Dr Nicholas Kolelrstrom: The Walls of Auschwitz
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What Actually Happened To Europe's Jews
Before the war, the Nazis encouraged emigration of German Jewry.
Laws were instituted and governmental pressures were brought to bear to make life more difficult for Jews in many professions which Jews came to dominate in the Weimar Republic.
As the Germans invaded and the Russians retreated,
large shifts in population occurred in eastern Europe. This shift went from west to east.
Since Jews were viewed by many eastern Europeans as willing accomplices of the Communists who had occupied the area in the years and months preceding the German assault, pogroms occurred after the retreat of the Red Army and prior to arrival of the German army.
Many of these assaults on local Jews were in reaction to the murdering of political prisoners by the Soviet policeas they prepared to retreat. These events left areas of eastern Europe, now occupied by the German Wehrmacht and under Nazi administration depopulated. The Nazis took the situation as an opportunity to remove Jews eastward into the areas abandoned during the Soviet retreat.
A result of the tremendous movement of people is many families and communities were scattered and people lost contact with one another. Many of these contacts were not reestablished after the war due to a multitude of reasons the greatest of which were the splitting of Europe in two after the war and the establishment of the state of Israel.
During the summer of 1942 a major typhus epidemic swept the Nazi concentration camp system. The most severely affected camp was Auschwitz camp in Poland. The epidemic continued for many months. Crematories were built in some of the concentration camps as part of hygienic measures established to fight the epidemics.
In the beginning, Europe's Jewish communities were concentrated in eastern Europe. By the end of the war, Europe's Jews were still in eastern Europe, but the communities were shattered.
Tens of millions of people, particularly Germans and Jews were left homeless by the war. As a result, millions of Jews emigrated. Many settled in Palestine. Many more moved to North America. Others settled in Australia, South America, and South Africa.
The Holocaust become the founding myth of modern day Israel. As such it became an excuse for behavior of the Israelis which would have been inexcusable. It also became the excuse for billions of dollars in aid and 'reparations' being sent to Israel from Germany and the United States even though Israel did not exist during the war and its citizens were not subject to Nazi repression.
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The Concentration Camp Photographs
Do the photographs taken at the Nazi concentration camps at the end of the war prove the Nazis were exterminating people?No. How often have we heard the phrase "bodies stacked like cordwood"? Certainly, the photos of the sickening conditions in some of the Nazi concentration camps in the spring of 1945 were not faked, but they were taken out of context.
As World War Two approached its conclusion in Europe, Germany was a chaotic mess. The Allies controlled the sky all over Germany. One of the missions of the Allied pilots was to disrupt German communications as much as possible. This meant they shot at just about anything that moved. Trains with supplies bound to concentration camps were attacked just like any other train.
As Germany collapsed upon itself, it suffered from many shortages. This included medicine, food and fuel. Not being the highestpriority, concentration camps were affected as well.
Bergen Belsen which had been designed by the SS as a sick camp in the waning days of the war became the destination of many prisoners who were already sick from other camps. A typhus epidemic was raging there when the British captured the camp where an uncounted number-usually estimated to be between 10,000 and 30,000 - of prisoners died primarily from disease.
While the pictures are authentic, the films of bodies being bulldozed into trench graves do not tell the whole story. There was a war going on. It is in this context that these pictures need to be viewed. There are several reasons the Germans didn't simply release those in the camps. Many of the inmates were common criminals. Many were politically anti-German or anti-Nazi. Those infected with disease posed the threat of spreading the epidemics into the countryside if allowed to roam Germany. The healthy prisoners had nowhere to go. There was a war raging all around. Their homes were on the other side of the battle lines. Additionally, the likelihood that freed prisoners would form criminal gangs was too high for them to be released. Many were imprisoned because they were considered risks to security to begin with. Releasing them to roam the countryside was out of the question.
Related Information:http://neoconzionistthreat.blogspot.com/2007/09/israel-lobby-and-us-foreign-policy.html
The Holocaust Industry by Prof Norman Finkelstein http://www.amazon.com/Holocaust-Industry-Reflections-Exploitation-Suffering/dp/185984488X/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/103-6777073-3682238?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1185737019&sr=8-1
Zionists Deprive Finkelstein Of DePaul Tenurehttp://www.bestcyrano.org/THOMASPAINE/?p=163