Holocaust
The figure "six million" Jews killed in the holocaust has
been repeated so many times that it has come to be accepted by
the Jews as absolute truth, and anyone who dares question its
veracity is automatically and vehemently attacked by their
leaders as an "anti-Semite".
The New York Times, then a non-Zionist newspaper,
commissioned Harrison Salisbury after World War II to do a world
survey of the Jewish population, and his findings were duly
published by them in February, 1946 on page Axx.
His findings were that there were 16 million Jews in the
world. At that time, the American Jewish Committee was
"estimating" that the Jewish population was 10 million, or six
million less than Salisbury's figures.
Consulting the '87 World Almanac, the estimate is now 17
million, an increase of 170% in 42 years.
A. M. Rosenthal, former Managing Editor of the New York
Times, writing in his column published May 6, 1988, states that
at the Yad Vashem Museum in Jerusalem are listed the names of two
million victims of the German Holocaust.
It seems a little strange that with all the publicity that has
been given the Holocaust in the United States, and presumably
world-wide, over the past 43 years, that 4 million names appear
to have been missed, or 2/3nds.
Jack Polak and Ina Soep, Dutch Jews, lived for 15 months in
Westerbork and Bergen-Belsen in Germany until liberated in 1945. The
New York Times Dec. 5, 2007.
Tom Lantos, from Hungary, was 16 when the Germans occupied it.
He twice escaped from forced-labor camps, and left Hungary after
diplomat Raoul Wallenburg provided him with a Swedish-protected
passport and declared him a Swedish citizen. Lantos said "these
miraculous, worthless pieces of paper worked", and later immigrated
to the U.S.
After the way, he managed to reunite with his childhood friend Annette
Tillemann, who had escaped to Switzerland, and later immigrated to the
U.S.
(New York Times 2/12/08)
Rabbi Arthur Schneier was born in Vienna and fled from the Nazis at age of 9,
moving to Budapest with his widowed mother. There, he survived the
Holocaust---Shoah in Hebrew---before coming to America in 1947.
World War II claimed the lives of my family at Auschwitz and Terezin in the Shoah.
( New York Times 4/15/08)