22/05/2026
PLEASE SHARE!
The following is a copy of an article attributed to Spanish writer Sebastian Vilar Rodríguez and published in a Spanish newspaper on January 15, 2008:
I was walking down a street in Barcelona when I suddenly came to a terrible realization - Europe died in Auschwitz. We murdered six million Jews and replaced them with 20 million Muslims.
In Auschwitz, we burned a culture of thought, creativity, talent, and genius. We destroyed a truly chosen people - chosen not only by history, but by the immense contribution they made to humanity through great men and women who changed the world.
The contribution of the Jewish people can be seen in every sphere of life: science, art, international commerce, and above all, as a moral conscience to the world. These are the people we burned.
Then, under the banner of tolerance, and in our desperate attempt to convince ourselves that we had overcome racism, we opened our gates to millions who brought with them religious extremism, intolerance, crime, and poverty - often fueled by an unwillingness to integrate, work, and build with dignity.
They bombed our trains and transformed many of our beautiful European cities into places overwhelmed by violence, filth, and fear.
Hidden away in government-funded apartments, some among them plot destruction against the very societies that welcomed them with naïve generosity.
Thus, in our misery, we exchanged culture for fanaticism, creative brilliance for destructive hatred, intelligence for backwardness and superstition.
We traded the European Jews’ pursuit of peace, their devotion to life, and their determination to build a better future for their children - for those who glorify death, both for themselves and for others.
What a terrible mistake miserable Europe has made.
Source