CALL FOR VIGILANCE

Message to French and European members of Parliaments and to main leaders

CALL FOR VIGILANCE

By Didier Bertin – 12 February 2011

Society for the Promotion of the European Human Rights Model

 

Europe must not return to the unacceptable concessions of a dark recent past. What is immoral for Europe must be also immoral for each of its members. European Ethics must not any more as in the dark past, adapt to circumstances.

The law of the double genocide was considered as unacceptable by the European Council at the European level and must consequently be unacceptable for each of its members. Our call for vigilance is due to fact that this basic principle of common sense may be in danger as a result of shocking negotiations.

The management of the end of WW1 and the vacillating attitude of the uncoordinated Europe paved the way of Nazism, which has involved the destruction of 63 % of the European Jewish population.

60 % of the Jewish population of the world lived in Europe in 1939 against only 12 % today. Destroyed and hunted out of Europe, the Jewish people live today mainly in United States and Israel and this is an indelible mark of shame on the forehead of Europe.

We also must not to forget by respect of equity that the intervention of the Russian army prevented the Nazis to reach their purpose of a total extermination of the European Jewish people. The Russian army freed the extermination camps and permitted the victory with the other allies against Germany.

The countries which ask today for the application of the double genocide law are the first witnesses of the Holocaust, which was essentially achieved on their ground and must feel endowed with a priority duty of memory while on the contrary the double genocide law is an insult for the memory of the victims of the holocaust.

Situation in numbers:

Jews killed and share of the Jewish population of each Eastern country

Lithuania

196 000

96%

Poland

3 000 000

91%

Rumania

287 000

84%

Latvia

80 000

84%

Yugoslavia

63 300

81%

Hungary

596 000

74%

Czechoslovakia

142 150

69%

Estonia

2 000

44%

USSR

1 100 000

36%

 

Total  

5 466 450 out of 6 000 000

              

 

The populations of the Eastern European countries have certainly suffered from the communism, and suffer today from a deep economic underdevelopment, but were not exterminated at the level of 63 % as the European Jewish people.

The word “genocide”, which must not be overused, has a clear definition, which does not apply to the crimes of the communist regimes. These regimes had not ,of course,  the will to exterminate systematically their whole populations and then the suffering imposed by the communist regimes must not be compared in any way to the Holocaust.

As we have said, the European council has decided that the “law of the double genocide” was not acceptable for Europe and consequently it must not be acceptable for each of its members.

Any concession made at the expenses of the logical reasoning leads to the illogicality and the incoherence, which is are legitimate factors of division among the European Union and a door opened to all the abuses.

Addendum for the French and European Members of Parliaments and other main leaders:

We ask you to act in order that the moral criteria of Europe are applied to all members, which is a rule of basic common sense and to let us know your position.