Hello
I found this site through videos linked to Teddy Jacobson's site. I have looked at a number of Chaim ben Pesach's videos, and found them highly informative. I have been pro-Israel all my conscious life, as my father knew the Middle East well, and left me in no doubt of the rightness of Israel's cause, and the pro-Arab attitudes of the British authorities. I remember well the build up to the 1967 War, and I have often pointed out to anti-Zionists that no one can doubt that an Arab victory would have been followed by genocide, rape and wholesale looting and destruction, and the repeated Israeli victories have not even resulted in the Arabs being shifted out, which common sense alone would tell anyone is the only viable solution.
What caught my eye was the use of the term 'righteous gentiles'. I first heard it used in connection with my father. I was on a sailing course almost 20 years ago, not long after my father's death, and I was having dinner with an Israeli bloke on the course. He was originally from Wales, but had gone to Israel to fight in the War of Independence in 1948, and had stayed there. I mentioned that my father really liked Israel, and had spent time there. The Israeli bloke asked (rather distantly) if he had been in the Palestine Police. I laughed, and said hardly, he was as much a Zionist as a gentile could be.
He had been in a small unit of the RAF, serving in the Middle East, although, like many people who went through war, he would only tell me funny stories. It was my mother who told me how he had been wounded, and someone I met who knew him, told me he had been with my father in Yugoslavia in 1942 (i.e. while the Germans were in occupation. I never found out what that was about). He had also been on the British Commando course at Spean Bridge in Scotland. He did tell me that there was a restriction on Jews being given full military training, as the British knew very well what a headache trained Jews would be for them after the War. My father's unit moved onto an airfield that had been used by the Italians, and found an Italian arms dump there. The CO told the armourer to get rid of the Italian weapons and ammunition, so my father and he did, by training the Jews in the squadron, who were from the British mandate, on the Italian kit. My father spent many of his leaves in Israel, and saw how the Jews had transformed the place. After I had explained this to the Israeli, he said my father would have the reward granted to righteous gentiles.
What impressed me even more about this site, was the fact that Chaim ben Pesach closed down the discussion on Bishop Williamson of the SSPX. I am a traditional Catholic, from a Catholic family, and I attended Mass at the Society of Saint Pius X's church in Glasgow yesterday. After Mass, I was discussing the lifting of the excommunications with an elderly lady of considerable wit and charm, who said, a propos of Bishop Williamson's revisionist comments, "When Bishop Williamson says something daft, and people outside the SSPX start on at me about him, I say to them - if your religion, church or organisation has no nutcases, you can criticise us. You have your nutcases, we have ours, like Bishop Williamson." Bishop Williamson also believes 9/11 was an inside job by the Americans.
I have met Bishop Williamson, and I only listen to him on matters of the Catholic Faith. Like all clergymen, including the Pope, his opinion on matters outside the Faith is worth no more than anyone else's. A friend of mine, who likewise attends SSPX Masses, told me his father had been one of the British troops who first went into Belsen, and had said to him, many years ago, "Son, never believe anyone who tells you the Concentration Camps did not murder Jews. I saw it with my own eyes."
"From the morning watch, even until night, let Israel hope in the Lord. For with the Lord there is mercy, and with Him plentiful redemption, and He shall redeem Israel from all his iniquities."
Fergus