Yesterday marked the 65th anniversary of the opening of the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam. We all know her story, so there’s no need for me to regurgitate it here. All of this Anne Frank and Holocaust stuff was forced down my throat as a senior at Oakcrest High School in Mays Landing, New Jersey, way back in 1996.
It was awfully boring and I hated every minute of it. As part of my Media class, I was forced to attend the Holocaust Museum and make a video about the place for the school’s daily morning announcements show. While there, I never felt a bit of sympathy for the Jews and especially the Franks. Why? Because it wasn’t the tragedy people made it out to be!
Look, the Holocaust was nothing important. It was merely part of the war. The Jews were not victims, not at all. They were simply prisoners of war. In every war, that will happen. It happened to the Jews and ever since then, they’ve been portraying themselves as victims. Not so!
First of all, nowhere near six million Jews died. Not even a million perished, regardless of their cries to the contrary. But let’s say it was a million. In a war, a million deaths isn’t that bad. It’s to be expected. It was simply the Jews’ turn. They’re no one special, after all, so they can experience a little misery here and there just like everyone else.
As for the Frank family, there’s been a lot of controversy surrounding their so-called “betrayal.” Who revealed their hidey hole? Who tipped off the Nazis and caused the Franks to be taken into custody and rightfully sent to concentration camps? There have been many theories, none of which carried any actual evidence.
No, we may not know for sure who dimed the Franks out, but I will tell you one thing: if I’d been alive back then, it would have absolutely been me who would have happily revealed their cowardly hiding place. I would have watched with glee as they were lead off to their doom.
As we all know, the entire Frank family died in what was called a “holocaust,” but was in reality just a small part of a bigger war. That is, of course, with the exception of Anne’s father, Otto. He is the one responsible for the publication of her pathetic, whiny diary.
Before you feel sorry for the Franks or other Jews, just remember that it was the Jews who handed Jesus Christ over to the Romans, and that made it possible for Him to be murdered. No, the Jews didn’t kill Him directly, but they sure had a hand in it and for that, they deserve eternal damnation and condemnation. That’s why I, and many like me, feel that they got what they deserved in what people falsely call a “holocaust.”
Come to think of it, they got off pretty damn light!
Oh, I would have had a grand time exposing the Franks! I guess the world will never know for sure who signed their death warrants, but as far as I’m concerned, whomever caused the Franks to get their comeuppance is an absolute hero!