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I know what it means to be an antisemite

May 21, 2015 17:20
Csanad Szegedi

ByAngela Epstein, Angela Epstein

5 min read

Standing by the crematoria at Auschwitz, Csanad Szegedi shivered with horror as he stared bleakly into a pit where the ashes of hundreds of thousands of Jews had once been so mercilessly discarded.

As a Jewish boy, trying to grapple with the magnitude of the crimes which took place on this blood-soaked soil, he felt, almost literally, as if he was gazing into the abyss.

"I thought to myself, I'm standing by the graveside of my family, of people I never knew. How could this have been allowed to happen?"

For Jews everywhere, it's an understandable reaction. Yet in the case of this 32 year-old businessman, it's also an extraordinary one.