Democracies investigate. Democracies debate. Within Israeli society, every political decision related to the country’s wars is hotly and publicly debated by politicians, commentators, ex-generals, human-rights organizations, and the mothers and other family members of combatants. On both the American left and the right, there is no visible lack of criticism of Israel—much of it nonsense.

The problem is the framework that is increasingly being normalized, in which lawfare replaces law, moral arithmetic replaces judgment, statistics replace intent, and civilian deaths become proof of illegality by default. That framework does not restrain war. It rewards the worst forms of it. It creates a future in which lawful self-defense becomes politically and legally impossible for the very states that attempt to fight within the law, while armed groups are free to violate every rule and be rewarded with political and moral legitimacy.

The new pseudo-legal framework that has been pioneered by critics of Israeli wartime behavior leans heavily on moral equivalency presented as empathy. The argument is simple and emotionally powerful, a perfect fit for the age of instant social media outrage: If every child’s life has equal value, then any military action that results in civilian death must be immoral. Just look at your screen.

The moral premise is true. The conclusion is false. This framing deliberately erases the most basic distinction in both moral reasoning and the law of war: the difference between deliberate murder and unintended collateral harm, between civilians targeted as a strategy and civilians tragically harmed despite a force’s effort to distinguish and take feasible precautions. The law of war does not ask whether all deaths of children are equally sad or whether images of dead bodies in a hospital corridor are equally disturbing. It asks whether civilians were targeted, whether force was proportionate to a legitimate military objective, and whether feasible precautions were taken, given conditions on the ground. Lawfare seeks to dissolve those distinctions.

Israel is not the endpoint of the debate over the rules of war in the age of TikTok. It is the test case. If the rules are rewritten here, American soldiers will inherit them in the next urban war.

Just war theory is the moral foundation of the modern law of armed conflict. It begins with the recognition that civilian deaths in war are tragic and morally weighty. But it also insists that tragedy alone does not determine legality or morality. Jus in bello is built on discrimination and proportionality, not on the fantasy of bloodless war or a morality in which both sides must be harmed equally. The purpose of restraint is not to make war painless. It is to limit suffering while preserving the possibility of lawful self-defense against enemies who will not be restrained.

The most damaging move in today’s discourse is the treatment of numbers as verdicts. Civilian-to-combatant ratios are presented as legal conclusions. Counts of destroyed buildings are treated as evidence of intent. Claims about food supplies, aid convoys, and infrastructure damage are wielded as if they automatically determine whether a military is complying with international law. Context is dismissed as excuse-making. Command intent is treated as propaganda. Enemy conduct is minimized or ignored. This is not analysis. It is the conversion of war into a spreadsheet and then the conversion of that spreadsheet into a moral tribunal.

Our current global infatuation with civilian-to-combatant ratios or aggregated death totals is not and cannot be how war works. Raw numbers are not law. They are not proof of distinction or proportionality. They are not evidence of intent. They are, at best, one contested data point among many. In urban warfare, they are almost always unknowable in real time.

Yet in Gaza, the world has watched casualty figures released within minutes of operations, updated daily with a precision down to single digits, often presented as an emotional plea rather than an analytical assessment, as if the most important legal and moral questions could be resolved by an accountant’s ledger. This is unprecedented in modern conflict, especially in dense urban combat, and it is operationally implausible on its face.

In Gaza, numbers are announced almost immediately despite rubble, tunnel collapses, secondary explosions, and active firefights. Determining who was present in a structure, who was directly participating in hostilities, who was coerced into remaining, and who was killed by regrettable but unavoidable secondary effects requires investigation, intelligence fusion, and time. Treating instantaneous casualty reporting as legal truth is not accountability. It is epistemic fiction.

At the same time, there is a powerful and understandable human impulse to compare Gaza to something else. To another battle. Another city fight in Iraq or Syria. Another war that might help make sense of the suffering. Inevitably, such comparisons drift toward hyperbole—the point of which is to overthrow the process of reasoned distinction-making through which law-bound nations act while declaring the enemy’s most heinous actions to be permissible in the face of an absolute world-historical evil that is often named but never demonstrated.

The sad truth is that there is no meaningful comparison to Gaza. Israel is not fighting a counterinsurgency shaped over two decades with control of terrain and population. It is not a conflict in which civilians had viable options to flee to neighboring states. It does not involve the obliteration of a city by a wonder weapon. It’s a war fought in a sealed enclave where one side spent more than 20 years preparing the battlefield, constructing hundreds of miles of tunnels beneath homes, hospitals, schools, and streets, and where civilians have not been permitted safe passage through borders such as Egypt. It is also a war being fought in the age of instantaneous global communication, when algorithms on platforms like TikTok, X, and others push the most horrific images of war to billions of people in real time.

Some of the images we see from Gaza are tragically real. Others are fabricated, misleading, or stripped of context that would give them meaning. All are consumed faster than facts can be verified. In this environment, people understandably struggle to know what is true or false, legal or illegal, moral or immoral, as war unfolds in real time. This confusion does not restrain violence. It incentivizes lawfare and accelerates the collapse of legitimacy in ways that the world’s armies have never experienced before.

In Gaza, one side follows the law of war as a matter of doctrine and accountability. Hamas, as a matter of strategy, deliberately seeks to erase the distinctions the law depends on. Hamas fighters do not wear uniforms. They operate from within civilian structures. They embed command centers in hospitals, weapons in schools, and fighters in residential buildings. They deliberately exploit civilian density and protected sites to complicate targeting and magnify poststrike narratives. Under those conditions, it is impossible for any outside observer to distinguish in real time who was participating in the hostilities and who was not. It is especially impossible for a Hamas-controlled authority to credibly separate combatants from civilians, given that its incentives lie in every case in the opposite direction.

This is not an argument for indifference to civilian suffering. The opposite is true. Civilian deaths should never be minimized or excused. They should be investigated, understood, and punished when unlawful. A professional military should always seek to reduce civilian harm, not because it is politically convenient, but because it is morally right and strategically wise.

But moral seriousness is often something entirely different than the moral theater that plays well on social media. Moral seriousness does not declare guilt by statistics. It does not erase the difference between deliberate murder and collateral harm. It does not treat the kidnapping and murder of civilians as morally interchangeable with deaths caused in the course of lawful military operations against an enemy that embeds among civilians. That equivalency is not compassion. It is a surrender of judgment.

The United States has lived this reality in its own urban fights long before Gaza. In Fallujah, Ramadi, Tal Afar, and Mosul, and Syria’s Raqqa, American forces confronted enemies who deliberately embedded among civilians, transformed mosques, schools, hospitals, and apartment blocks into defensive strongpoints, and waged information warfare alongside kinetic combat. The United States adapted tactics, improved intelligence, tightened targeting processes, and increased precision. It did what professional militaries do.

But no amount of adaptation can eliminate civilian harm in major urban combat. That is not a moral failure. It is the nature of war in cities. History proves this at scale. When American forces fought to liberate the Philippines’ Manila in 1945, the battle became one of the most destructive urban fights of World War II. Over four weeks of combat, approximately 100,000 civilians were killed alongside roughly 17,000 Japanese defenders. Thousands of American and Allied civilians were held as internees, along with prisoners of war, inside the city. The devastation was immense. Yet no serious legal or historical analysis frames the United States as having committed genocide in Manila. The intent was not to destroy the Filipino people. It was to defeat an enemy that turned a city into a fortress and carried out systematic atrocities against civilians. Civilian death, however tragic, did not redefine lawful military necessity as criminal intent then, and it cannot be allowed to do so now.

The Korean War underscores the same point even more starkly. Roughly 2 million North and South Korean civilians were killed over 37 months of war. If the same statistical logic now applied to Gaza were imposed retroactively, stripped of context about who died, how they died, and who killed them, that figure would translate into more than 54,000 civilian deaths every single month. Yet the Korean War is understood, correctly, as a lawful collective defense against invasion, not as a genocide.

This is what happens when the laws of armed conflict are replaced by statistical absolutism. Law becomes a tool of political warfare. Legal terms become slogans. The side that fights lawfully becomes uniquely vulnerable, judged not by intent or conduct, but by the inevitable suffering that accompanies urban combat.

When civilian suffering becomes the decisive weapon, advantage flows to those who want civilians to suffer. If accusation and optics define legality, the optimal strategy is to embed among civilians, prevent evacuation, fight from protected sites, and manipulate information so that every death becomes ammunition. That is not the protection of civilians. It is the exploitation of them.

If this logic becomes the standard, the result will not be fewer civilian deaths. It will be more. The new standard by which Israel “committed genocide” in Gaza will validate hostage taking, the use of human shields, the engineering of humanitarian crises, and the manipulation of casualty figures as weapons. It will tell future adversaries that the fastest way to defeat a democratic military is not to fight it, but to endanger civilians until the defender is condemned for trying to stop the violence. In that world, urban areas become more lethal, not less. Civilians become more vulnerable, not more protected.

The implications for the United States military are direct and dire. Every serious contingency in the Pentagon’s war-planning scenarios involves dense urban terrain. Defending Seoul, Taipei, or NATO’s eastern flank means fighting in cities where civilians cannot be separated from the battlefield and where adversaries are trained to exploit information and lawfare as much as maneuvers and firepower. If civilian harm alone becomes proof of criminality, democratic militaries face an impossible choice: Fight and be condemned, or refrain and concede defeat.

Accusations of genocide being leveled against Israel do not merely constitute baseless defamation of an ally, as I have personally seen with my own eyes during six research trips to Gaza over the course of the war. It is a weapon aimed at lawful self-defense. The tragedy of civilian suffering in war is real. It should never be denied. But turning tragedy into a legal verdict without proof of intent is not moral progress. It is paralysis.

If baseless slander becomes law, lawful self-defense becomes impossible. And if lawful self-defense becomes impossible, democracies will have lost the next wars before they begin.


John Spencer is the Executive Director of the Urban Warfare Institute. He is the coauthor of Understanding Urban Warfare.


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YouTuber Ms. Rachel Apologizes for ‘Accidentally’ Liking Instagram Comment Calling to ‘Free America From Jews’


YouTuber Ms. Rachel Apologizes for ‘Accidentally’ Liking Instagram Comment Calling to ‘Free America From Jews’

Shiryn Ghermezian


Ms. Rachel. Photo: Wiki Commons.

Children’s educator and YouTuber Ms. Rachel admitted on Wednesday that she “accidentally” liked an antisemitic comment on Instagram that called for America to be “free from the Jews.”

The YouTube star, who creates toddler learning videos, apologized for the apparent mistake after a social media user privately messaged her on Instagram and pointed out that Ms. Rachel liked the antisemitic comment left on one of her posts. The private message promoted Ms. Rachel, 43, to issue a public apology in a video that she posted Wednesday on Instagram for her 4.8 million followers.

The YouTuber, whose real name is Rachel Griffin Accurso, explained that she thought she deleted the hateful comment but accidentally hit “like and hide” instead. The avid critic of Israel, who has shared online posts accusing the Jewish state of “genocide” and has 18.6 million subscribers on her YouTube channel, got emotional in an Instagram video while explaining what happened.

“I thought I deleted a comment, and I accidentally hit ‘like’ and hide,’” she said in an Instagram video. “I don’t know how or why. I’ve accidentally liked comments before. It happens. I’m a human who makes mistakes. I would never agree with an antisemitic thing like the comment. We have Jewish family, a lot of my friends are Jewish. I delete antisemitic comments.”

The issue reportedly began when Ms. Rachel shared a statement from her notes app on Instagram that read “Free Palestine, Free Sudan, Free Congo, Free Iran.” A social media user who replied to the post wrote, “Free America from the Jews” and the comment garnered four likes including from Ms. Rachel, according to screenshots cited by the New York Post. 

The children’s YouTube star insisted she was “so broken over” the incident.

“I feel like we can’t be human anymore online,” she complained in the video. “And I’m so sorry for the confusion it caused. I’m so sorry if anyone thought that I would ever agree with something horrible and antisemitic like that. I don’t.”

“I want to say that it’s OK to be human and it’s OK to make mistakes and I’m old, so I am not as good with touching things online, I guess. I have liked things by accident before,” she added.  “Everyone who knows me knows I would never like that.”

In an earlier Instagram post about the incident, Ms. Rachel wrote that “people are allowed to make mistakes” and that she was “super sorry for any confusion it caused.”

“I delete antisemitism ANY time I see it. I am against all forms of hate including antisemitism against the Jewish people,” she added.

The watchdog group StopAntisemitism.org has previously accused Ms. Rachel of spreading Hamas propaganda and false information about Israel’s military actions in the Gaza Strip during the Israel-Hamas war.

Ms. Rachel lives in New York City and her husband is Broadway music director and composer Aron Accurso.


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Ocalały Bernard Offen: droga ku przyszłości prowadzi nie przez zemstę, ale empatię

Ocalały z Zagłady Bernard Offen podczas głównych obchodów Międzynarodowego Dnia Pamięci o Ofiarach Holokaustu na terenie byłego KL Auschwitz II-Birkenau w Brzezince. Fot. PAP/Jarek Praszkiewicz


Ocalały Bernard Offen: droga ku przyszłości prowadzi nie przez zemstę, ale empatię

szf/ aszw/ mhr/


Droga ku przyszłości nie prowadzi przez zemstę i gniew, ale empatię i dostrzeganie wartości człowieka – mówił ocalały z Zagłady Bernard Offen podczas ceremonii upamiętniającej przypadającą we wtorek 81. rocznicę wyzwolenia niemieckiego obozu Auschwitz.

W głównej części obchodów, które odbyły się w budynku tak zwanej Centralnej Sauny w byłym niemieckim obozie Auschwitz II-Birkenau, uczestniczyło 21 byłych więźniów, prezydent RP Karol Nawrocki, minister kultury Marta Cienkowska, a także przedstawiciele społeczności żydowskiej i romskiej oraz dyplomaci.

97-letni Bernard Offen urodził się w Krakowie. Był więźniem getta i pięciu niemieckich obozów, w tym Auschwitz. W Holokauście stracił rodziców i siostrę. Przeżyli jego dwaj bracia, którzy walczyli pod dowództwem gen. Władysława Andersa. Po wojnie się spotkali, wyemigrowali z Polski. Bernard kilka lat temu powrócił do rodzinnego miasta. Jak podkreślił: „Kraków stał się jednym z najbardziej przyjaznych i bezpiecznych miejsc do życia dla Żyda”.

Offen mówił, że patrząc na współczesny świat, widzi „odradzającą się nienawiść”. – Widzę przemoc, która znów zaczyna być usprawiedliwiana. Widzę ludzi, którzy wierzą, że ich gniew ma wartość większą niż życie drugiego człowieka. Mówię to dlatego, że jestem starym człowiekiem, który widział, do czego prowadzi obojętność. I mówię to także, ponieważ wierzę – naprawdę wierzę – że możemy dokonać innego wyboru – powiedział.

Apelował, by pamięć nie była ciężarem, ale stała się światłem, które poprowadzi nas w ciemności. – My, świadkowie, wkrótce odejdziemy, lecz wierzę, że to światło pozostanie z wami – mówił.

Podkreślił zarazem, że droga ku przyszłości nie prowadzi przez zemstę i gniew, nawet wobec zbrodni takich, jak Holokaust, ale przez empatię i dostrzeganie wewnętrznej wartości każdego człowieka na ziemi.

W imieniu darczyńców Fundacji Auschwitz-Birkenau, która dba o zabezpieczenie finansowe prac konserwatorskich w Miejscu Pamięci Auschwitz, by zachować dla przyszłych pokoleń jego autentyzm, przemówił Yossi Matias, wiceszef Google’a. Jak mówił, obecnie „przechodzimy do epoki pamięci historycznej z epoki pamięci żywej”. – Pojawia się zagrożenie powrotu ciszy. To moment, gdy głosy świadków nieuchronnie miękną i cichną. Nasza praca nie polega wyłącznie na zachowaniu danych i dokumentów, ale także na tym, by wiedza była dostępna dla wszystkich i to wszędzie. To klucz do zachowania pamięci o Zagładzie – podkreślił.

Matias zwrócił uwagę, że technologia może być potężnym narzędziem, które promuje edukację i upamiętnienie. Zaznaczył, że hasło „nigdy więcej” nie jest „bierną nadzieją”, a „czynnym imperatywem”. Przypomniał, że 15 lat temu zainicjował i współprowadził działania na rzecz digitalizacji dokumentów dotyczących Zagłady oraz ich udostępniania we współpracy z muzeami na całym świecie – od Instytutu Yad Vashem do Muzeum Auschwitz-Birkenau. Podkreślił zarazem, że jego celem jest, by „historia została zachowana dla przyszłych pokoleń, żeby nigdy nie została zapomniana”.

Dyrektor Muzeum Auschwitz, Piotr Cywiński, zwrócił się do Ocalałych. – Wasze doświadczenie, drodzy, tak bardzo bolesne i trudne, tak okrutne i trudno wyobrażalne stało się fundamentem naszej pamięci. Jest więc dziś, w wichurze dzisiejszych wyzwań i zagrożeń, naszym skarbem, drogowskazem, podpowiedzią, ostrzeżeniem. Jest naszą potęgą: indywidualną i społeczną. Dlatego każdy dzień powinien zaczynać się od poczucia wdzięczności, naszej dla was – Ocalałych – mówił.

Cywiński wskazywał, że w czasach szybkich zmian, niestabilności wszyscy szukamy punktów odniesienia w pamięci. – To pamięć jest naszą ostoją, wsparciem, źródłem ocen najtrudniejszych sytuacji. To z niej wynika potrzeba i hierarchia naszych kroków i czynów. Pamięć jest potęgą, dokładnie tak, jak doświadczenie. Pamięć i doświadczenie to w istocie bliźniacze pojęcia. (…) Są jak skarby, jak drogowskazy, jak podpowiedzi i ostrzeżenia – powiedział.

Podczas uroczystości w miejscach symbolicznych w byłym Birkenau zapalone zostały znicze. W imieniu Ocalałych prezydent Karol Nawrocki zapalił jeden z nich na pomniku ofiar obozu. Minister Marta Cienkowska oraz dyrektor Muzeum Auschwitz Piotr Cywiński postawili znicz przy ruinach krematorium IV. Symboliczna lampka została zapalona też przy pozostałościach po prowizorycznej komorze gazowej, tak zwanym białym domku.

Ceremonię zwieńczyła wspólna modlitwa Żydów i chrześcijan.

27 stycznia 1945 roku żołnierze Armii Czerwonej otworzyli bramy obozu. Skrajnie wyczerpani więźniowie, których było w nim jeszcze kilka tysięcy, w tym kilkaset dzieci, witali ich jako wyzwolicieli.

KL Auschwitz stał się symbolem dokonanej przez Niemców zagłady Żydów. Zamordowanych zostało w nim około 1 mln Żydów. To także miejsce kaźni Polaków, Romów i osób innych narodowości.


27 stycznia obchodzony jest na świecie jako Międzynarodowy Dzień Pamięci o Ofiarach Holokaustu. (PAP)


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The Missing Stories of Sexual Abuse During the Holocaust


The Missing Stories of Sexual Abuse During the Holocaust

Esther Dror and Ruth Linn


Two Israeli researchers uncover Nazi crimes that targeted their victims because of their gender, and the postwar narrative of suspicion that ensured their continuing silence

Tablet Magazine

We were liberated from the camp by the Red Army—it was horrible. The soldiers were like wild horny animals—no girl and no woman were safe. My friends and I found a place to hide in barracks full of former prisoners, all men. The men who stayed in that barracks were tired and therefore incapable to rape us, and the Soviet soldiers didn’t look for us in that barracks.

This confession reached us in 2016. On the other side of the phone was Anna, an Israeli citizen, a woman who introduced herself as a Holocaust survivor who had just read our book in Hebrew, titled How Did You Survive.

We were not surprised. Anna wanted to assure us that although war was a dangerous time for girls, she nevertheless “succeeded in escaping its gender’s fate.”

Why was it so important for Anna to share with us a narrative of a spotless past?

We chose to answer this enigmatic question by listening to the stories of 23 women and three men, all Holocaust survivors and Israeli residents aged 75 to 93. As Israeli academics and researchers of people in stressful situations, we were quite familiar with the horrors of war and with the specifics of World War II. Yet, we were not aware of the war against the suspicion that these women had been fighting ever since they set foot in their homeland—Israel.

At the time, even though little was known about the Holocaust, suspicions prevailed: “If you survived that terrible war, you must have been violated. You must have used your body, or you have merely been raped.” The most beautiful female survivors could not escape this hidden blame.

Similar suspicions emerged in postwar Israeli literature, poems, and artworks. Notable in this regard is the poem by Yitzhak Sadeh, the mythological commander of the Palmach (the major Jewish resistance organizations of the Yishuv, the pre-1948 Jewish population of Israel), which he titled “My Sister on the Beach.” In it, Sadeh depicts an encounter with a young female Holocaust survivor, real or imaginary, who had found her way to Israel from Europe via an illegal refugee boat:

Darkness. On wet sand my sister stands: Dirty, barefoot, her clothes are ripped and her head is down as she stands and weeps.

I know that a tattoo is imprinted on her flesh; For officers only.

While Sadeh probably intended to raise empathy and compassion toward this poor immigrant, one wonders if he would be so suspicious regarding a survivor’s past if the subject of his poem was not a female survivor, but a male. In his poem, Sadeh provides the woman an opportunity to defend herself: “Am I worthy that young healthy boys risk their lives for me? No, there is no place for me in the world. I should not live.”

We listened carefully to the response that Sadeh placed in the girl’s mouth. One of us, Ester Dror, is a daughter of an Auschwitz woman survivor. The second, Ruth Linn, is a daughter of Israeli pioneers, who served under Sadeh. We both recalled how cautiously our teachers in school discussed the rules of war—and how little was said, if at all, about women’s fate during the ancient wars depicted in the Bible, and about the fact that the winning soldiers were permitted to marry the conquered and abused women.

Ruth Bondy, a writer and a survivor of the Terezin Ghetto, thus describes her experience as a new immigrant in Israel immediately after the war: “Here in Israel the Jews also wished to know: How did you stay alive? What did you have to do to survive? And in their eyes a spark of suspicion shone: a capo? a prostitute?”

Similar feelings are shown by the American author Ruth Kluger, who survived the Holocaust as a child of 12. Kluger emphasizes the endless struggle of women against what was sometimes required of them in order to survive, both during the war and in light of the postwar “collective narrative” of suspicion:

And there were, in fact, both men and women with whorehouse fantasies who wanted to know whether I had been raped. Like the college doctor who saw the Auschwitz number on my left arm and called sundry nurses and colleagues, as if, now that I had washed up on these shores, the natives could invade my privacy at will. I was shaken but I’d answer, no, not raped: they merely wanted to kill me. I’d explain the concept of Rassenschande, the rule against miscegenation Aryan style, because I found it interesting that a malicious idea could serve as protection (albeit not a foolproof one) against sexual abuse.

In his movie Stalags (a Hebrew nickname for concentration camps), the journalist and filmmaker Ari Libsker claims that the suspicious attitude toward female Holocaust survivors is largely a result of the notorious Israeli popular booklets of the ’60s which carry the same name. The Stalags booklets described the erotic sadistic-masochistic abuse inflicted by a German woman commander on American male inmates. Libsker explains that these ideas of sexual abuse popped into his mind already as a child, during his visit with his grandmother in Haifa. There, he happened to hear about a neighbor, a childless woman Holocaust survivor who used to scream during her sleep. The gossip was that she had probably lost her mind because she was forced by the Germans into prostitution. “How easy it was back then to attach this stereotype to women survivors who were beautiful and childless,” he concludes.

Yet even if we agree that these are exclusively fabricated tales, they are probably not fully detached from the suffering of actual women during the Holocaust. However, for many years, most researchers preferred not to contaminate their research with topics related to sexuality that might be judged by the public as improper. The few who dared to do so faced hostile academic responses.

When Joan Ringelheim first presented her data on the sexual vulnerability and agency of Jewish women during the Holocaust, for example, she was accused of disrespecting the victims’ memories, serving the purposes of Holocaust deniers. Similarly, when Sonja Hedgepeth and Rochelle Saidel, two noted American scholars, presented similar data, they were scolded by a famous Holocaust researcher present at their conference (whom they refused to name): “You are not allowed to talk about it [sexual abuse of Jewish women] if you have no proof.” Other scholars reported that they were often ridiculed for not knowing that “Jewish women always knew how to protect their bodies.”

A common obstacle to studying this topic was the Nuremberg Laws, which officially forbid intercourse between Aryans and Jews. As expressed by the scholar Gideon Grief:

It is inconceivable that brothels, which did exist in the different camps, employed Jewish prostitutes. Utterly inconceivable, because it contradicts the most basic thing upon which The Third Reich was established: that the Jewish race is inferior. It does not belong to the family of man and it is inconceivable that there would be a physical sexual relationship between the Aryan and the “Unter Menchen,” the Jewish sub-human.

The reluctance of formal historians to study women’s sexual abuse during the Holocaust was supported by the fears of survivors themselves. Both groups feared that certain testimonies would eroticize the extermination. As Ruth Bondy observes:

Everything in me is outraged at the mention of this concept … The theme of sexuality during the Holocaust has been blown out of all proportion, dating from the time of Ka Tzetnik. This subject attracts far more attention than that of the slaughter but is inconsequential compared with all that happened. If 2 million Jewish women were murdered during the Holocaust, sexual molestation was the lot of a few, but violence was the lot of the many. They faced cruel choices connected to annihilation, which is soul-searing, whereas the coupling of sex and destruction makes for more striking headlines

Shoshana, an Auschwitz Birkenau survivor whom we met, related:

We were naked over there, at Mengele’s [during the selection] and all around us were SS soldiers, guarding us … and this young beautiful woman offered to sell herself. She actually shook her breasts in front of the soldiers who guarded us. She may have thought she would save herself and indeed, she was taken, perhaps for this purpose. She never came back, and I told no one, even not to her husband whom I met after the war. I didn’t want to tarnish her memory.

“But I didn’t do that,” emphasized Shoshana, quietly, like the other survivors that we met, when our discussion reached its end. “She [the woman who offered herself to the guards] was already married. She may even have had a propensity … I also could offer myself, but it never occurred to me to do so: I was unmarried and a virgin. I was brought up in a religious family—I’d rather die.”

Like many other survivors whom we met and whose diaries we had read, Shoshana not only asserted that it didn’t happen to her, but also that it couldn’t have happened to her under any circumstances, since she was both young and a virgin, and lacked the necessary knowledge about sex due to her strict upbringing in an Orthodox Jewish family. Shoshana’s well-armored words lead us to wonder further how the patriarchy narrows down the options available for women in order to present a proper narrative that will be easily accepted by the wider public. In the words of Ruth Kluger: “Women have no past or aren’t supposed to have one. A man can have an interesting past, a woman only an indecent one.”

Tragically, when it comes to sex, it seems as there are no extenuating circumstances for women. Patriarchy expects us, women, to guard our innocence and the entirety of our bodies, even at the price of our lives during the Holocaust. In this spirit, the rabbinical establishment in Israel succeeded in convincing several municipalities to name streets and public gardens in memory of 93 girls from Bais Yaakov (an Orthodox seminar in Krakow), who, according to a story published after the war, committed group suicide in order to avoid being raped by German officers. Although no hard evidence exists of this event, the religious establishment highlights the 93 girls as a symbol of modesty.

The women we interviewed were eager to leave us with the proper stories that they were forced to construct since they first set foot in Israel. Like the young survivor in Sadeh’s poem “My Sister on the Beach,” they wanted to be remembered as women who were worthy of being saved, worthy of getting married, and worthy of the right to continued presence in this world. When we talked to them, 60 years after the Holocaust, they were already long-term Israeli citizens, mothers, grandmothers, and even great-grandmothers. They, and the historians alike, knew that “it did happen.” Yet they also whispered to us upon departure: “But I did not do it.”


Dr. Esther Dror is a lecturer on family education and gender at Kinneret College. She wrote her Ph.D. dissertation under the supervision of Prof. Linn.

Ruth Linn is the former Dean of the faculty of Education at the University of Haifa and the author of five books.


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Holocaust Denial Is Best Predicted by Belief in Other Conspiracy Theories, New Research Shows


Holocaust Denial Is Best Predicted by Belief in Other Conspiracy Theories, New Research Shows

Jack Elbaum


White supremacist Nick Fuentes with a crowd of supporters after speaking at the America First Political Action Conference 4 outside of Huntington Place in in Detroit, Michigan, on June 15, 2024, after he and his supporters were ejected from the Turning Point USA ”People’s Convention.” Photo: Dominic Gwinn/ZUMA Press Wire via Reuters Connect

The best predictor of Holocaust denial is belief in other conspiracy theories, which is driven by low trust in institutions, according to newly published research.

The report, released by The Center for Heterodox Social Science and written by Canadian professor Eric Kaufman, is titled, “Recreational Racists and Performative Antisemites? A Profile of Right-Wing Audiences from Fuentes to Carlson.”

In the report, Kaufman explores the audiences of far-right podcasters, including Tucker Carlson, Nick Fuentes, and Candace Owens. He also extensively goes through a recent Manhattan Institute report that included findings on antisemitism and other forms of hate.

“Fuentes and others are infotainers, with very little impact on public opinion,” the professor states. “First, Fuentes’ audience is no larger than Alex Jones. My new survey shows that just 2-3 percent of US adults and 7 percent of [US President Donald] Trump voters under 35 tune in regularly.”

And while Kaufman found in the data that the audiences of Carlson and Owens are larger, “There are few white nationalists among Fuentes or Tucker Carlson’s followers. Only 10-20 percent of Fuentes & Carlson’s regular viewers back zero immigration or say you have to be white to be a ‘true American.’”

In his article on the report for Compact Magazine, the researcher argued, “It’s time to press pause on the panic about antisemitic and racist influencers taking over young conservatism. We should worry more about how a collapse in trust is fueling nihilistic conspiracy theories.”

He goes on to explain that the audiences of many of these podcasters are not particularly ideologically or consistently hateful. For example, “Holocaust denial is linked to other conspiracy theories but not as clearly to attitudes toward Jews, with only 22 percent of Holocaust deniers saying that Jews are given too much support and favorable treatment in American society.”

Instead, “Their racism is superficial, transgressive, and performative,” and it is driven by a form of nihilism that expresses itself in conspiracy theories.”

“Researchers find that an important predictor of belief in conspiracy theories is low trust,” Kaufman writes. “After all, conspiratorial thinking is predicated on a lack of trust in powerful elites and institutions, notably mainstream media, and a suspicion that one’s fellow citizens have had the wool pulled down over their eyes.”

On that note, he notes in a summary of his findings on social media that “the strongest predictor of Holocaust denial is believing in other conspiracy theories (i.e. moon landings, 9/11 an inside job). This is even more predictive than identifying as an antisemite!”

He continues, “Similar pattern for beliefs about ‘Israel’s supporters’ controlling the media. The more conspiratorial accounts (Jones, Fuentes, Tucker, Owens, Bannon) are twice as likely to believe this.”

“The strongest predictor of Jewish conspiracism is general conspiracism,” he writes.

The consequences of his findings, Kaufman explains, is that “the right-wing cultural ecosystem faces a dilemma. A degree of populist disruption, mistrust, and skepticism is necessary to reform established institutions and challenge the power of special interests, entryism, and ideological capture.”

However, “the challenge,” Kaufman argues, “is to permit all theories to be advanced in the public square, but have commentators dismantle those which are ungrounded in systematic evidence.”

He sees this as a dilemma that needs to be solved to prevent his concern over “the emergence of a floating ‘conspiracy vote,’ leaning young and nonwhite, which could shape the political and cultural direction of today’s unprecedentedly low-trust America.”


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