According to The Jerusalem Post, the (Kita) Anne Frank
day care center-- which has served families in Tangerhütte, Germany, for over
50 years-- will likely soon be renamed to “World Explorers”… because migrant parents apparently find
it difficult and/or uncomfortable to explain Frank’s significance to their
children.
According to a German media report, parents have pressured
the facility to change its name, and city officials seem more than willing to
do so. The report noted that, per Andreas
Brohm, the town’s mayor, the renaming is part of a broader push to celebrate
the diversity of the children attending the daycare center.
Germany’s BILD newspaper stated: “Ultimately, the parents and
employees wanted a name that was more ‘child-friendly’ and ‘better suited to
their concept,’” and added, “Their needs are more important than the global
political situation.” Because Anne Frank is obviously not child-friendly in the
way that world explorers are.
Today’s parents and caregivers may have struggled with how to
address Anne Frank’s brief life-- and its meaning—despite the fact that this
apparently wasn’t the case for the past five decades. (Not that it necessarily had
to be addressed at all.) It is much more likely it made these folks
uncomfortable and that they simply didn’t want the center named after Ms.
Frank.
In any case, in keeping with the West’s dogged determination
to eventually eviscerate itself, it is far more important that we celebrate
diversity, especially the diversity of those members of The Religion of Peace
who wish to convert, enslave, or kill all the infidels who disagree with their
religious “philosophy” and Sharia law. It may be only a matter of time until
the daycare center is again renamed, possibly to the “Mohammed Center for Young
Jihadists.” I must say, this seems ironic, especially for Germany, given its
history. Which, by-the-way, very much includes Anne Frank. Heil, insanity! (On August 4, 1944, Anne Frank’s
family’s hiding place was discovered by the Gestapo, and she was taken to
Auschwitz in Nazi-occupied Poland, before being transferred to
Bergen-Belsen in Germany. According to the Dutch government, she died there
in March of 1945, at the age of 15, during a typhus epidemic.)
The anti-Jewish sentiment—and violence—sweeping the globe defies rational
comprehension, and is beyond repulsive, the more so given the litany of heinous
acts many Jews had perpetrated upon them on October 7th…and beyond. (Even
babies were allegedly brutalized and beheaded, though this fact may not
properly resonate with rabid pro-abortionists in America.)
I wonder what those migrant parents are teaching their kids
about what happened on October 7th-- and in the days since. Ironically,
Germany seems to have expunged most of its virulent anti-Semites, only to
import many more decades later. It appears “never again” equals 78 years.
There is a darkness descending on the West. And it has
nothing to do with the sun going down.
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