Brother anybody who has ever gone to college and was forced to read Night or Maus or knows how grossly disingenuous this is. Almost every American was forced to read Anne Frank's Diary in high school. This is dumb to posture about.
Of course "the jews want to monopolize genocide", it's the entire ideological basis of the chabad movement. The entirety of post-enlightenment jewish eschatology, the whole of lurianic kabbalah and rabbinical judaism is built on trying to enter the third temple period. The name you guys gave to this genocide is "Holocaust" which is an archaic term for a "burnt passover offering"
Anybody with a basic education can see right through the shit you're peddling
Retard, the name the Jews gave to the genocide is
khurban (Yiddish), which comes from the Hebrew word that was used to describe the destruction of the Second Temple. That is the word used by the Jews who experienced the Holocaust, who survived. The word reflects how the Holocaust is seen not as an isolated event by the people who experienced it, but part of the continuous destruction over history. Similarly, the Hebrew term is
Shoah, also meaning destruction. That is what Jews call it in their languages.
The English term is Holocaust, coming from Latin which borrowed the Greek translation of the Hebrew word
olah, the term for the offering burned on the alter in the Temple. The English term is a decidedly Christian perspective of the event: the sacrificial lamb or martyr, offered to cleanse people of sin, substitutionary atonement.
Reading Anne Frank’s diary is “monopolizing genocide”? The non-Jewish obsession with Anne Frank reflects the above Christian theological interpretation of the sacrifice of the innocent. The whole success of her diary relies on downplaying her Jewishness to universalize her.
Her diary does not describe the genocide, as she had not yet witnessed it. You’re likely familiar with her most over quoted line “in spite of everything, I still believe that people are really good at heart.” The appeal of this quote lies in the gratifying feeling of being absolved of guilt for the Holocaust. It is conveniently downplayed that she wrote this line before she witnessed Nazi Death Camps. This book is chosen not because there is some lack of literature vividly describing the genocide. Plenty of that exists but none of it is equal in popularity.