He represents the Jewish collaborators that assisted the Nazi to exterminate their own people. I.e. Traitors, Gadaar, Munafik
How Israel’s Justice System Dealt With Alleged Jewish Collaborators in Concentration Camps—And Why That Still Matters Today
circa 1955: The perimeter fence of the Nazi concentration camp at Auschwitz. Keystone/Getty Images
BY
DAN PORAT
OCTOBER 25, 2019 4:30 PM EDT
When Allied forces
broke open the gates of concentration camps in 1945, they discovered not only piles of corpses and dozens of gravely ill inmates but also survivors who were seeking revenge. Many of those who were liberated sought retribution not just against the Germans but against former Jewish functionaries in the camps and ghettos as well. Freed inmates lynched and beat Jews who, as ghetto policemen, had surrendered them and their family members to the Nazis or who, as kapos in concentration camps, had harassed or abused them.
.