Major Jewish organizations have harshly condemned a recent measure by the US state of Arizona to execute death row convicts through the use of a Zyklon B gas chamber, the same poison used by the Nazis to kill Jews in concentration camps during the Holocaust.
The state has had a gas chamber since 1949, and since then it has only been used twice, the most recent of which was in 1999 to execute German national Walter LaGrand.
The use of Zyklon B is seen by the state as being an "upgrade" of their preexisting gas chamber.
Jewish organizations have come out against this, however, and have drawn comparisons to its use in the Holocaust.
Friebaum condemned the gas chambers as an inhumane Nazi innovation. "To think our 'civilized society' today in the state of Arizona would utilize this Nazi innovation, I believe, is tantamount to giving posthumous approval to the evils conducted by the Nazis. We're basically saying what the Nazis did was OK," she explained, according to NBC News.
The American Jewish Committee (AJC), one of the oldest Jewish advocacy groups in the US, also came out against the decision they said "defies belief."
"Whether or not one supports the death penalty as a general matter, there is general agreement in American society that a gas devised as a pesticide, and used to eliminate Jews, has no place in the administration of criminal justice," the AJC said in a statement, according to NBC News.
Despite this, Arizona already has a convict in mind: 65-year-old Frank Atwood, who was convicted of killing a child in 1984, though his legal team have been working to fight this.