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Arthur R. Butz – The Hoax Of The Twentieth Century

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Chapter 7: <strong>The</strong> Final Solution<br />

and 2,400 Jews were taken to Palestine in it. <strong>The</strong> British met it on arrival but did<br />

not want complications with SHAEF, so they allowed the passengers to enter Palestine.<br />

Eisenhower later became President of the United States. 407<br />

As suggested above, the Jews who left the Soviet Union for Poland did not, for<br />

the most part, remain in that country very long. Supported by the Joint Distribution<br />

Committee and related Jewish organizations (contributions to which were<br />

tax-deductible in the U.S.), 408 the Jews moved on to Germany and, in some instances,<br />

Czechoslovakia, spurred on by Zionist propaganda of all sorts. <strong>The</strong>re was<br />

the talk, which we have noted, of pogroms, and there was also, no doubt, a widespread<br />

idea among the Jews that all were bound for the U.S. From Germany,<br />

many did indeed eventually depart for the U.S. But many others moved on to Italy,<br />

where there were also UNRRA camps for them, or to France, which earned a<br />

reputation at that time for marked friendliness to the Zionist cause. From Czechoslovakia<br />

the Jews moved on to Italy or to Vienna and from Vienna to ports in Italy,<br />

or Yugoslavia, or to Budapest, Belgrade, and points near Palestine. In all this<br />

hectic illegal movement there was, of course, no respect paid to such things as legitimate<br />

passports or identity papers. Greek identity papers were manufactured on<br />

a large scale, and many Jews posed as Greeks returning home from Poland. When<br />

the Greek government learned of this, they sent an official to investigate, but the<br />

official was an active Zionist himself and merely informed the Zionist Organization<br />

that he could cover up the past illegalities but that the “Greek” angle would<br />

have to be discarded. It had, however, served so well that in Czechoslovakia, border<br />

guards, who thought that they had learned from the large number of “Greeks”<br />

that they had processed what members of that nationality looked like, got suspicious<br />

and made arrests when real Greeks appeared. 409<br />

In the beginning of the mass movements, the Zionist Organization had found<br />

that the Jews were too undisciplined and demoralized to serve as members of an<br />

effective movement. <strong>The</strong>y therefore settled on the method of the propaganda of<br />

hatred to boost the fighting morale of the Jews in the various camps; they began<br />

“to instill into these Jews a deep dislike and hatred for the German and, indeed,<br />

for their entire non-Jewish environment, for the goyim around them.” In the winter<br />

of 1946, the Anglo-American investigation committee visited the Jewish<br />

camps in Germany and was “overwhelmed by this anti-goyism among the camp<br />

inmates, by the impossibility of maintaining any contact between the displaced<br />

Jews and the British and American peoples.” 410<br />

<strong>The</strong> U.S. occupation authorities in Germany were naturally very concerned<br />

about the fact that so many people, so tenuously classified as “refugees,” were<br />

pouring into their area of responsibility, but were reluctant to speak out too loudly<br />

or bluntly, for fear of the sort of abuse that had been heaped on Patton and Morgan.<br />

However, the constant increase in the “refugee” population was creating<br />

problems that could not be ignored. In June 1946, a group of U.S. editors and<br />

407<br />

408<br />

409<br />

410<br />

Kimche & Kimche, 101-103.<br />

Kimche & Kimche, 97-98.<br />

Kimche & Kimche, 85-88.<br />

Kimche & Kimche, 81-83.<br />

279

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