Two years after Toronto: Holocaust Survivor blows whistle on WEF
"Holocaust-Survivors, it seems to me, should be especially equipped to sense when things are going wrong. Klaus Schwab frightens me as much as any evil man frightens me"
When on March 27, 2021, Irène Tokayer, who was born in 1927 in the town of Schwerin north of Berlin, spoke at the Toronto Freedom Rally at Queens Park North, all she wanted to convey was: “Do not comply with the Covid Mandates. They are more insidious than the Yellow Star I was forced to wear in my Childhood in Germany, which gave people permission to insult me as ‘carrier of disease’.” Ms. Tokayer was overwhelmed by the echo her speech received and refrained from speaking publicly ever since. After she watched Vera Sharav’s documentary series “Never Again Is Now Global” she knew it was time to speak out again.
In a first interview since then she explains that the documentary was “extremely important that we take note of similarities (…) and that ‘Never Again’ means ‘Never Again to inhumanity to man’”.
Irène Tokayer was born in the fall of 1927 in Germany to parents who were Musicians. Her father was Jewish Composer Alfred Tokayer. After having his German citizenship revoked in 1934, Alfred Tokayer had fled to France, where he briefly fought in the French Legion after the Nazis occupied France. After his return to Paris, where he thought to be able to hide in anonymity, Alfred Tokayer was apprehended in 1943, deported and killed by the Nazis in Sobibor Death Camp. Irène Tokayer was able to hide until the war was over, when she traveled to Canada in order to learn English. There she met her future husband, with whom Irène started a family in Canada.
In the Interview, Irène Tokayer speaks about how she had remaind doubtful about her father’s wartime promise that ‘once the war was over and Hitler gone, things would be fine’. She recounts that also witnessing genocide later in life, such as the Massacre of My Lai in Vietnam in 1968, kept her vigilance awake. In this context Irène Tokayer also recalls how protest against the second Gulf War attracted tens of thousands of Protesters in Toronto despite freezing conditions.
The Toronto speech in 2021 came about because after attending several “meagre rallies of maybe fiveteen-hundred people in Toronto” in protest of the Covid Policies her children had asked Irène to speak about her perception of the situation as a Survivor of the Holocaust and parallels to Nazi-Totalitarianism. Ms. Tokayer stressed that in doing so, it was not her intention to offend:
“I certainly don’t wish to offend any Holocaust-Survivor, but it seems to me they should be especially equipped to sense when things are going wrong. And I don’t understand the psychological process that makes them not see what Vera [Sharav] sees, so many of them.”
Here are a few quotes of what Ms. Tokayer said in our Interview:
“Whether we have a Martial Law or Sanitary Law, it doesn’t matter: it is power arrogated wrongly and always wrongly used. We have got a long way to go!”
— Irène Tokayer, Holocaust Survivor
Whilst other Holocaust Victims stayed away from Germany, the country in whose name they had suffered and lost relatives, Irène Tokayer did go back to Germany, where she thought lessons had been learnt:
“I was invited by the Senate of Berlin to have a week in Berlin, and I was shown Schöneberg, where we were neigbours. I came away somewhat reconciled, because I sensed there was some acknowledgement. There seemed something good about it.
Little did I know that they were hatching Klaus Schwab at the time …”
“It fills you with existential dismay. You feel there is nothing but lies around you.”
Like Drs. Zelenko (“What a great guy”) and Yeadon in the Documentary, Irène Tokayer is able to express her concerns quite precisely: It is the transhumanist agenda of the World Economic Forum which she is concerned about:
“I do not know why Holocaust Survivors who are angry at us, do not watch the World Economic Forum and this terrible man who frightens me as any evil man has ever frightened me.”
Irène Tokayer is a quiet and humble personality, who does not like to make a great fuss about herself. However, at 95 years of age her mental clarity and dedication is truly amazing. “We can only do in our little corner what we know about.”