Trinity...are you ready to bow before the new religion yet. If so here's a few tips below.
Such Christian requests to Jєωs for "foregiveness" are the results of a long Jєωιѕн lobbying and pressure effort, heavily leaning on guilt-based non-Jєωιѕн associates who seek to bask in the Christian tenets of compassion and religious tolerance.
In the late 1970s, for example, the largely Jєωιѕн "National Conference of Christians and Jєωs" (with branches in 77 major U. S. cities) published "A h0Ɩ0cαųst Memorial Service for Christians." The volume appeals to a grandiose universalistic morality, and suggests that Christians incorporate, on a yearly basis, "a special day" (April 22) in their religious services to pay homage to the h0Ɩ0cαųst, [NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF CHRISTIANS AND JєωS, p. 3] particularly underscoring that righteous Christians are morally bound to protect Jєωs from anti-Jєωιѕн hostility. [p.4]
Likewise, "Christianity's role in the h0Ɩ0cαųst must not remain hidden or unstated. It must be faced, no matter how painful an undertaking it may be." [p. 4] A section even tries to diffuse the obvious question, which is given a bold-type heading: "Are You Asking Us to Lay a 'Guilt Trip' on Our People?" [p. 5]
For those who might wonder why the h0Ɩ0cαųst is so suddenly relevant, "more than thirty years" after the fact, a small chapter explains that, through the prism of the h0Ɩ0cαųst, we all "can better prepare ourselves to meet the chalenges of the day," [p. 6] (i.e., the consequences of Jєωιѕн particularism may be used to explore generalized principles of human universalism, even though the h0Ɩ0cαųst must be held to be separate, distinct, from all other historic atrocities).
In subsuming Christian identity beneath that of Jєωιѕн martyrs, "Many Christians have wished to have a Christian symbol attached to the yellow Star of David when they wear it ... If you choose to use the Yellow Star as a symbol, and wish to have some Christian identification on it, it is recommended that you use the Sign of the Fish, the oldest Christian symbol. This is preferable to using the Cross." [p. 11] (And why can't Christians wear the cross? Because Jєωs hate the cross, and from time immemorial have understood it -- rival religion -- as a sign of evil. Spitting at the Christian symbol is an old Jєωιѕн tradition, long before the h0Ɩ0cαųst). [See citations elsewhere]
The National Conference of Christians and Jєωs have even provided a page-long prayer for Christian penance for the h0Ɩ0cαųst, with the recurring refrain: "For the sin which we have committed before You" -- 14 times. [p. 15]