Friday, March 30, 2018

kimberly Colangelo; The mind of a talented sociopath who brought my life down.

http://youtu.be/a6TDhucaaSg 

Kimberly long ago delivering me my son for my parenting session.Note the lack of angst on my son's face, the opposite of what he feels when I deliver him to his mother.

This video is the moment when Kimberly Colangelo first understands that I have been video taping these exchanges....I thought I would trust an employee with the task as we were on the way back to Cincinnati. Bad idea. Kimberly sees the obvious. Usually my P.I. would video tape these. He taped some very telling scenes. Kimberly tries to figure out why my son is so happy to be with me, so unhappy to leave me.

At some time in the future Kimberly Colangelo actually asked me straight up about this question....i just looked at her...keep in mind this intelligent talented person was often self admitted to Good Sam Psych Ward...her perspective on life was skewed more than a little.

Suddenly Kimberly Colangelo had an epiphany it seems as her face changed and she exclaimed, "Oh!....he has FUN with you"

Yep, and he hated being with Kimberly's mother while Kimberly was doing drugs and sexual blood play with Shadow (Charles Perkins) see motion in limine. below




Oral History of my mother, Dr Paula S. Biren, deceased June 2016, 2005 and 1979   +
https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn517852
https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn10 and 20003910 

My mother meant to save me from what Kimberly Colangelo destroyed.

It's a matter of waiting for something else to happen, in time...through the system of course.



Tuesday, March 27, 2018

The main concern of Dr Paula S. Biren, deceased, Auschwitz survivor; French Jews Fear a New Strain of ISIS-Inspired Anti-Semitism




Oral History of my mother, Dr Paula S. Biren, deceased June 2016, 2005 and 1979   +

https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn517852
https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn10 and 20003910
 
_________________________________

 "Anti-Semitism Today!"

https://www.nytimes.com/2016/01/25/world/europe/french-jews-fear-a-new-strain-of-isis-inspired-anti-semitism.html?action=click&contentCollection=Europe&module=RelatedCoverage&region=EndOfArticle&pgtype=article

French Jews Fear a New Strain of ISIS-Inspired Anti-Semitism

Copy and paste from top link;

 "MARSEILLE, France — It was the heavy leather-bound volume of the Torah he was carrying that shielded Benjamin Amsellem from the machete blows.

His attacker, a teenage fanatic who the police say was inspired by the Islamic State, was trying to decapitate Mr. Amsellem, a teacher at a local Jewish school. But Mr. Amsellem used the Torah — the only defense at hand — to deflect the blade and save himself.
It was the third such knife attack since October on a Jew in Marseille, where the Jewish population, around 70,000, is the second largest in France after Paris. And it was the latest example of how France is confronting both the general threat of terrorism, especially after two large-scale attacks in Paris last year, and a particular strain of anti-Semitism that has left many French Jews deeply unnerved.
“This was something claimed by an individual who invoked Daesh, who wanted to kill a Jew. It is extremely serious,” said Marseille’s top police official, Laurent Nunez, in an interview. “Daesh” is an Arabic acronym for the Islamic State, which is also known as ISIS or ISIL.
Continue reading the main story
Among Jews here, the attack on Mr. Amsellem, 35, has been met with a mix of anger and resignation, a response conditioned by the history of anti-Semitism in France, along with the recognition that global jihadism has made French Jews choice targets.
Mr. Amsellem said it took him only seconds to understand what was happening to him on that Monday in mid-January: a stranger was attempting to kill him because he was wearing a Jewish skullcap.
That instinctive wariness, combined with the green-leather Torah — there are now deep gashes in the book — saved him. “It is thanks to this book that I avoided some very serious blows,” he said quietly, sitting in his lawyer’s office here.
Mr. Amsellem, a father of five, was strolling to work in the north Marseille district where he grew up, attended school and now works and lives. Suddenly he felt “violent blows” on his back.
“It took me a moment to realize what was going on, that he was hitting me because I was a Jew,” Mr. Amsellem said. “I turned around and realized it was somebody I didn’t know. I realized he was there to kill. I said, ‘Stop, stop, stop!’ but he heard nothing.”
Deflecting the blows as best he could, Mr. Amsellem tried to run. He stumbled and fell. “And when I was on the ground, I felt I was not going to survive,” he said. “I really saw his eyes. And I saw someone very cold.”
Passers-by heard his cries, saw what was occurring, and gave chase. The attacker fled, and the police caught him at a nearby Métro stop.
The episode soon reverberated throughout the country. From the president on down, French officials condemned it. The interior minister came to Marseille to express solidarity. Supporters of the beloved local soccer club said they would wear a hat to the next match in sympathy. An anti-racism march was organized.
Even so, this is a country that continues to grapple with its complicated history with Jews, and to balance its ideal of a secular public society against the beliefs and identities of its religious and ethnic minorities.
A wall inscribed with the names of thousands of Jews who were deported to their deaths by the Nazis — the French police assisted in the roundup — stands, largely hidden from public view, in the courtyard of the Grand Synagogue here.
In the wake of the attack on Mr. Amsellem, a top community official here called on Jews to stop wearing skullcaps in public, provoking a furious backlash from other community leaders in Paris. “It was my duty,” said the official, Zvi Ammar, who was startled by the outcry. “My only goal was to preserve human life.”
The teenager being held for the attack hardly fits the conventional profile of a radical Islamist: He is a Turkish Kurd, a group at war with the Islamic State.
The suspect — whose name is being withheld because of his age — has “very good marks in school,” said Mr. Amsellem’s lawyer, Fabrice Labi, and lives with his immigrant family in well-maintained if drab apartments north of the city center. His father, who brought the family to France five years ago, is a tile-setter with a solid income.
On a recent frigid morning, the suspect’s older brother was speaking anxiously into a cellphone outside the family’s apartment. His mother, wearing a head-covering, came to the door of the apartment. Both slammed it shut when asked for comment.
Officials here said the suspect has no known connection to radical groups, has no police record and appears to have self-radicalized — without the knowledge of his parents — while sitting in front of his computer connected to jihadist websites, for hours on end.
The case has been transferred to Paris-based antiterrorism prosecutors, a measure of how seriously officials have taken it.
Yet the young man’s connection to the perpetual undertow of anti-Semitism that exists here as elsewhere — “dirty Jew” yelled at people leaving the synagogue, conspiracy theories among Muslim youth in the city’s tough housing projects — appears tenuous to nonexistent.
“It is not the anti-Jewish discourse that formed this young man who went out to kill,” said Yamina Benchenni, a teacher who has heard plenty of such talk from her years of working in Marseille’s northern precincts. “He was in solitude. He did it alone. He was in front of a computer. He wasn’t with those youths,” Ms. Benchenni added, in reference to radical students whose views she has tried to change over the years.
At the Grand Synagogue after the morning services on a recent Saturday, the atmosphere was jovial at the kiddush, the post-prayer collation. Skullcaps were de rigueur, and while there was some talk of the attack, it was hardly laden with anxiety.
“It doesn’t shock us that much,” said Michele Allouche, who lives in the old downtown neighborhood near the 19th-century synagogue. “We’re waiting for it. There’s huge anti-Semitism in France.”
But the attack’s bloodthirsty undertones — the deadly blade, the will to decapitate, the coldness of the would-be killer — continued to stir unease.
“The machete, that evokes something barbarous,” said Hagay Sobol, a prominent doctor here.
“And this boy, he’s the opposite of any image one might have of the terrorist. He’s not marginalized. And that tells us any boy could do this.”

 

The N0.1 Concern of Paula S. Biren; contrary to some thoughts; "She Survived the Holocaust, to Die in a 2018 Hate Crime"

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/26/world/europe/france-holocaust-survivor-murder.html

The real concerns of Paula S. Biren; contrary to some thoughts; She Survived the Holocaust, to Die in a 2018 Hate Crime..
All this will be explained in detail soon enough. 

Until then;

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claude_Lanzmann



Copy and paste from top link
"
PARIS — An 85-year-old woman who as a child narrowly escaped France’s most notorious wartime roundup of Jews has been murdered in Paris, and the authorities are calling it a hate crime.
The body of the woman, Mireille Knoll, was found on Friday in her apartment in the city’s working-class 11th Arrondissement. She had been stabbed to death, and her body was partly burned after her attackers apparently tried to set fire to the apartment.
The Paris prosecutor’s office said on Monday that Ms. Knoll had been killed because of the “membership, real or supposed, of the victim of a particular religion” — a roundabout way of saying she was killed because she was Jewish.
Ms. Knoll was a child in Paris when, in the summer of 1942, the French police, cooperating with the Germans, rounded up thousands of the city’s Jews, stuffing them into a cycling stadium, the Vélodrome d’Hiver. Virtually all were subsequently murdered at Auschwitz.
Ms. Knoll’s mother, summoned to the stadium like other Parisian Jews, was able to escape at the last minute with her daughter because she had a Brazilian passport, said Meyer Habib, a member of Parliament who has spoken with one of Ms. Knoll’s sons.
Continue reading the main story
Francis Kalifat, the head of the Representative Council of Jewish Institutions of France, said: “This makes one feel something absolutely terrible. She escaped the anti-Semitism of the Nazis, but in the end her destiny followed her because she was killed because of anti-Semitism.”
Interior Minister Gérard Collomb said that “to attack a Jew is to attack France, and the values that are the very basis of the nation.”
A number of anti-Semitic episodes have shaken France, including the murder last year of Sarah Halimi, an elderly Jewish woman, by a man of Malian origin who shouted, “God is great” before throwing her out a window.
The speed with which the authorities recognized the hate-crime nature of Ms. Knoll’s murder is being seen as a reaction to the anger of France’s Jews at the official response to that earlier crime, which prosecutors took months to characterize as anti-Semitic.
Other anti-Semitic crimes that have rattled France include the 2015 attack on a kosher supermarket in Paris by Amedy Coulibaly, a heavily armed Frenchman, who killed four people, and the 2012 assault on a Jewish school in Toulouse by Mohammed Merah, who killed three children and a teacher after killing three soldiers.
By Monday, two suspects had been arrested in the murder of Ms. Knoll: both young men in their 20s, one of whom was a neighbor. “One of them had known her for a long time,” Mr. Kalifat said. “He had friendly relations with her.”
The Paris prosecutor’s office declined to characterize the origins of the two people; Mr. Kalifat said the principal suspect was of North African origin.
“These are not just thugs,” Mr. Kalifat said. “She was attacked because she was Jewish. This is what characterizes anti-Semitism in our country.”
The suspect “said that Jews have money, and that was the reason he attacked her,” Mr. Kalifat said, whose group is often consulted by the government. “She was absolutely massacred. Eleven knife wounds. That is hatred of the Jews, we see it in the fury of the murderer. This is how we recognize anti-Semitism.”

France’s chief rabbi, Haim Korsia, said in a tweet: “Horrified by the tragic death of Mireille Knoll, who escaped the Shoah, nearly a year to the day after the murder of Sarah Halimi-Attal. The horror of the crime and the violence of the executioners are identical and are a negation of humanity …”
Ms. Knoll was the widow of an Auschwitz survivor, according to press reports.
“The Jews are on the front lines,” said Mr. Habib, the member of Parliament. “They start with the Jews, and afterward they kill other Frenchmen,” he said. “Jews are being killed because they are Jews. That is very serious.”

Continue reading the main story

Related Coverage


"


Monday, March 26, 2018

Arek Hersh | Concentration camp survivor. I wonder if he knew my mother; Paula S. Biren, in Lodz



http://holocaustlearning.org/survivors/Arek-Hersh


Arek Hersh | Concentration camp survivor. I wonder if he knew my mother; Paula S. Biren, in Lodz, Poland.

 Copy and paste from above link;

"I was coming out from the school and a few Polish children shouted me "Go back to Palestine". My parents were born, my grandparents were born in Poland and I was born in Poland, a Polish subject, but according to them we weren't Polish. And that was a terrible situation. There were 3½ million Jews in Poland and a quarter of a million survived after the war".
Arek was born and brought up in Poland, the son of a boot-maker for the army. He had four siblings and was brought up in the Jewish faith in a tight-knit, loving family. He remembers going to the park in the summer, ice-skating on the river in winter and singing solos in the choir. Arek went to a Jewish elementary school and a mixed secondary school. Jews in Poland were troubled by anti-Semitism, particularly after the 'Polenaktion' of 1938 in which Germany forcibly expelled many of its Polish Jewish citizens across the border.

On 1 September 1939 the Germany army attacked Poland. Arek's family had to leave their home town and stay with relatives in Lodz, a big industrial city similar to Manchester. They walked there in a 65-km  journey that took them three days. Arek remembers seeing the German motorbikes, tanks and planes that far outclassed anything the Polish army had to fight with. He also remembers seeing German soldiers laughing and joking while they humiliated Jewish men by cutting their beards off.

In 1940 the Jews of Lodz had to start wearing the star of David on their outer clothing and soon were forced into a ghetto, where food was rationed and people lived in very cramped conditions. Towards 1941 the authorities came to take Arek's father to a work camp. As they took him out of the door he managed to escape. Arek's brother managed to do the same thing, so 11-year-old Arek was taken instead. He spent the night in a police station and the following day he and other prisoners were taken to a railway station where Arek's brother was waiting and wanted to take Arek's place. Arek refused. He was taken to a camp called Otoschno, near Poznan, which was run by the SS. After 18 months there were only 11 of the original 2500 men left alive. Arek managed to survive through his job cleaning the camp commander's office which meant he was able to steal food. In 1942 Arek was sent home. When he got there people came to ask him for news of their relatives. Arek told them that everybody was working because he couldn't bear to tell them what had actually happened.

In August 1942 the Nazis decided to liquidate the ghetto. 4000 people were made to assemble in the church. Arek ran away on pretence of getting some water and went to join a group of people who had been selected to work. Those in the church were taken to Chelmno death camp where they were gassed and buried in mass graves.

Arek and the other 150 people were taken to Lodz. The president of the ghetto demanded that the ghetto population should hand over 10,000 children. Arek knew he fell into that category. He managed to hide from the SS in a cemetery while the ghetto children were taken to Chelmno where they were also gassed. Alone, and without his family, Arek was accepted into the orphanage where he worked in the textile mill and was able to find food.  He stayed there for two years.

in 1944 the Germans decided to liquidate the Lodz ghetto because the Russian army was getting closer.  The remaining population was put on a goods train for the two-day journey to Auschwitz-Birkenau. The 185 children from the orphanage were among them. When they arrived at Auschwitz, Dr Mengele selected people to work and people to go straight to their deaths. Arek didn't know what was happening, but he could tell that the fitter, healthier people were on the right so took advantage of a disturbance to run across to that side. He was made to leave all his clothes and possessions, had his head and body shaved and was made to shower. He was given a striped suit to wear and was tattooed with the number B7608.  From that day onward Arek lost his name and was only referred to by his number.

After a few weeks Arek was chosen with a group of other boys and taken to Auschwitz 1. He was put into a block with political prisoners of different nationalities and the food was a little better. He had to work as an agricultural labourer for the SS, ploughing fields and fertilising them with ashes from the crematorium. Arek remembers feeling the bones as he spread the ashes on the ground. He later worked in the fishing commando which involved catching fish from the River Vistula to be transported to Germany for food.

In January 1945 Arek could see and hear American and British bombers and knew the Germans were losing the war. On 18 January the Germans decided to clear Auschwitz camp. They took the remaining prisoners on a forced march, known as the death march, for three days with no food, wearing only their striped camp uniforms in deep snow and temperatures as low as minus 25 degrees. The survivors found themselves in Buchenwald in Germany where Arek was put into a children's barrack. In April he and 3000 other people were taken to the city of Weimar in Germany, loaded onto open wagons and sent off on a month-long rail journey to Theresienstadt. Many people died on the train. Arek was one of the 600 who arrived alive in Czechoslovakia on 8 May 1945. There they were liberated by the Russian army.
Survivors in cattle trucks
In August 1945, after four months in Theresienstadt, Arek was taken to Prague as one of a group of 300 children and taken by plane to Windermere in the Lake District. They stayed in former factory accommodation and had some English lessons and some time to recover. Arek moved to Liverpool where he and some of the boys he had arrived with were able to learn a trade.
Boys at Windermere        Arek seated front       

Arek didn't speak about his experences until 1995 when he wrote his book, A Detail of History. Today Arek goes to schools, universities and other organisations to talk about his experience of the Holocaust. He hopes that by doing this he can help young people to build a better world.

Arek later discovered that only 40 people from his home town survived the war. Most people were killed in the death camp at Chelmno, including many members of his family."


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claude_Lanzmann