Persecution and persecutors
I was reading a book about Germany during WWII. A Jewish couple who weren't able to escape the country fast enough, were reduced to living in a single room in a Jewish ghetto, their wealth gone, their possessions stolen or destroyed.
The wife said she preferred to be the victim of such abuses rather than the perpetrator of them. She felt the Nazis had lost their essential humanity and were really the ones to be pitied, not her. Her husband disagreed.
This is a though provoking moral dilemna. Which would you choose. To be the persecutor or the victim?
I was reading a book about Germany during WWII. A Jewish couple who weren't able to escape the country fast enough, were reduced to living in a single room in a Jewish ghetto, their wealth gone, their possessions stolen or destroyed.
The wife said she preferred to be the victim of such abuses rather than the perpetrator of them. She felt the Nazis had lost their essential humanity and were really the ones to be pitied, not her. Her husband disagreed.
This is a though provoking moral dilemna. Which would you choose. To be the persecutor or the victim?
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