02/07/2025
Jewish History in Massachusetts -please read to the end
In a world of AI censorship, and frivolous defamation lawsuits that infringe on our First Amendment Rights, let us read between the lines, and always endeavor to separate fact from fiction, truth from lies. Please share this article far and wide.
In 1752, wealthy Jewish Slave Trader Aaron Lopez became the first Jewish Naturalized citizen of Massachusetts. In 1777, he and fellow slave-trader, Jacob Rodriguez Rivera, founded the first Massachusetts Jewish community in Leicester, numbering 61 people at the time (not including negroes/slaves).
In the later half of the 1830's, Ashkenazi Jewish settlers established the state's first official congregation, Ohabei Shalom, in Boston. From there, the congregation exercised powerful influence over the growth of new Jewish settlements throughout the state and beyond.
Over the next 100+ years, these networks of Jewish trading post owners would gradually displace the local Yankee traders. Although the vast majority of the Massachusetts Yankee population despised slavery, and held such slave-traders in disdain, this network of innovative Jewish ship owners and trading post operators, were able to export negro slaves southward, establishing new and profitable markets, further strengthening Jewish influence over Massachusetts.
Innovative Jewish traders in Massachusetts flourished, selling new products such as candles, footwear, ci**rs, leather products, and pornographic books. These merchants established themselves in the most populated areas, such as Framingham, Worcester, Springfield, Lynn, Haverhill, and many other locations.
In 1877, a Jewish trader by the name of Leopold Morse, a German-Born migrant, became the first Massachusetts Jew to serve in the U.S. House of Representatives. Morse was a maverick. Massachusetts, being a solid Republican state at the time (This writer's great great grandfather was a Captain in the Union Army and a Republican), had just fought the civil war, to end slavery. Though the Democrat Party was highly unpopular in Massachusetts at that time, due to it's hard-line pro-slavery position, Morse held firm to his principles and won the election.
The same year Leopold Morse won election to Congress, the first eastern European Jews began arriving in Massachusetts. Among these upstanding Jewish immigrants was Simon Siniansky. In 1879, Siniansky's house became the meeting place for the first known "minyan" (a Talmudic concept of a quorum, of at least ten Jewish males, such as that referenced in "The ten spies", in the biblical book of numbers) in Massachusetts.
In 1885, Leopold Morse became president of the Post Publishing Company. With this new found influx of Eastern-European Jewish intelligence, Morse would utilize his new position to launch a major PR campaign, cleaning up the false public perception that Jews were all slave traders, slave owners, and people of generally low morality (Only 78% of American slave-owners were Jewish, and only 40% of American Jews owned slaves. The rest just kept their mouths shut).
Around that same time, several Jewish educational institutions were established, such as Brandeis University, the National Yiddish Book Center, and the Jewish Women's Archive. Then, in 1906, The Menorah Society, a Jewish intercollegiate movement, was organised at Harvard University, where it would promote newly established Marxist Principles over it's umbrella of college student groups. Taking advantage of the First Amendment, Jewish Marxist doctrine would go on to dominate Massachusetts educational institutions over the next 100 years.
Throughout the early twentieth century, innovative Massachusetts Jews would pioneer new markets, such as supplying newly printed capital to mafia loansharks. During the great depression, enterprising and resourceful young Jews made ends meet, by selling apples they stole from my great grandfather's apple orchard in Framingham. All while continuing to promote Marxist/Communist principles throughout Massachusetts, using their substantial media resources that were growing ever larger.
During the 1940's, when World War 2 broke, many young Massachusetts Jews were able to avoid mandatory military service by enrolling in undergraduate programs at colleges and Universities. Such enrollment often meant deferral from service. This was due to the brilliant foresight and the growing strength of the menorah society.
Throughout the 1960's and 1970's, Prominent Massachusetts Jewish Civil Rights activists such as Leonard Zakim, would fund and lead the civil rights movement in Massachusetts. Utilizing Marxist principles such as critical theory, Zakim and other Jewish leaders brilliantly reinvent the narrative of black slavery, spinning African-American animosity toward the very people who never owned slaves, but rather fought a war to free them. This model would become the prototype, and evolve into critical-race-theory, continuing to incite people of color to violence against caucasian Americans for the next 6 decades.
In the early 1990's, when the Soviet Union was overthrown, tens of thousands of former Soviet Jews immigrated to Massachusetts (and continue to do so from Ukraine). There is no proof that our wonderful new Soviet Jewish immigrants had anything to do with the deaths of tens of millions of Russian and European Christians, killed during the 20th Century.
Now, in the early 21st Century, many many prominent Massachusetts Jews continue to fight an ever-escalating struggle for equality. Jewish leaders such as Norman Spack, Eli Erlick, and Idit Klein. These are only a tiny fraction of the Jewish leaders who sacrifice themselves daily in the name of public service. Leaders that ensure every national or Christian holiday is ruined. Great leaders who fight to ensure every child has the right to free transgender reassignment surgery, without the burden of parental consent.
On this upcoming No-Kings-day (formerly Independence day, July 4th) let us all take a moment of silence to reflect on these wonderful contributions made by the Framingham and Massachusetts Jewish community, who continue to relentlessly, almost mentally-psychopathically, work to destroy every decent aspect of human life in this once-great country. Amen.
This article was written to honor the memory of Andrew Stigliano. An Adopted Jewish son, a Father, a drug-addict, a provocateur, a victim of injustice, and finally, a Christian Convert.
Ashland News
Josh Eaton