08-20-2009, 10:01 PM
http://quicktake.wordpress.com/2009/08/13/...lers-holocaust/
<b>Vatican uses short codes to blame Hinduism for Hitlerâs Holocaust</b>
August 13, 2009 · 4 Comments
3 Votes
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Are you forgetting these halcyon days?
The Vatican forgets these halcyon days?
the Vaticanâs 1998 apology, âWe Remember.â That long-awaited document expressed regret at Christian mistreatment of Jews over the centuries but pinned the fault on some of the churchâs sinful âmembersâ while holding blameless âthe church as such.â
The Vaticanâs champions say it had no choice: âthe church as suchâ is ecclesiastical shorthand for the church as bride of Christ, which partakes of divinity and must thus be without blemish. âWe Rememberâ further contended that the Holocaust was the product not of Christianity but of a âneo-paganâ regime that had renounced the faith, but Carroll portrays Hitler as the heir to such church-sanctioned haters as St. John Chrysostom and Torquemada. (via The Church as Sinner â TIME).
Deflect ... blame ... cover up ...
Deflect ... blame ... cover up ...
Hitler ⦠Aryan .. Pagan â¦
Some few years ago, the Vatican came out with a much awaited âapologyâ for its involvement in the Holocaust. Since Hitler, though technically a Catholic, was a staunch believer in his Aryan lineage.
This the Vatican uses as an escape hatch to pin the blame on âneo-paganâ beliefs. Combine Hitlerâs Aryan supremacy theory, India as the citadel of âpagansâ and non-believers, makes Vaticanâs language a short hand for Hinduism and India.
Just how did the Church think, it could palm off Hitlerâs genocide onto Hinduism â and India which is the citadel of âpaganismâ. Are they forgetting the Abbott of Citeaux?
Another red-wash
âNovit enim Dominus qui sunt eiusâ (Kill them all, God will know his own) instructed the Abbot of Citeaux to followers at the start of the Albigensian Crusade.
Did the Church look at its own history? The Ustashe killings, the Albigensian Crusades, at the Hussite Wars, at its blood soaked history, at the numerous humans who were burnt at the stake, torn apart â all in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost.
<b>Vatican uses short codes to blame Hinduism for Hitlerâs Holocaust</b>
August 13, 2009 · 4 Comments
3 Votes
Quantcast
Are you forgetting these halcyon days?
The Vatican forgets these halcyon days?
the Vaticanâs 1998 apology, âWe Remember.â That long-awaited document expressed regret at Christian mistreatment of Jews over the centuries but pinned the fault on some of the churchâs sinful âmembersâ while holding blameless âthe church as such.â
The Vaticanâs champions say it had no choice: âthe church as suchâ is ecclesiastical shorthand for the church as bride of Christ, which partakes of divinity and must thus be without blemish. âWe Rememberâ further contended that the Holocaust was the product not of Christianity but of a âneo-paganâ regime that had renounced the faith, but Carroll portrays Hitler as the heir to such church-sanctioned haters as St. John Chrysostom and Torquemada. (via The Church as Sinner â TIME).
Deflect ... blame ... cover up ...
Deflect ... blame ... cover up ...
Hitler ⦠Aryan .. Pagan â¦
Some few years ago, the Vatican came out with a much awaited âapologyâ for its involvement in the Holocaust. Since Hitler, though technically a Catholic, was a staunch believer in his Aryan lineage.
This the Vatican uses as an escape hatch to pin the blame on âneo-paganâ beliefs. Combine Hitlerâs Aryan supremacy theory, India as the citadel of âpagansâ and non-believers, makes Vaticanâs language a short hand for Hinduism and India.
Just how did the Church think, it could palm off Hitlerâs genocide onto Hinduism â and India which is the citadel of âpaganismâ. Are they forgetting the Abbott of Citeaux?
Another red-wash
âNovit enim Dominus qui sunt eiusâ (Kill them all, God will know his own) instructed the Abbot of Citeaux to followers at the start of the Albigensian Crusade.
Did the Church look at its own history? The Ustashe killings, the Albigensian Crusades, at the Hussite Wars, at its blood soaked history, at the numerous humans who were burnt at the stake, torn apart â all in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost.