Muman, your (deliberate?) obtuseness is infuriating. Thankfully, I am a calm person and have pretty decent control over my temper, so I didn't smash any inanimate objects upon reading your post.
kwrbt, get off it... You are guilty of the very things you accuse others of doing. Claiming that I put words in others mouths when you yourself just did the very thing to me. I did not spit on the graves of the Holocaust victims my friend.
What words did I put in your mouth? What words?
You DID equate one side of a Syrian civil war with victims of the Holocaust. And I accused THAT EQUATION as being an insult to every holocaust victim. Why? Because by comparing them with people fomenting political rebellion and provoking violent reciprocation (things which holocaust victims did NOT do), you are essentially blaming holocaust victims for what was in reality an unfair victimization. Because both sides of the Syrian civil war are guilty of crimes, and both sides
deserve (at least in part) to incur the wrath of the opposing side based on their actions taken against the other side. So how can you possibly say with a straight face that holocaust victims are in any way similar to this scenario?
As I said before, it is rational for the Syrian regime to react to violence with violence to preserve itself. When a regime puts down a violent rebellion, it is NOT a holocaust.
By suggesting that we should be more sensitive to the plight of others I am standing on the Torah principles.
But you didn't just implore us: "Be more sensitive to the plight of others." You compared and equated holocaust victims with moslem brotherhood jihadis and syrian rebels and syrian nazi so-called civilians. And that is what I took issue with. That is not a Torah principle. Equating, as you have done here, things that are different, makes a mockery of human intellect.
And since you are claiming I put words in your mouth, then just so you don't forget what you actually said, I'll quote you directly right now. This is what you replied to me in this thread when I said that I want the most possible Syrians to perish in the Syrian civil war:
"
So I suppose we should have never expected the non-Jews to have helped us during the Holocaust. No wonder nobody did anything and let 6 million Jews die in that churban.
"
With silly accusations out of the way, let's continue.
I could address several examples where the Torah implores us to stand up against the wrongdoing of others.
Well luckily for me, I didn't claim that people shouldn't stand up against the wrongdoing of others.
(I wonder, what do you mean by "stand up" exactly?)
It is wrong to murder,
Well luckily for me, I didn't claim that it is not wrong to murder.
it is wrong to take the life of innocent people (not guilty of a death penalty crime),
Well luckily for me, I didn't claim that it is not wrong to take the life of innocent people (didn't you just say the same thing by saying murder?)
it is wrong to stand idle while others are spilling blood.
Well luckily for me, I didn't claim it is right to stand idle "while others are spilling blood." (But still, hopefully you realize that you have misquoted the verse).
One lesson of the story of Jonah is that Jonah was sent by Hashem to go instruct the nation of Nineveh to repent. Jonah did not want to do so because in his prophetic vision he knew that the people of Nineveh would one day rise against the Jewish people, thus he would be assisting those who wanted to kill us. But Hashem wanted Jonah to deliver the message of Teshuva so badly that he would have Jonah die by drowning in the sea for not delivering it.
With the number of incongruous things you equate, you sound like a reform rabbi. Why don't we also bring up "love your fellow like yourself" and "love Hashem your God with all your heart all your soul and all your possessions" to justify insulting the memory of holocaust victims? Afterall, if we have to love Hashem with all our hearts, we have to love Syrians too, and therefore they are the same as holocaust victims, right? The story of Jonah and the pesukim I just referred to have nothing to do with genocide or chemical warfare in Syria which themselves have nothing to do with the holocaust.
Another interesting lesson from Jonah is that according to some midrashim and sages the Pharoah of Egypt who oppressed the Jews during the Exodus actually survived the Sea of Reeds and became the King of Nineveh. How could the most evil man in History (up to that point) have been allowed to make Teshuva?
Your question doesn't make sense. Everyone is "allowed" to do teshuvah. Why would anyone not be allowed to do sincere teshuvah?
Meanwhile on planet earth, we don't go around assuming that every criminal beast and animal HAS ALREADY DONE TESHUVAH when they haven't. Especially not rodfim, nazis, and enemies of our people.