The Jesuits vs The Jews

angel_n

Other Christian
Thought this would be an interesting topic to explore, since there's discussions going on online whether the Jesuits are actually the ones guilty of the majority of what people accuse The Jews of. The recently deceased Catholic Pope (who was a Jesuit) for example was a strong advocate of 3rd world immigration into Europe and criticized pro nativist policies coming out of Europe and the US.

Looking at how the Jews were responsible for the US' involvement in Middle Eastern Wars and degenerating Western societies with their overt hatred of Jesus Christ and White Europeans, I don't really support the idea that it's Jesuits orchestrating these things behind the scenes and using Jews as a scapegoat but am interested in the thoughts of others.
 
I've talked about that link for a long time in modern politics, as they are trying to build worldly kingdoms, and have representatives that are very sick. These are "catholics" and "jews" that absolutely need to be distinguished from any earnest believer. They use money and mafia tactics to advance a debt based buy-off state of welfare, surveillance, and state sponsored propaganda. The people who lost their connection to the Roman Catholic faith of old became the shabbos goy and money changers of the modern day, claiming they were helping others and "building a kingdom". The Pelosi/Biden example is among the starkest.
 
Some good old news for a change. Father Walter Ciszek, a Polish-American Jesuit missionary

On Oct. 12, 1963, American-born Jesuit Father Walter Ciszek (1904-1984) arrived in New York after 23 years in Russia, much of it spent in captivity in Siberian labor camps and Soviet prisons.

To add to the intrigue surrounding this extraordinary Jesuit’s life, Fr. Ciszek’s daring release — a complicated prisoner exchange — was negotiated with the help of President John F. Kennedy just one month before the president’s tragic assassination. Although Fr. Ciszek’s life reads like a Hollywood script, his experience results from one simple question: Will you devote your life to the service of others? As Jesuits have for centuries, Fr. Walter Ciszek answered that call.

Fr. Ciszek’s canonization cause was formally opened in March 2012. The Walter Ciszek Prayer League, dedicated to the cause, maintains a museum in his birthplace of Shenandoah, Pennsylvania, honoring Fr. Ciszek’s life.





Ciszek was born on November 4, 1904, in the mining town of Shenandoah, PA to Polish immigrants Mary (Mika) and Martin Ciszek, who had emigrated to the US in the 1890s from Galicia, Austria-Hungary. A former street gang member, he shocked his family by deciding to become a priest. Ciszek entered the Jesuit novitiate in Hyde Park, NY in 1928. The following year, he volunteered to serve as a missionary to Russia, where the Bolshevik Revolution had taken place 12 years before. Christians were being openly persecuted there, and few believers had access to a priest. Pope Pius XI made an appeal to priests from around the world to go to Russia as missionaries

 
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