The Reason an Israeli Man Couldn’t Bring Himself to Turn in His Weapons Will Sound Familiar to U.S. Gun Proponents:n 1938, the Nazis expanded upon Germany’s already restrictive gun laws, most of which were established during the Weimar Republic.
Israeli police are in the midst of a
campaign encouraging citizens to hand in their unregistered weapons,
with no fear of prosecution and no questions asked.
One person they likely didn’t expect to
show up was a 78-year-old grandmother who arrived at the police station
in Kiryat Gat with a virtual arsenal in tow — four crates worth.
According to Ynet,
the woman is the widow of a Holocaust survivor who collected a variety
of weapons, so traumatized was he by his experience during World War II
and the fear someone might confiscate his belongings.
The police did not provide the names of the woman or her daughter, but Ynet offers these details and photos of the retro weapons they handed in, courtesy of the Israel Police [emphasis added]:
The woman, who was accompanied by her daughter, brought in four crates filled with firearms including an Uzi machine gun, a 38 mm Colt handgun as well as numerous cartridges and flares. These belonged to the woman’s late husband, a Holocaust survivor who hoarded weapons obsessively throughout his life.
The woman’s daughter told police “My father was a Holocaust survivor who immigrated to Israel as a child. Ever fearful of another war, he had been especially afraid assailants might confiscate his possessions, thus he hoarded weapons. For 40 years he was the moshav’s [agricultural community] security coordinator, responsible for its armory.”
The daughter added that when the State decided to terminate local armories, her father collected some of his neighbors’ weapons, intending to ultimately hand them over to the military; however the opportunity never arose as he became gravely ill.
The man’s daughter further recounted to Ynet, “My father was opposed to the idea of returning the weapons himself.”
“He came from another generation, a
generation where everyone sought to possess arms to safeguard laws and
community regulations. For today’s generation this might seem weird, as
we concentrate on taking care of ourselves,” she added.
The description of the Holocaust
survivor’s outlook is particularly noteworthy as some American gun
rights proponents have made the case that if only Jews during World War
II had been armed, they might have been able to resist the Nazi
genocide.
Just days after the Newtown, Connecticut school shooting in December, Tablet magazine examined the issue in an article titled “Gun Control and the Holocaust”
in which the article’s author Michael Moynihan asked gun rights
proponents to “leave Hitler out of it [the gun control debate].”
At the same time, Moynihan wrote,
“Still, it is indeed true that in 1938, the Nazis expanded upon
Germany’s already restrictive gun laws, most of which were established
during the Weimar Republic.”
Moynihan quoted from Germany’s
Regulations Against Jews’ Possession of Weapons which stated that “Jews
are prohibited from acquiring, possessing, and carrying firearms and
ammunition, as well as cutting or stabbing weapons. Those now having in
their possession weapons and ammunition must at once surrender them to
the local police authority.”
In 1938, the Nazis expanded upon
Germany’s already restrictive gun laws, most of which were established
during the Weimar Republic.
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/06/03/the-reason-an-israeli-man-couldnt-bring-himself-to-turn-in-his-weapons-will-sound-familiar-to-u-s-gun-proponents/
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