By Alan Caruba
There’s
something very sad about the murders in Kansas City that began the holy week
for Jews—Passover—and the forthcoming Easter for Christians. The two events are
closely linked biblically and historically. The murders are a rebuke to both
faiths.
There is
irony and tragedy in the murder of William Lewis Corporon and his grandson,
Reat Griffin Underwood. Both were Christian as was the third
victim, a woman, who was Catholic. The first two were visiting a Jewish
community center to participate in a music contest. The other victim was killed
at a Jewish retirement community.
The
alleged perpetrator is Frazier Glenn Cross who was identified by the Southern
Poverty Law Center as having been involved in the white supremacist movement
for most of his life. Fox News reported that he “founded the Carolina Knights
of the Ku Klux Klan and was its “grand dragon” in the 1980s before the Center
sued him for operating an illegal paramilitary organization and using
intimidation tactics against blacks.”
I cannot
even imagine what it must be like to devote one’s entire life to hating blacks
and Jews. Hatred is a corrosive emotion and the complete opposite of the values
that both Judaism and Christianity embrace.
Michael
Siegal, chairman of the Jewish Federations of North America, said “no community
should have to face a moment such as this one. Today, on the eve of Pesach, we
are left to contemplate how we must continue our work building a world in which
all people are free to live their lives without the threat of terror.”
The key
element in his statement is “all people.”
Around the
world today terror is the primary weapon of those who would impose Islam on
everyone while killing thousands of their own believers and, in the case of
Israel, threatening death to an entire nation of Jews. It must be noted that thousands
of Arabs are Israeli citizens as well.
It reminds
one that the Nazi death camps and deliberate killing of others in the last
century not only killed Jews, but millions of Christians as well. According to
Wikipedia:
“In addition to Jews, the targeted groups included Poles (of whom
2.5 million gentile Poles were killed) and some other Slavic
peoples; Soviets
(particularly prisoners of war); Romanies (also
known as Gypsies) and others who did not belong to the Aryan Herrenvolk
"Aryan master race"; the mentally
ill, the deaf, the physically disabled and mentally retarded; homosexual and transsexual people;
political opponents such as communists, social
democrats and socialists; and
religious dissidents, i.e. members of Jehovah's Witnesses.[2][3] Taking
into account all of the victims of Nazi persecution, they systematically killed
an estimated six million Jews and mass murdered an additional eleven million
people during the war. Donald Niewyk suggests that the broadest definition,
including Soviet civilian deaths would produce a death toll of 17 million.”
One can
only conclude that humans are a very dangerous specie, inclined to kill its own
for reasons that focus on religion, politics, and other factors.
By
contrast, Passover and Easter focus on survival and sacrifice in the face of
evil. Both acknowledge and celebrate the role of our Creator. Holy week for
both Jews and Christians is a good one to concentrate on the values that they
both teach and uphold. It is also a week (among all the others) to dedicate
ourselves to opposing those for whom hate is their only reason to exist.
© Alan
Caruba, 2014
It's an old *line* but it's true; haters are going to hate...
ReplyDeleteMost of them are MORONS too...
Hate and stupidity is a BAD combination..
I hate hate!
ReplyDelete