"my brain can easily accept direct contradictions as long as the Israeli news tells me its ok".
you're a real life orwell character.
This cartoon, published in The New York Times the day after the establishment of the State of Israel, captures a rare moment when, for just one instant, the West understood who were the good guys and who were the Nazis - just like the brief clarity that followed October 7.
On one side stands “Palestine” - symbolizing the reborn Jewish nation - with a sword in her hand. Opposite her stands the Grand Mufti, dressed in a Nazi uniform - a clear reference to Haj Amin al-Husseini, the Mufti of Jerusalem during World War II, who closely collaborated with Hitler’s regime, supported the systematic extermination of Jews, and later led the Arab opposition to the new Jewish state.
The caption beneath, “Not like Dachau, eh, Mr. Mufti?”, cuts like a knife. Only three years after the liberation of the Nazi death camps, the Jews - those who had been persecuted and slaughtered in Europe - were fighting back, this time against those who had stood beside their murderers.
For a brief moment, public opinion understood that the birth of Israel was not an act of conquest, but of survival. The Arab leaders who opposed its creation did so under the shadow of their alliance with Nazism, and the victims of Dachau were no longer helpless. But it lasted only for a moment, just as after Israel’s victories and again after its extraordinary resurgence following October 7 - the world returned to forgetting who the good guys and who the Nazis really are.
