• Updated

To the editor: Dear Gary, I am delighted that you responded to my letter to you. Thank you. I must admit surprise that you found a way to insert “hate for the jew,” so quickly, based on my question as to whether you accept the new portion of the Bible. I just assumed that you accepted the old. Forgive me if I was wrong. However, if you do accept the old, then my question was really the question I meant to ask.

  • Updated

Pastor Jerry: Your opening question, “Do I accept the New portion”…proves my accusation that hate for the Jew is the foundation of churches. Should not the question be the Bible, Old and New?

  • Updated

BERLIN (AP) — “Are there still Jews in Germany?” “Are the Jews a chosen people?” Nearly 70 years after the Holocaust, there is no more sensitive an issue in German life as the role of Jews. With fewer than 200,000 Jews among Germany’s 82 million people, few Germans born after World War II know any Jews or much about them.

The Christians who were in the twin towers were killed by Moslems who had witnessed decades of seeing children die in their father's arms by the guns of Jews who had seen their parent's generation nearly exterminated by Christians. The cycle repeated once again as all three agreed it had since Cain and Abel.

A letter printed Nov. 14 ("Children less safe") suggested that the Jewish race was "nearly exterminated by Christians." This is nonsense, both specifically and in general.