Politics

Good Letter from a Jewish Reader

 Jerusalem Post rendition of Haman and Haman’s Ears in a story for Children

Interesting letter with a little correction–

I received the following letter after I posted my response to the “young Jewish intellectual.” I am impressed with the fact that a number of Jews are very cognizant of the hypocrisies of Jewish supremacism. Here is one who is honest and I respect him for it. There is only one slight error in his letter, he says that at Purim, Jews don’t eat cookies in the shape of their enemy’s ears, but in the shape of hats. Actually, some Jews in the Yiddish Tradition call the folded, dough-filled cookies pockets or hats, but the actual Hebrew word, is Oznei Haman. At the end of his letter you can see what the Jerusalem Post, the most prestigoius Israeli newspaper, has to to say to young Jews about Purim, the words and illustrations show that on this issue I am absolutely accurate.
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Greetings Mr. David Duke,

I am a forty-six-year-old Jewish guy from the Borough Park and Kensington sections of Brooklyn, New York, who is now residing in the grand and glorious state of Texas. The Borough park and Kensington sections used to be heavily Jewish and Italian parts of the city, but the demographics may be somewhat different nowadays how it was back in the day when I was growing up there.

I can remember seeing you on NBC’s Today Show all the way back in the 1970s. At the time, as I recall it, they had you billed as a leader in the Ku Klux Klan, and so quite naturally I was expecting to see you all dressed up in a white-hooded outfit, acting belligerently and screaming racial epithets into the camera! Of course the reality of your televised appearance turned out to be altogether different from what I had been anticipating, and much to my surprise you turned out to be very articulate and soft-spoken.

Basically you came across as a clean-cut gentleman …nothing at all like what I had been expecting based on your prior billing.

The reason I am writing to you is that I want you to know that I really did appreciate your response to that “young Jewish intellectual” who sent you that God-awful hate letter. Thank you. I’m glad that you are talking back to these people, and I must say that you are doing a truly excellent job of it. Of course there is one point in your response that could be challenged on purely factual grounds, and that is your contention that the three-pointed Purim cookies (“hamantashen”) were fashioned in the image of a human ear. As a former Yeshiva student who attended Jewish parochial school many years ago, I was taught that Haman wore a three-pointed hat and that “hamantashen” pastries were intended to represent Haman’s hat and not his ear !

“Ha kova sheli
shalosh pinot,
Shalosh pinot
ha kova sheli”

Thanks again Mr. Duke and please keep up the good work.

Radical Zionism is without a doubt one of the greatest evils on earth and “ditto” for radical Jewish supremacism.

Cordially and respectfully,

Ken A
Brooklyn, NY
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Now read a “Come and Hear” segment cached from the Jerusalem Post

There is a lot to learn from this Internet Lesson for young Jews. Here are some juicy sections:..

“And recognizing the sly Haman who wants to destroy us is important, because there seems to be a Haman in every generation.

And so on Purim we celebrate our escape from a long line of “Hamans” that stretches down through history and around the world! “

Boy, they are really getting the future generation of Jews ready.

In Synogogue Purim Ceremonies,

“wicked Haman is read aloud, during which the entire congregation, led by the children, make loud noises, often with rattles, to drown out Haman’s name. “

Does that symbolize the need for the Jewish-dominated media to suppress the speech and expression of those Gentiles who dare to oppose their power?

Finally, I just love the final paragraph where it says:

This Purim custom is a way of letting our fellows know that we are celebrating the survival and continuity of the Jewish people and a way of expressing our love of our neighbors.

And what better treat to deliver on this occassion than a plate of “Haman’s Ears”?

Yep, eating a plate of Haman’s ears is a wonderful expression of love of your neighbors.

Jewish self-deception is indeed very, very deep.

—David Duke
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Now here’s the original article:
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WELCOME…
And a Happy PURIM to us all !
From The Jerusalem Post

The joyful Feast of Purim celebrates a “close call” that the Jewish people had. If you don’t know the story, read the Book of Esther in the Bible. Reading the Book of Esther is one way that we celebrate Purim.

Traditionally we attend a reading in the synagogue. (From a long scroll, sort of like this long Dry Bones Purim Web page.)

The fight of Queen Esther and her Uncle Mordechai against the wicked Haman is read aloud, during which the entire congregation, led by the children, make loud noises, often with rattles, to drown out Haman’s name.


Obviously the saving of one Jewish community in ancient Persia is not what makes the joyous Purim holiday so significant.

And the characters of “Queen Esther” and “Mordechai the Jew” are NOT what makes the holiday tick.

The tale of Purim is important because it provides us with a view of the archetypical villian, Haman.

.Wicked Haman

And recognizing the sly Haman who wants to destroy us is important, because there seems to be a Haman in every generation. And so on Purim we celebrate our escape from a long line of “Hamans” that stretches down through history and around the world!
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On Purim we bake or buy tasty pastries called “Oznei Haman”. (Which means “Haman’s Ears” in Hebrew). the pastries are sometimes called “Hamantaschen” (Which means “Haman’s Pockets” in Yiddish).

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The triangular pastries are traditionally filled with poppy seeds. Yup, the seeds of the opium poppy. But the only buzz you’ll get from “Hamantaschen” will be the yummy taste and the joy of Jewish continuity and survival. Some people prefer other kinds of pastry fillings.

On Purim, we dress up our kids in costumes and send them to knock on the doors of our friends and neighbors. But unlike the Halloween tradition, costumed Purim kids are not on “trick or treat” missions.

They bring a plate of food treats to give to the people whose doors they knock on. This Purim custom is a way of letting our fellows know that we are celebrating the survival and continuity of the Jewish people and a way of expressing our love of our neighbors.

At what better treat to deliver on this occassion than a plate of “Haman’s Ears”?

HAPPY PURIM To Us ALL

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Here’s the link, check it out for yourself!

http://www.come-and-hear.com/editor/cp-queen-esther-jp/