Jews are worshippers of Satan.
Just read the Old Testament and you will see it.
"A young Hindu gentleman came to see me, and a very pious
man he proved to be: a worshipper of Vishnu, employed as a
clerk or secretary of one of the Indian delegations at the UN.
He had been reading the works of Heinrich Zimmer on Indian
art, philosophy and religion, works that I had edited many years
before, and which he wanted to discuss. But there was
something else he wanted to talk about too.
"You know, " he said after we had begun to feel at home
with each other, "when I visit a foreign country I like to acquaint
myself with its religion; so I have bought myself a Bible and for
some months now have been reading it from the beginning; but
you know" … and here he paused, to regard me uncertainly, then
said, "I can't find any religion in it!"
… Now I had of course been brought up on the Bible and I
had also studied Hinduism, so I thought I might be of some
help. " Well," I said, "I can see how that might be, if you had
not been given to know that a reading of the imagined history of
the Jewish race is here regarded as a religious exercise. There
would then, I can see, be very little for you of religion in the
greater part of the Bible."
I thought that later I should perhaps have referred him to
the Psalms; but when I then turned to a fresh reading of these
with Hinduism in mind, I was glad that I had not done so; for
almost invariably the leading theme is either the virtue of the
singer, protected by his God, who will "smite his enemies on
the cheek" and "break the teeth of the wicked;" or, on the other
hand, of complaint that God has not yet given due aid to his
righteous servant: all of which is just about diametrically opposed
to what an instructed Hindu would have been taught to regard as
religious sentiment.
In the Orient the ultimate divine mystery is sought beyond
all human categories of thought and feeling, beyond names and
forms, and absolutely beyond any such concept as of a merciful
or wrathful personality, chooser of one people over another,
comforter of folk who pray, and destroyer of those who do not.
Such anthropomorphic attributions of human sentiment is – from
the point of view of Indian thought – a style of religion for
children."