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Photo
5: [1942, revisionist source]
Apprentices at the
workbench. Impossible to locate |
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Photo 6:
[1942, revisionist source]
Sport Fencing
Betriebssportgemeinschaft JG Auschwitz / Auschwitz enterprise youth
group [?] Sports association |
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PART FOUR
CHAPTER
2 |
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AUSCHWITZ ACCORDING TO
THE REVISIONISTS Photographic exhibition of the famous holiday camp
KL AUSCHWITZ |
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| Introduction to the revisionist
world |
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K L Auschwitz-Birkenau an extermination camp ? A
myth! The photographs on this and following sheets show that it was nothing of
the sort. Auschwitz was simply a labor camp like so many others. The prisoners,
Jews or otherwise, were above all employed on building the huge BUNA complex at
Monowitz [Photo 1 shows a small part of the whole]. If they fell ill,
they received appropriate treatment [Photo 2: a prisoner in striped
uniform being X-rayed]. Their refectory was extremely spacious [Photo
3], and on the stage at the end, different artists regularly came to
perform [Photo 4, a Ukranian women's choir]. Young people, instead of
living as parasites, were taught useful trades in model German enterprises
[Photo 5]. During their leisure time they participated in such things as
sports events [Photo 6: a fencing competition]. This, as proved by
photographic evidence, was the true face of Auschwitz."
The above
faithfully sums up the thoughts of many revisionists, and above all, I am sure
it does not betray the spirit. |
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Photo 1 is certainly a view of part of the
Buna complex. Prisoners worked there, with a supplementary ration of Buna
Suppe, half a liter to a liter of colored liquid served at midday. The
patient undergoing X-ray examination in Photo 2 is not a prisoner, but
is wearing ordinary pyjamas. If such an installation existed, it was reserved
for the SS and their families. The refectory and its musical evenings was not
for the ordinary prisoners, except those employed on cleaning or maintenance.
It was a refectory for SS troops. The prisoner apprentices on Photo 5
are too Aryan, too neat. with their straight partings and the lack of any
zebra suits to be true. Are these Jewish adolescents? Half of them
are of the blond so dear to the racial theorists of the Third Reich. As for the
fencing competition, the swastika on the flag and the badge worn by the fencer
on the right, the presence among the spectators of SS and SA officers, members
of the party in uniform and of policemen, show that this is a meeting for
Reichsdeutschen, exclusively for "sound" elements and no
others.
I do not know the precise origin of these photographs from
revisionist sources. They were certainly taken at Auschwttz during the year
indicated, but they cannot have anything to do with the Auschwitz concentration
camp and its prisoners, and still less Birkenau and its Krematorien.
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