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Hagee Blames Jews for Holocaust?

Just this afternoon, Huffington Post sleuth Sam Stein found audio footage of Pastor John Hagee describing the Holocaust as part of God's Plan for Israel and the Jews. Rabbi Eric Yoffie, who had previously called for groups to stop working with the controversial pastor and zealous "supporter" of Israel today issued an open letter to Pastor Hagee asking for an explanation of these reported remarks. Read the entire letter after the jump.

Rabbi Yoffie's letter is below.  Pastor Hagee's staff, according to the Huffington Post has confirmed the remarks are accurate.  I think the line Hagee has that is most inflammatory is: "Why did it happen? Because God said my top priority for the Jewish people is to get them to come back to the land of Israel." 

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Dear Pastor Hagee,

I have received questions from many of my members who have read recent articles (The Huffington Post, IsraelENews, Talk2Action) about themes in your speeches and writings.  You have been quoted as suggesting that the Holocaust was part of God’s plan to force the Jews to go to Israel and that the Jews brought the Holocaust upon themselves by defying Herzl’s Zionist dream to have all Jews go to and settle in the land of Israel. 

I am deeply troubled by these quotations.  The Holocaust was the work of a deranged, bigoted, and anti-Semitic figure supported by a racist government.   To suggest otherwise is surely an affront to the 11 million individuals, 6 million of whom were Jews, who lost their lives in the ashes of what is unquestionably the greatest tragedy of the 20th century.  To blame the victims for the Holocaust and to suggest that they brought it on themselves is a desecration of their name and their memory, and an insult to the survivors and their descendents who thankfully remain in our midst today.

I am aware of the work that you have done on behalf of the State of Israel, and for that reason I find your remarks especially troubling.  Please help me explain to the members of my movement the statements attributed to you.  Are these sentiments representative of your current feelings and perceptions of the Jewish people and the people of Israel?  Were they at one time representative?  Have you in some way been grossly misquoted?  Are these views which you have now repudiated?

As a Pastor to one of our nation’s largest churches, your influence is widely felt and your model of leadership is surely one that will influence many Americans.  I hope that you agree with me that justifying the Holocaust or blaming it on the Jews is anathema to all who repudiate group defamation and cherish tolerance and respect.  I look forward to your response.

Sincerely,

/s/

Rabbi Eric Yoffie

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