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After World War II, a Jew's plan for revenge: poisoning a lurking water plant, targeting the assassination of 6 million Germans

Beginning with germany's annexation of European countries in September 1939, the Nazi persecution of Jews rose to a new stage, with tens of thousands of Jews imprisoned in concentration camps and subjected to inhuman abuse. However, after the war, it was rare to hear the news of large-scale retaliation by the Jews against the Germans, but in fact, there were still incidents of revenge, and the Jew introduced today had a "belief": the blood debt of the tragic death of 6 million Jews must be repaid by 6 million Germans.

After World War II, a Jew's plan for revenge: poisoning a lurking water plant, targeting the assassination of 6 million Germans

This man was Abakovna, who had actually formed an armed resistance force called the United Party as early as World War II. He preached to every Jew that "they should never be sent to the slaughterhouse as sheep", but with little success, only a small number of Jewish youth joined in, because of their limited strength, they hid in the mountains and forests to carry out guerrilla tactics against the Germans.

After World War II, a Jew's plan for revenge: poisoning a lurking water plant, targeting the assassination of 6 million Germans

In May 1945, when the Nazi Empire collapsed, Abakoffna thought germans would be severely punished, but less than 5 percent of the more than 10 million accused Nazis were prosecuted, and often those prosecuted were simply confiscated or restricted from their freedom. When Kovner learned that 6 million Jews had been mutilated, he decided to retaliate against the Germans for tit-for-tat. He called on a group of Jews to form a group called Nakam (meaning Avenger) to "hunt" free Nazis in western Germany, Spain, Latin America, and elsewhere.

In this organization, they have a code of conduct that outsiders do not know, and many of their members are members of the "united parties" of World War II, and the means are quite sophisticated: some people die on the street, some people die in car accidents, some people die in fires... Their assassinations were successful, with dozens of Nazis dying at their hands, and each dying more like an accident or suicide.

After World War II, a Jew's plan for revenge: poisoning a lurking water plant, targeting the assassination of 6 million Germans

If we rely on one assassination after another, 6 million people may not be able to do it for a while and a half. So Kovner had evil intentions and formulated two large-scale revenge plans, A and B.

After World War II, a Jew's plan for revenge: poisoning a lurking water plant, targeting the assassination of 6 million Germans

Let's start with Plan A: Kovner attempted to poison the water supply systems of large German cities. In order to obtain the poison, Kovner returned to Israel to seek the help of biologist Efreim Kazir, who gave Kovna a deadly poison that could kill people at 1 milligram, and at the same time, several members of the organization successfully mixed into several German water supply companies, and the lives of German people were in danger. Fortunately, at the critical moment, some Jewish elders in Israel were worried that this move was likely to poison some British and American people living in Germany, thus affecting the establishment of the State of Israel, so they told the British and American countries in advance, and when Kovner boarded the ship to return to Germany, the British gendarmes captured him, but Kovner threw the poison into the sea earlier, so although Plan A failed, but because there was not enough evidence, Kovner was released after several months of detention.

After World War II, a Jew's plan for revenge: poisoning a lurking water plant, targeting the assassination of 6 million Germans

However, Kovner was not reconciled, and Plan B was soon put on the agenda. Many German prisoners of war were held in Nuremberg and guarded by Americans. How could God not feel that these captives had been taken away? They soon discovered that the bread the captives ate was purchased from the same bakery and came every day. So they first had arsenic hidden under the floor of the bakery, and on April 14, 1946, Kovner and four others disguised themselves into the bakery, dipped arsenic with a brush and smeared it on the bread, and from morning until early morning, they made 3,000 poisonous breads.

After World War II, a Jew's plan for revenge: poisoning a lurking water plant, targeting the assassination of 6 million Germans

This time they succeeded, 2,283 people were poisoned in the prison of 15,000 prisoners, and although many people were rescued in time, 300-400 people died. Although the United States has since tracked down the bakery, the matter was closed because Kovner and the others had already fled, and the deaths were german prisoners.

After World War II, a Jew's plan for revenge: poisoning a lurking water plant, targeting the assassination of 6 million Germans

Returning to Israel, Kovner disbanded the organization and led the crowd to devote all their energy to the establishment of Israel. It was not until Kovner's death in 1985 that people found this 39-year-old past in the recordings and notes he left behind. Although Germany has also done a meticulous investigation since then, because Kovner and others have long died, coupled with the "special identity" of Germany after World War II, this incident has gradually disappeared into the torrent of history.

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