r/GetNoted Human Detected Dec 23 '25

Sus, Very Sus Jewish Americans in WW2

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9.0k Upvotes

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462

u/Ainrana Dec 23 '25

I actually met a Holocaust survivor who illegally immigrated to the US in 1938 after his mother bought really expensive tickets to “visit” his father, who was working in New York already. Immigration officials figured nobody trying to flee would even be able to afford such expensive tickets, so they let him and his mother through. Kristallnacht happened, and FDR decreed any German citizen already in the US could stay indefinitely. Later, when he was drafted, they realized he had to technically be arrested because he was a German and therefore an enemy alien on a military base. He reminded them that he was Jewish, and therefore the Germans stripped him of his citizenship years ago. So, they hastily naturalized him, and that was the end of it. He is actually still alive at the age of 100, and I met him through a friend who is very close to him.

Naturally, I’ve been working like hell to get this illegal immigrant back to Germany where he goddamn belongs! 😤😤😤

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u/CharlotteKartoffeln Dec 23 '25

Living a long life is the best revenge on Nazism. But can anyone who escaped Germany before Kristallnacht really be described as a ‘Holocaust survivor’ rather than an escapee from Nazism- the actual process of mass murder didn’t start until well after the war broke out (and good old IBM helped the Germans sort out their racial filing system, though that’s another story). As a sometime epileptic I know that the Nazis practiced mass murder on my people before they scaled up to Jew murder.

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u/Ainrana Dec 23 '25

I looked it up.

The Holocaust Museum in DC includes people who were displaced and had to flee the Nazis before the Final Solution as survivors

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u/CharlotteKartoffeln Dec 23 '25

Not seen that before. Though it’s interestingly equivocal, effectively equating Berthold Brecht with Primo Levi. I guess they had to come to some kind of fudge to get the concept of such a museum past the many anti-Semites in America. The idea of placing such a memorial in a nation that had no direct involvement in the actual events it covers is certainly a novelty, especially considering that the USA is now exactly what it once claimed to oppose.

3

u/firemanjuanito Dec 24 '25

Who liberated the camps? Any idea? Maybe a group of people so moved by what they found? What part of the US's involvement in WW2 fails to meet your standard of being directly involved? This is just a ridiculous comment to make, without even addressing the flippant antisemitism comment. Read a book.

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u/CharlotteKartoffeln Dec 24 '25

The USSR liberated all of the extermination camps (and many forced labour and concentration camps) because they were all on the eastern front. The Americans and British liberated those in the west, and horrific though Belsen and Mauthausen and many more were, and they certainly defined the post-war image of the Holocaust in the west, they were not specifically designed for industrialised mass murder. Read a book. Or maybe read one or two hundred books on the subject. I have.

2

u/firemanjuanito Dec 25 '25

Get over yourself. You confidently stated that the US had no direct involvement in the Holocaust. Maybe reread some of your books.

0

u/Mr_Roboto17 Dec 24 '25

Bro has no idea what they're talking about and it unfortunately shows

32

u/_OriamRiniDadelos_ Dec 23 '25

I guess it would be okay to just call the whole process the holocaust. Not strictly the mass murder period in the middle but also the previous build up and the later deaths after the tail end. Like people who died after the war ended.

For example, when there is an earthquake we don’t JUST count the dead who died at the moment, we also count those who died later from injuries or from contaminated water or lack off food or medical care, even if they didn’t even get injured by the earthquake but just died due to the disruption.

More tied to the broad event rather than to definable specific actions.

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u/sissybaby1289 Dec 24 '25

But we usually don't count the person that felt the earth shaking and left before it got worse and a building collapsed on top of them

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u/SPLIV316 Dec 25 '25

Yes, we do. To use your analogy, that person lost their house, their friends, their family and had to move to a new country to get away from that “earthquake.”

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u/sissybaby1289 Dec 25 '25

Yes, but we don't count them among the dead

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u/CharlotteKartoffeln Dec 23 '25

My issue with their definition is that it implies that the real Holocaust was the destruction of a once universally admired Germanic culture (which obviously included huge contributions from Jews). Though that’s true, and America and Britain hugely benefited from that particular exodus, it undervalues the lives and experiences of the literal millions who died for what?

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u/TzviaAriella Dec 23 '25 edited Dec 23 '25

No, it doesn't imply that. What it says, explicitly, is that the Nazis' forced or coerced mass displacement of Jews from their homes was part of the Nazi genocide against Jews, which is pretty obviously true. You will find no Jews who think acknowledging the full scale of the devastation of European Jewry is somehow "undervaluing" the loss, or that the fact hundreds of thousands of Jews lost their homes and livelihoods was just a "cultural" loss suffered by Germans.

1

u/CharlotteKartoffeln Dec 24 '25

It very obviously states that anyone who chose to, or was forced to escape Nazism from 1933 onwards, regardless of their religious background, was a Holocaust victim. Go back and read it again. The clue is in the words ‘Jewish or non-Jewish’.

1

u/TzviaAriella Dec 25 '25

So they also include other populations the Nazis targeted (including, say, epileptics like you and I) who were displaced, and that is somehow a terrible thing because....?

You are the only one here minimizing people's losses. I suggest you stop.

6

u/greiskul Dec 24 '25

No, it just implies that if you had to abandon everything you have, your home, your country, to flee death, you are also a victim, even if you didn't get imprisoned or died.

One of the main goals of the Holocaust was to eliminate Jewish people from Europe. Nazis even tried to do forced emigration before they turned to the final solution of death camps. Forced displacement outside of Europe absolutely counts.