Another book to read in regard to your comment is Grodzinsky's "In the Shadow of the Holocaust" in which is related the extreme pressure put on the residents of the displaced persons camps after WW2 including beatings in order to get Jews there to state that they wanted to go not to America but to Palestine. If that isn't a sign of fanaticism, what would be?
Another book to read in regard to your comment is Grodzinsky's "In the Shadow of the Holocaust" in which is related the extreme pressure put on the residents of the displaced persons camps after WW2 including beatings in order to get Jews there to state that they wanted to go not to America but to Palestine. If that isn't a sign of fanaticism, what would be?
Another book to read in regard to your comment is Grodzinsky's "In the Shadow of the Holocaust" in which is related the extreme pressure put on the residents of the displaced persons camps after WW2 including beatings in order to get Jews there to state that they wanted to go not to America but to Palestine. If that isn't a sign of fanaticism, what would be?