Künast provides outrage with Palestinian Jesus -Tweet!

Künast provides outrage with Palestinian Jesus -Tweet!

Nazareth, Israel - The German political scene is head! A tweet of the Green politician Renate Künast causes violent discussions and horrified critics from a wide variety of camps. In a explosive message to X, Künast explained the birth of a "Palestinian Jew" - a brave but risky statement that she combined with her criticism of migration policy. Her post, which was supposed to heat the migration debate, backfired when the criticism almost seemed to come from all the pipes.

Künast quoted the publicist Nils Minkmar, who used his newsletter for this unusual comparison, and wrote on Sunday: "On these days everyone celebrated the birth of a Palestinian Jew, whose parents move around in the center. After that, the race starts again who is most mutually deporting and urbanizing migrants publicly." Critics like the author Andreas Hallaschka violently contradict and emphasized that every sentence of Künast was historically incorrect. The region was not called Palestine at the time of Jesus, emphasized Hallaschka, but at that time belonged to the Roman province of Judea. Jesus' parents were not centered; Josef was a craftsman and landowner (source: Welt ).

violent criticism also from party friends

The protest was not only limited to angry historians. Even within her own party, Künast's tweet met with massive resistance. Volker Beck, also a member of the Greens and President of the German-Israeli Society, described the statement as a "embarrassing slip". Beck indirectly accused Künast of anti -Semitism by pointing out historical incorrectness and its deeper implications. This is an attempt to delete Jesus' belonging to the Jewish people from history.

also Jutta Ditfurth, formerly part of the Greens, was concerned and warned that ignorance of the history of Christian anti -Judaism was dangerous. Your comment speaks volumes about the possible aftermath that Künast's tweet could still have. The Palestine of the seventh century - only then there were Muslim residents of the region - has no relation to the time of Jesus. The Romans only rejected the area later, revealed Ditfurth.

The debate on X

on the platform X, formerly Twitter, the users overwhelmed the post of Künast with context information - a clear case of "communitynotes", which show alternative perspectives. "Jesus was a Jew" and "the parents were not centered" as a contextual addition to Künast's message. How sharply the debate is conducted is also shown in the comments of Arnd Diringer, a lawyer who wrote that the annual "Fakenews" by Künast and others manipulated the Christmas story to fit into their own worldviews (source: x.com ).

The consequences of this heated discussion could be far -reaching and once again led to fast reactions in the political landscape. Whether this medial vertebrae of the migration debate is substantially contributing to a different sheet.

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OrtNazareth, Israel

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