Lies being Taught;
Hitler was
racist. During 1936 Berlin Olympics, He refused to shake the hand of the
American Black athlete Jesse Owens after the latter had won a race, because
Jesse Owens was Black.
He put Jews in concentration camps which
proves he was racist.
Now the Truth;
One of the famous American 'Tuskegee Airmen', Alexander Jefferson, wrote
a book called 'Red Tail Captured, Red Tail Free' where he talks about being a
second class citizen in his own country. He was shot down and put into a German
P.O.W. camp where for the first time in his life he wasn't segregated from the
white troops. He recalls the incredible irony of finally being freed and
returning home and no sooner did he walk off the ship when he was told 'Whites
to the right, niggers to the left'!
The brilliant black historian and
sociologist W.E.B. Du Bois visited National Socialist Germany in 1936. He
related that he received more respect from the German academics then from his
white colleagues back in America. He was treated like a human being in Germany,
and stated: 'The National Socialists did not show any trace of racial hatred
toward blacks.' Society under Nazis was completely integrated.
Owens
said, "Hitler didn't snub me – it was FDR who snubbed me. The president
didn't even send me a telegram." On the other hand, Hitler sent Owens a
commemorative inscribed cabinet photograph of himself. Jesse Owens was never
invited to the White House nor were honors bestowed upon him by President
Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR) or his successor Harry S. Truman during their terms
though they did meet many other American medalists.
Germany was never racist. Owens was allowed to travel with and stay in
the same hotels in Germany as whites, while at the time blacks in many parts of
the United States had to stay in segregated hotels while traveling. After a New
York City ticker-tape parade of Fifth Avenue in his honor, Owens had to ride
the freight elevator at the Waldorf-Astoria to reach the reception honoring
him.
The reason why Hitler could not shake hands with Jesse Owens is that
Hitler had personally attended the first day of the track and field competition
on 2 August 1936, and did personally congratulate the German athlete Hans
Woellke, who became the first German to win a gold medal in the Olympics since
1896.Throughout the rest of the day, Hitler continued to receive Olympic
champions, German and non German, in his VIP box.
The
next day, 3 August, the chairman of the International Olympic Committee, Comte
Baillet-Latour, approached Hitler early in the morning and told the German
leader that he had violated Olympic protocol by having winners paraded to his
box.
Hitler apologized and gave an undertaking that he would from then on
refrain from publicly congratulating any winners, German or otherwise. During
this day, Owens won his gold medals - and in line with the Olympic Committee's
ruling, Hitler did not shake his hand, or anybody else's for that matter, at
the games again.
On reports that Hitler had deliberately avoided acknowledging his
victories, and had refused to shake his hand, Owens said at the time:
"Hitler had a certain time to come to the stadium and a certain
time to leave". "It happened he had to leave before the victory
ceremony after the 100 meters. But before he left I was on my way to a
broadcast and passed near his box. He waved at me and I waved back. I think it
was 'bad taste' to criticize the man of the hour in another country”
Owens Arrives With Kind Words For All Officials – The Pittsburgh Press,
24 August 1936. News.google.co.uk. Retrieved on 2011-09-15.
Sources;
Schaap, Jeremy (2007). Triumph: The untold
story of Jesse Owens and Hitler’s Olympics. New York: Mifflin Harcourt.
Owens Weighs his pro offers – The Baltimore
Sun, August 18, 1936.
George Takei, of Star Trek fame, was one of the many victims of American racist policy. Here's his account of his experience in American concentration camps during WWII:
’I was only a child when soldiers with
bayonetted rifles marched up our driveway, banged on our door, and ordered us
out. I remember my mother's tears as we gathered what little we could carry,
and then were sent to live for many weeks in a single cramped horse stall. Our
bank accounts were frozen, our businesses shuttered, and our homes with most of
our belongings were left behind, all because of what we looked like.'
'A few months later, we were shipped
off to the swamps, over a thousand miles away, by railcar. They placed in all
one hundred twenty thousand of us inside barbed wire fences, machine guns
pointed down at us from watch towers. We slept inside bug-infested barracks,
ate in a noisy mess hall, and relieved ourselves in common latrines that had no
walls between the stalls. We were denied adequate medicines, shelter and
supplies. I remember as a child looking up toward a U.S. flag in the room, as
we recited the Pledge of Allegiance, those ironic words echoing, "with
liberty, and justice for all."'
Executive
Order 9066, signed by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, was issued on the
premise that anyone of Japanese descent could not be trusted and was to be
treated as an enemy, even those of us who were American citizens, born in this
land. We were viewed not as individual people, but as a yellow menace to be
dealt with, and harshly. The guns pointed at us at every point reminded us that
if we so much as tried to stand up for our dignity, there would be violent
consequences. The order and the ensuing confinement was an egregious violation
of the constitution and of due process as we were held, without trial and
without charge, awaiting our fate.'