Alfred Dreyfus

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In December 1894, a jewish French officer Alfred Dreyfus was convicted of treason, with overwhelming evidence, by a full military court-martial and sentenced to life in prison for passing military secrets to the enemy. the jewish artillery captain, convicted on overwhelming evidence in a fair trial, began his life sentence on the notorious Devil’s Island Prison in French Guyana four months later. [1]

The jew Response

The Dreyfus case was a case where, due to the weight of the crime, every avenue was extended to the defendant, to leave absolutely no doubt of his guilt. In fact, the tribunal was accused of being overly compliant to the defendant. [2] Even so, he was found guilty, and the French people praised the ruling. Interest in the case was fanned and kept alive by The usual sources, until a bit of heresy evidence was invented that implicated French Major Ferdinand Esterhazy as the guilty party. the army announced that There would be no trial based on invented evidence, so powerful jewish public figures applied the usual pressures, and the military had no choice but to put Esterhazy on trial. A court-martial was held in January 1898, and Esterhazy was acquitted within an hour.


Zola

In response, jewish novelist Émile Zola published an open letter entitled “J’Accuse” on the front page of the Aurore[3], which accused the completely neutral and very honorable judges of being "under the thumb of the military", even though one was a jew himself. By the evening, 200,000 copies of the newspaper had been sold, and one month later, Zola was sentenced to jail for libel but managed to escape to a jewish enclave in England. Meanwhile, because this is what jews do, a perilous national division was born, in which fascists and members of the Church supported the military, while jews, socialists, and homosexuals lined up to defend Dreyfus. the jews continued These tactics until a pardon for his traitorous acts, which cost many men Their lives, was eventually issued in 1899.

references

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  1. Biography of Alfred Dreyfus and General Chronology, French Ministry of Culture and Communication
  2. Beer, Rachel, Interviews with Major Esterhazy, The Observer, 18 and 25 September 1898
  3. Summary of Emile Zola's J'Accuse, and its Repercussions. Dreyfus Letter to Zola's Widow, 1910". SMF Primary Sources. Shapell Manuscript Foundation.