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Germar Rudolf, Resistance Is Obligatory (2012; PDF-Datei

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GERMAR RUDOLF, RESISTANCE IS OBLIGATORY<br />

many, he might be tried on criminal charges and fined and sentenced to<br />

prison.<br />

On the brighter side, questioning the existence of gas chambers,<br />

even though they are not a part of the Wieselian definition of “Holocaust,”<br />

is not likely to cause our hypothetical professor to be put on the<br />

rack or subjected to water boarding. Not yet.<br />

In Night the fate of Wiesel’s two older sisters, Hilda and Beatrice, is<br />

deliberately omitted leaving the reader with the impression that they too<br />

perished at Auschwitz. In fact they were quarantined at Auschwitz for<br />

about three months after which they were transferred to another labor<br />

camp, Kaufering near Dachau, where they stayed until liberation at the<br />

end of the war. The history of the Wiesel sisters between their arrival at<br />

Auschwitz and the end of the war has been carefully concealed. Why?<br />

Would their accounts have supported or undercut their famous brother’s<br />

story told in Night?<br />

In video testimony for the Shoah project, 31 Hilda Wiesel says she<br />

was sent to Auschwitz with her brother, her mother, two sisters, and her<br />

paternal grandmother. A comparison of what Hilda and Elie said on the<br />

sisters’ transfer from Auschwitz to Kaufering near Dachau is revealing.<br />

Elie quotes Hilda as saying: 32<br />

“I remember that night, our last night in Auschwitz. That night<br />

they moved out a transport of twelve hundred women. Naked. Yes,<br />

naked. Bea and I were part of the transport. […] In the cattle car, a<br />

very pious woman remarked: Today is […] the saddest day of the<br />

year.”<br />

Actually Hilda said they got undressed and were disinfested. 33 Then<br />

“they took us to another place, gave us clothing, and that same<br />

morning we left in a passenger train – they put us in a passenger<br />

train, the 800 women – they gave us food, some bread to bring with<br />

us – and we left, we didn’t know where we were going, and there<br />

was the Wehrmacht – not the SS but soldiers of the Wehrmacht –<br />

who constituted our guard.”<br />

pp. 24-33). The GSU administration hired Deborah Lipstadt, who testified against him, but of<br />

course the amount she was paid could not be revealed, presumably for “ethical” reasons. After<br />

10 months of investigation Lipstadt’s charge of fraud in research was dismissed. The trial was<br />

never reported in any mainstream media.<br />

31<br />

www.holocaustdenier.com/2011/07/elie-wiesels-sister-apparently-doesnt-have-an-auschwitztattoo-either/<br />

32<br />

And the Sea is Never Full, p. 404.<br />

33<br />

Hilda Wiesel Interview, Part 2, 8/28/2010, p. 1.<br />

20

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