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The Hebrew idea of holiness is separation, which creates antisemitism


               
2024 Apr 26, 2:05pm   2,970 views  81 comments

by Patrick   follow (60)  

Most Hebrew prayers begin with "Blessed are you O Lord our God, king of all creation, who has sanctified us with his commandments..."

But that "sanctified us" (kidshanu) can also be read as "separated us":


The root of the word קדוש is קדש (Q-D-Sh), which is related to the concept of separation, distinction, or consecration. In Hebrew, this root is used to express the idea of something being set apart, dedicated, or consecrated for a specific purpose or to a particular deity. In the context of biblical Hebrew, קדוש (kadosh) is often used to describe something or someone that has been set apart for God's purposes, making it holy or sacred.


So a core principle of Judaism is separation from other people. This is literally what it means to be holy.

In other words, holiness is a rejection of all other people. This inevitably leads to hostility against the Jews, which further increases the separation in a feedback loop.

So my argument here is that Judaism itself creates antisemitism, which in turn helps to maintain Judaism. Without antisemitism, Jews would assimilate and no longer be Jews. So it is in the interest of Judaism to create some degree of antisemitism.


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25   DemoralizerOfPanicans   2025 Mar 7, 11:25pm  

Patrick says


all minority ethnic religions have to encourage a dislike of outsiders or they will rapidly be assimilated and cease to exist as a distinct group.


Autocelphalous Churches ... "Are you Serbian? Why are you here if you're not even married to a Romanian? Great Commission? Father Seraphim never told me about no Commission, what are we, Protestants?"

There's an old joke that the last time Greek Orthodox tried converting anybody was St. Cyril.

Interestingly, the most evangelical are the Russians... because of their yuge expansion over Eurasia beginning in the 1600s.
26   Patrick   2025 Mar 8, 10:24am  

Yes, and this tends to get them massacred rather like the Jews, the Armenians being the most obvious example. The Greeks and Syrian Orthodox were also massacred by the Turks.
27   DemoralizerOfPanicans   2025 Mar 8, 2:16pm  

Patrick says


Yes, and this tends to get them massacred rather like the Jews, the Armenians being the most obvious example. The Greeks and Syrian Orthodox were also massacred by the Turks.

Yes, and also interestingly... disliked by the Spaniards in the 1500-1600s when Spain ran parts of Sicily, Italy, Malta, etc.

Their "dual allegiance" because a large number of Greeks came to several Med Islands from the Ottoman Empire, were mostly involved in trade from the Ottoman Empire, and practiced a very different looking and sounding form of religion.
28   Patrick   2025 Mar 20, 11:08am  

A conversation I had on https://boriquagato.substack.com/p/the-truth-about-jfk-et-al/comments


patrick.net/memes

In case you want the real explanation for antisemitism: it's an inevitable result of the Jewish conception of what it
means to be holy, ie to be a "people set apart":

https://patrick.net/post/1381234/2024-04-26-the-hebrew-idea-of-holiness-is

Unfortunately, that's the very core of the religion, so mutual mistrust is inevitable.

PN Schwartz


This analysis is entirely wrong. In ancient Roman times, Jews were a proseletyzing people and oppressed people, slaves,
and even some elites joined the Jewish nation--because it is about the law of the liberated slaves, the law that
prevents lifetimes of servitude and misery. No big shock that the Roman nazi leaders spent hundreds of years trying to
wipe out the Jews, forcing Jews to stay quieter, but it was not always the case. This is all backed up by writings of
ancient Roman historians. Every fascist empire in history despises the Jews and loves the antithesis--clerical fascism
(often islam).

patrick.net/memes

There were a lot of converts to Judaism in the Roman Empire, but very little active proselytizing. The Jewish religion
and ethnic group essentially sees itself as a biological family, the literal descendants of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob,
so it doesn't make sense to go out and look for converts.

The Romans found the Jews difficult to assimilate and a threat to the unity of the Empire, so this caused some tension.
The Romans would pick up foreign gods like Isis, and conquered groups would adopt Roman gods, but the Jews were quite
strict about not worshipping any foreign gods, only their own single God.

Christians also refused to adopt foreign gods, but were very aggressive about proselytizing, so one can see
Christianity as the solution to that tension - a highly modified form of Judaism that is not a particular ethnic group
or family, and so it spread much more quickly, eventually displacing the Roman religion entirely.

So I still maintain that it is exactly the deliberate separation that is central to Judaism which creates antisemitism.

PN Schwartz


there are texts that say otherwise. Tell us why Hitler did not have any Jewish SS units. He had Muslim units of course,
so he was willing to 'play ball' with anyone with the right characteristics.

patrick.net/memes

I don't know of any ancient texts talking about significant Jewish proselytizing. Do you have a name or a book?

Lol, you're seriously asking why Hitler didn't have any Jewish SS units?

I've heard he liked Muslims because they themselves were not fond of the Jews as a rule, though there's a long history
oscillating between good and bad relations between Muslims and Jews.

PN Schwartz


Muslims and clerical fascist Christians (rabid Catholics) will do any kind of evil to obtain their glorious afterlife.
Jews have none of this concept. It is not possible to get any remotely observant Jew to destroy this world based on
belief of a glorious afterlife. So Hitler loved the ones that believed this bs, and despised the resistance.

patrick.net/memes

I do agree that Judaism was at first entirely about this life. Basically "if you will diligently obey my commandments...
I will give grass in your fields for your cattle, and you will eat and be sated." Nothing about heaven.

Later though, Judaism did start to teach the belief in a glorious afterlife.

PN Schwartz


Yes tell us why no Jewish SS units. Should not be hard for you to explain. Regarding the proselytizing Jews, it is
covered in Francisco Gil-White's book Crux, chapter one, https://app.box.com/s/86jltj9p8i Unlike other religions the
Jews welcomed gentiles to see and hear the services, it is commanded to read the law so that all can understand. There
are no great secrets. It was only after the Roman and various European genocides of the anti-fascist Jews that Judaism
turned more inward. So your claim that this inward nature is the reason for Jewhatred is absurd. The reason is fully
contained in the Torah--it is a lot of law that protects people from fascist leaders. Of course nazi type leaders
despise this, to this very day.

patrick.net/memes

OK, Hitler's whole shtick was that Jews were an alien race, separate from the Germans, and abusing and exploiting the
Germans. He saw Jews as genetically alien, therefore impossible to ever be German even if they wanted to be. His SS was
composed of people who felt the same way.

There are lot of PDFs at the link you gave, but they all seem modern. What I'm looking for is some evidence in ancient
writings that Jews were actively proselytizing.

I'm certain that Judaism always had a very strict boundary between Jews and outsiders. There was literally a wall within
the temple in Jerusalem with a warning that non-Jews would be killed if they went over the wall:

"Attached to the Soreg were inscriptions in Greek and Latin warning Gentiles against trespassing under penalty of death.
One such inscription, discovered archaeologically and known as the "Temple Warning Inscription," reads (in translation
from Greek):

No foreigner is to enter within the balustrade around the sanctuary and the enclosure. Whoever is caught will be
responsible for his own death that will follow."

PN Schwartz


It's covered in chapter 1 of Crux. My historians rely on the content of the Torah, where it is commanded for the
services to be open to all, and read aloud, as well as the archaelogical evidence as mentioned. My historians do not
have a pro-nazi bias, which yours do have. It is obviously absurd that a movement of liberated slaves, that by all
estimates was growing greatly in the Roman empire would be 'inward turning'. This only started after genocides by the
fascist elites. Hitler made it clear why he did not like the Jews: Jews do not believe in a glorious afterlife, and thus
cannot be made to slaughter and enslave people as the long tradition of nazi leaders want their minions to do. Muslims
are the best at this of course.

note that I'm fully aware that around 99% of the 'historians' we are exposed to in the West have a pro-nazi, anti-Jew
bias. This is because the romans established a pattern where teaching others to despise the liberated slave movement of
the Jews is the most important fascist trait they must promulgate to their disciples. But there are objective
historians, which is what I use. Francisco used to teach at U Penn until being fired for not following State Department
policy regarding lying about Israel.

patrick.net/memes

The Torah does not encourage gentiles to convert to Judaism though. It stresses the idea of the separation and specialness of the Jews.

Not sure what you mean by "Nazi" in the ancient world. Was Josephus a Nazi?

Those liberated slaves saw themselves as all one biological family, separate from other slaves.

Jews actually do officially believe in a glorious afterlife now.

https://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/4848230/jewish/Heaven-and-the-Afterlife.htm

I think it's an influence from Zoroastrianism during the Persian period. The Zoroastrians had those ideas of heaven, hell, final judgement, and resurrection.

PN Schwartz


The Torah is to be read out loud so that all can hear. It doesn't stress specialness other than that the Jews are chosen
to fullfil the mitzvot. But anyone can join the Jewish nation. But fascist haters will not only choose not to, but
fabricate things that help them feel good about hating those that improve the world. The Jewish belief in eventual
messiah/afterlife is behind the mitzvot--Jews must do good in this world.

patrick.net/memes

So you first claimed that Jews don't believe in an afterlife like "Nazis", and now claim that they do?

Note also that ancient Greek and Roman "Nazi" beliefs about the afterlife did not involve heaven like you claim. Their
beliefs were pretty much identical to ancient Jewish beliefs there until Jews and Christians introduced heaven. Greeks
and Romans and ancient Jews all believed that everyone would go to some moderately unpleasant place. Sheol and Hades are
about the same.

Anyhow, I'm not saying Jews are bad, only that Judaism itself inherently causes antisemitism by its exclusivity.
Semitism creates antisemitism. Antisemitism is then used as justification of the original semitism. Everyone should just
admit that that's how it works and how it always will work.

29   stereotomy   2025 Mar 21, 8:05am  

Boy, that PN Schwarz was going crazy trying to gaslight and misdirect. Of course, the original comment is deleted.
30   DemoralizerOfPanicans   2025 Mar 21, 8:40am  

Patrick says


- Christians write from left to right, so Jews write in the other direction, even though it's less efficient because then your right hand covers and maybe smears what you just wrote.

Right to Left is traditional and still widespread in the Middle East:

Nabatean, Arabic, Sumerian, Phoenician, etc. - all originally, or still, written right to left.

Aramaic, the first language of Christians and probably Christ and most of the Apostles themselves, was also written right to left.

Chinese and many other East Asian languages were also traditionally written vertically from right to left until recently. Old Coptic also was written Right-Left until centuries of Ptolemaic Rule switched that preference. Egyptian Hieroglyphs were written in either direction.


The reason is simple: you hold down the clay tablet with your left hand, so you start chiseling from the right side. Most written language began with chiseling on clay or wax.


The reason Europeans write left is because the Greeks were the Freaks decided to write their version of Phoenician characters .... AFTER they switched from chiseling to writing characters. Romans learned writing from the Greeks, and the rest of Europe from the Romans.

Really ancient Greek was Chiseled... Right to Left.
31   AD   2025 Mar 21, 9:26am  

Patrick says

As comic illustrations of how the core of Judaism is opposition to the majority


And they enthusiastically don't hesitate to financially screw over the Gentiles

.
32   stereotomy   2025 Mar 21, 9:36am  

AmericanKulak says

The reason is simple: you hold down the clay tablet with your left hand, so you start chiseling from the right side. Most written language began with chiseling on clay or wax.

The reason Europeans write left is because the Greeks were the Freaks decided to write their version of Phoenician characters .... AFTER they switched from chiseling to writing characters. Romans learned writing from the Greeks, and the rest of Europe from the Romans.

Really ancient Greek was Chiseled... Right to Left.

This needs to go in the TIL or "the more you learn " thread.
33   Patrick   2025 Mar 21, 9:41am  

AmericanKulak says


The reason is simple: you hold down the clay tablet with your left hand, so you start chiseling from the right side. Most written language began with chiseling on clay or wax.

The reason Europeans write left is because the Greeks were the Freaks decided to write their version of Phoenician characters .... AFTER they switched from chiseling to writing characters. Romans learned writing from the Greeks, and the rest of Europe from the Romans.

Really ancient Greek was Chiseled... Right to Left.


It sounds just as easy to me to write from left to right even while holding a tablet.

The Greeks had a weird intermediate period called boustrophedon, where they wrote one line from right to left, the next from left to right, etc, and even used mirror images of the letters when going the other way. Crazy.

But true, all those ancient alphabets derived from Phoenician went right to left like Hebrew.
34   Patrick   2025 Mar 21, 10:01am  

AD says


And they enthusiastically don't hesitate to financially screw over the Gentiles


Leviticus 19:18 — King James Version (KJV 1900)

"Thou shalt not avenge, nor bear any grudge against the children of thy people, but thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself"

But that applies only to fellow Jews, not outsiders. Jesus' innovation was taking that particular sentiment and making it universal by omitting the "children of thy people" part:

Matthew 22:39

"And the second is like unto it, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself."

On the other hand, there is quite a bit in the Old Testament about not oppressing the foreigner who lives among you, for example:

Leviticus 19:33

"And if a stranger sojourn with thee in your land, ye shall not vex him."
35   Patrick   2025 Mar 21, 10:18am  

A Jewish guy I worked with told me he found it a bit offensive that orthodox Jews recite the Birkot Hashachar each morning:


Blessed are You, Lord our God, King of the universe, who has not made me a gentile.
Blessed are You, Lord our God, King of the universe, who has not made me a slave.
Blessed are You, Lord our God, King of the universe, who has not made me a woman.
36   Patrick   2025 Mar 21, 10:25am  

All this stuff is interesting to me because of family history. I didn't know that my grandfather was Jewish until he died when I was 13 and I went to his funeral. He was a really wonderful guy to us, loved his grandkids deeply.

My parents were from the Hyde Park area of Chicago and grew up just a couple of blocks from each other, but didn't know each other until in their 20's.

My Polish grandmother converted to Judaism when she married my Jewish grandfather, so my mother was born and raised Jewish. She thought she was going to marry a guy named Glenn Cohen, but Cohens are not supposed to marry converts, and this guy Glenn took it a step further and broke up with my mother because her mother was a convert. So mom felt rejected.

She converted to Catholicism, her mother's original religion, and met my dad, who was Irish. Then my dad's sister-in-law told him "You can't marry her, she's Jewish." My dad said that she's Catholic now, and my aunt said "No, she's still Jewish." So my mom was getting problems from both sides. But they had a happy marriage anyway, and we kids were raised Catholic.
37   DemoralizerOfPanicans   2025 Mar 21, 10:35am  

Every time you get some cocky asshole -the stereotypical New Yawk Jewish Teachah "Oh my gawd, how could you vote for Trump, he's gonna defund Social Security and Kill da Gays!" many cringe.

Just like when a normal Black guy sees some Ghetto Ass Black Woman sqawking at the KFC "Where my food, dammit! My's kids hungry. Why you not take EBT and sheit?"

It's like a customer experience: People remember the Yenta or the Gruff Snobby Orthodox much better than the one acting ordinary. The also pay more attention. The best comparible to Jews is overseas Chinese or Parisees. Especially Parisees due to immense Jewish charity donations - that everybody seems to overlook, from Museums to Schools. Or when the do notice it, they notice it's Woke today (but wasn't in the past), but so is the Ford Foundation these days.

I too am a McBagel (with Kraut, Prussian Protestant, not "Jewish-German", possibly via the great Hugenot exodus), but not at all Polish. Of course I'm a convert to Christianity so who knows.

The first person to point out to me how Colleges transfer money from students and taxpayers to the far left via "Speaking fees" was actually a Gay Jew.
38   Patrick   2025 Mar 21, 11:10am  

AmericanKulak says

I'm a convert to Christianity


What were you before?
39   Patrick   2025 Mar 21, 11:16am  

Another tidbit: my dad lived near Jews in Hyde Park, and an old Jewish immigrant woman would hire him as a "shabbos goy" to light her stove on the sabbath. "Come here Tommy, light the fire, I give you a nickel" as he would tell it.

I think the whole shabbos goy thing is pretty offensive in itself (we are holy, you are not, so we'll pay you to do profane things) but my dad admired the Jews, particularly the German Jewish physicists like Einstein. So he was a physics major and took German, and I ended up being a German major myself before the computer thing.

He told me that on their first date, the very first thing my mom said was "My dad's Jewish, is that a problem?" He was surprised, but no problem, actually a plus in his book.
42   DemoralizerOfPanicans   2025 May 29, 5:17pm  

Patrick says


What were you before?

Atheist. I'm sure I have atheist crap on this board back in the day.

Thanks Jordan Petersen for kindling my interest in the deep truths in Genesis and the Bible.
43   Ceffer   2025 May 29, 5:20pm  

When I was a tiny tot in Hawaii where my father was posted, their best friends were also in the Navy and Jewish. I really liked the father because he talked to me like I was an adult and asked me what I thought of stuff. My parents never did that, even after I went to college.
44   DemoralizerOfPanicans   2025 May 29, 5:20pm  

There are denominations of Christianity which place undue holiness on separation. Anchorites, Stylites, Mt. Athos, etc.
45   Patrick   2025 May 29, 5:27pm  

I bet they are resented for it too.
46   DemoralizerOfPanicans   2025 May 29, 5:29pm  

Patrick says


I bet they are resented for it too.

No doubt some of the monastery closings in the West during the Reformation Era (and the slapping around of monks and nuns in the Spanish Civil and French Revolutionary Wars), and the popular dislike for Orthodox Clerics in the East, is related to it.

No joke but in trad times, something the Reax don't engage with, is how the big organized state religions had basically a tax on people getting married, baptisms, etc.
47   DemoralizerOfPanicans   2025 May 29, 5:32pm  

Also I should say in Israel! Between the very Frum Hassidim and others.
48   Patrick   2025 May 29, 5:34pm  

I've personally heard several secular or moderately religious Jews express dismay at how the Hasidic behavior makes Jews look. Various scams, public service fraud, etc.
49   DemoralizerOfPanicans   2025 May 29, 5:37pm  

Legalism breeds legalism, so "It's Legal"
50   Ceffer   2025 May 30, 9:34am  

AmericanKulak says

Legalism breeds legalism, so "It's Legal"

'Legal' is the self-referral of imposed codes and rules, legal masturbation and legal bureaucracy. It does not mean 'lawful' aka natural law or common law. There are many things in our system that are 'legal' but not 'lawful'. They stand on foundations of fraudulent corporate theater.
51   stereotomy   2025 May 30, 9:42am  

Ceffer says

AmericanKulak says


Legalism breeds legalism, so "It's Legal"

'Legal' is the self-referral of imposed codes and rules, legal masturbation and legal bureaucracy. It does not mean 'lawful' aka natural law or common law. There are many things in our system that are 'legal' but not 'lawful'. They stand on foundations of fraudulent corporate theater.

There is a concerted effort to erase the memory of Common Law or Natural Law. Fucking lawyers think that they can legislate reality.

An oldie but goody:

"What do you call 10,000 lawyers drowned at the bottom of the sea? A good start."
52   Patrick   2025 Jul 8, 2:41pm  

https://www.unz.com/article/why-are-jews-so-influential/


This evolved response to external threat is often manipulated by Jewish authorities attempting to inculcate a stronger sense of group identification—for example, the messages of ever-increasing threat of anti-Semitism promulgated by the ADL — accompanied by pleas for donations.
53   FortWayneHatesRealtors   2025 Jul 8, 5:26pm  

gotta ask sometimes, what are jews doing to piss off entire world with their behavior.
54   DemoralizerOfPanicans   2025 Sep 3, 9:16pm  

Patrick says

What were you before?

Jeeze Pat, missed this too. I was Secular-Agnostic Mischling
55   DemoralizerOfPanicans   2025 Sep 3, 9:17pm  

Fortwaye says


gotta ask sometimes, what are jews doing to piss off entire world with their behavior.

Inventing technology and getting blamed for it.

"Kurwa! Now when there is a drought, I cannot fleece the nearby towns, for the dirty Jew has financed all these railroads that bring in Potato and Rye from elsewhere, keeping the price stable and ruining my near-monopoly on surplus foodstuffs!"

@Patrick, check out "Deutschephysik". Quantum Theory was Judenphysik because it removed certainties, and replaced the "Nordic Luminiferous Aether" and many Classical Mechanics (going all the way down) ideas.

Much of the "Passive Aggression" is mostly "Hey, how about the paradox" that is part of the culture.

When you have a duality situation or insight or comedic attitude, it greatly angers lineal, A is A, B is B thinkers.

It seems to annoy the "One Church" linear/traditional authority fans more than "Priesthood of all Believer" types.
56   Patrick   2025 Sep 3, 10:11pm  

@DemoralizerOfPanicans

DemoralizerOfPanicans says

I was Secular-Agnostic Mischling


Mischling ersten Grades oder zweiten Grades?
57   Patrick   2025 Nov 8, 1:15pm  

https://chrisbray.substack.com/p/when-jews-fight-they-survive


In Kerstein’s discussion, the Jew-hatred of the Red-Green Alliance is “a species of spiritual nihilism…beyond rational argument.” It can’t be debated; it can only be fought. “Antisemitism can be defeated only by imposing physical consequences. ...


This demand to use violence instead of rational argument and debate is pretty much the definition of fascism.
58   DemoralizerOfPanicans   2025 Nov 8, 3:05pm  

Patrick says

Mischling ersten Grades oder zweiten Grades?

Erste
59   DemoralizerOfPanicans   2025 Nov 8, 3:12pm  

The separation thing doesn't explain the lack of hostility by most towards Amish and Hutterites and Navajo.
60   Patrick   2025 Nov 8, 4:36pm  

In Germany and Austria, the Amish and other anabaptists were actually hated and persecuted. They were accused of disloyalty because they would not fight in the army, and the established churches hated them for drawing away believers (and their donations).

I was surprised to learn that some of them were put in a cage in the center of Innsbruck and burned alive. I walked by that spot hundreds of times during my year there, but didn't know it. I don't think there's any memorial plaque.


while early Anabaptists in the 1500s were missionary-minded and suffered persecution for spreading their faith, the Amish quickly turned inward after their formation, focusing on preserving their community and purity rather than growing through conversion


So by the time they got to the US, they were no threat to any other church, and refusing to fight was a more normal thing. They also explicitly avoid politics and stick to farming.

Jews are very much into money and political power, and generally give off a hostile or contemptuous vibe towards white Christian people, which I've run into dozens of times myself. Kinda funny actually. There's this eternal game of encouraging antisemitism in passive-aggressive ways, and then claiming that antisemitism is "beyond rational argument" and can't be debated. That's the core of things right there: deliberately cause anger, and then claim that the anger is irrational as a way to justify what you wanted to do anyway.

The gypsies had an analogous thing going on, with a feedback loop of cheating or stealing from the majority population, getting chased out of town, and then using the anger against them as a justification to do those very things once again in the next town.

Among both Jews and Gypsies, there is a lack of honest introspection because that would break group solidarity. The guilt of outsiders and innocence of the in-group is always taken as axiomatic, and any attempt to actually explain the eternal mechanics in an honest way is considered unwarranted hostility in itself.

Not to say that Jews and Gypsies were not persecuted, just saying that the persecution in both cases did not come out of nowhere, and that it is absolutely essential for group solidarity to deny the obvious.

I could go on forever about this. Another insight: In every country the Jews were expelled from, the majority group and especially the nobility had large debts to Jews, and getting rid of the Jews got rid of the debts. Jews are forbidden from charging even the slightest interest to other Jews, but outsiders are fair game. That's the whole thing in a nutshell once again.
61   HeadSet   2025 Nov 8, 6:59pm  

Patrick says

This demand to use violence instead of rational argument and debate is pretty much the definition of fascism.

That would be the definition of authoritarianism. Fascism is a form of socialism where the government does not own but strictly controls the means of production.
62   Patrick   2025 Nov 8, 8:11pm  

Technically true, but I see fascism as simply:

1. refusal to engage in sincere debate
2. use of violence against those who disagree
63   HeadSet   2025 Nov 8, 8:23pm  

Patrick says

Technically true, but I see fascism as simply:

1. refusal to engage in sincere debate
2. use of violence against those who disagree

Those two points are merely tools that fascists use. Those tools are also used by communists, islamists, and assorted dictators.
64   DemoralizerOfPanicans   2025 Nov 8, 8:24pm  

Patrick says


Jews are very much into money and political power,

Like Burt Shavitz of Burt's Bees?

Just wait until you hear about the Whiteness, who want to be on Time, Long Time Preferences, and look for sea passages so they can greedily gorge themselves on rare spices...

It's just a variant of the Woke Narrative.

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