A good Passover story should always involve cakes. Austrian baker
Manfred Klaschka is the subject of this years story. He was in the news
because of his most recent catalogue of cake designs; Klaschka is a
pastry specialist.
Of course, Austrian pastries are famous the world over. Now, pastry
baker Manfred Klaschkas most recent catalogue of such tasty delights
was in the news this week because it included cakes decorated with
swastikas as well as one with a baby raising its right arm in a Nazi
salute.
Herr Klaschka insists he is not a Nazi. After the news story broke, he
even met with a Holocaust awareness group, and apologized for what he
had done, and he then baked a cake to say he was sorry a cake with
Jewish and Christian symbols. The point of the story the bit I found
interesting is Herr Klaschkas explanation for what he did.
"I see it was a mistake, anyone who knows me knows what kind of person I
am. I am no Nazi", said Klaschka, who had earlier said he was just a
pastry maker fulfilling his customers wishes. Fulfilling his customers
wishes? There is a market in Austria in 2011 for cakes with babies
raising their arms in Nazi salutes, cakes with swastikas on them? There
are parties where people serve such cakes? Maybe birthday parties for
babies?
Of course there are such people, and there are such parties, and because
of that, there is a market there is consumer demand for swastika
cakes. Which is why Herr Klaschka was happy to bake them. And not only
in Austria.
You may remember the case of the Campbell family from New Jersey.
When Kurt Waldheim was exposed as a war criminal his popularity rose.
The neo-Nazi Freedom Party headed by the late Jorg Haider, won 27% of
the vote in the 2000 elections and became part of the coalition
government the first time since 1945 that Nazis had sat in a European
government.
But this never happened in New Jersey which is why I want to talk
about the Campbell family. The Campbell family in New Jersey made the
news back in 2008 when they tried to get a birthday cake made for their
son they have a son and two daughters at the local Shop Rite in
Holland Township.The store refused their request.
And the reason was that Mr. Campbell wanted the cake to read "Happy
birthday Adolf Hitler". Because, you see, his sons name was Adolf
Hitler Campell. One of the daughters is named is named JoyceLynn Aryan
Nation Campbell. Well, you get the point.
When I read about the Austrian baker Manfred Klaschka, I thought here
was a marketing opportunity for him. He would have happily baked a cake
for the Campbell family. So what does all this have to do with Passover?
This week, when we are forbidden to eat Sachertore or Linzer tort or
even the delightfully named Punschkrapfen, we might want to pause and
think about something we say every year at the Passover seder: 'In every
generation it is the duty of man to consider himself as if he had come
forth from Egypt'.
Because in this generation, as in all others, there are those who order
custom-made swastika cakes. There are those who name their children
after Adolf Hitler. And there are others who fire anti-tank missiles at
school busses with Jewish children in them. Because there are those who
are building nuclear weapons, having told the world that their intention
is to wipe the Jewish state off the face of the earth. Because people
like that make Pharaoh look like a nice guy. Because getting out of the
house of bondage, out of slavery in Egypt, was not the end of the story
for the Jewish people, but was the beginning.
It is a story of a never-ending struggle for freedom, for dignity, for
respect, for human rights, that has universal resonance and meaning
for all people, everywhere, always.
Source: Eric Lee
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