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The curse of "Zylon-B"
Hitler did not
die after the battle for Berlin. He left Germany alive
Degussa-quarrel stops the construction of Holocaust-Memorial in Berlin
Rafael Seligman:
"I appeal to stop the building process of the holocaust memorial.""The entire common sense of the 'political correctness' is menda-cious. ... We are dealing with a demonstration of a forcibly im-posed political correctness of the curatorship and politicians. These people look at world's opinion. For them it is important what 'the' Americans say, 'the' Israelis and 'the' Jews."
Degussa supplies a chemical agent to the curatorship of the Holocaust-Memorial-Berlin (under construction) to protect the surface from graffiti scribbles. Under Hitler, Degussa was the parent company of Degesch that supplied Auschwitz and other camps with the pesticide "Zyklon-B". This historical fact prompted the committee of the Holocaust-Memorial to stop the building process until an new supplier would be found, since they do not wish the Memorial to be connected to the name "Degussa".
One gets the impression that the spirit of the diseased Adolf Hitler is working most effectively these days in Berlin. After all, the memorial is being built right above the former "Führer-Bunker". A fact that is fueling even more this disastrous symbolism. According to Jewish teaching, Amalek (arch enemy of the Jewish people) can only be considered defeated if he was physically destroyed and his memory totally wiped out.
Jewry has a problem. Hitler did not die after the battle for Berlin. He left Germany alive. Since Jewry was denied the necessary opportunity to destroy Amalek physically, the holocaust industry seems to be doomed to keeping Hitler's memory alive by relentless media condemnations. Moreover, Hitler's legacy and memory have evolved into a parallel culture, even world-wide: "'Mein Kampf' became a pop culture. Germany, whose NS-past means also history, economical factors, bestsellers, underground culture, identity, political reasoning and cult-believe, an even world-wide phenomenon, encounters interpretation problems of its past." [Die Welt, Aug. 18, 1999, p. 10]
Many might now object and claim that Hitler killed himself together with Eva Braun on April 30, 1945 and ordered the bodies to be burnt. That is a fairytale as so many other fairytales have been told about Adolf Hitler, according to the BBC. On May 22, 2003 the BBC, Channel 4, broadcasted a documentary as part of its series "Secret History" at 9 p.m. concerning the whereabouts of Adolf Hitler after 1945. The film showed eye-witnesses who saw Hitler and his entourage in a hotel complex in southern Argentina, near the South Pole. Some even made contact with him. The documentary quotes the then US-President Eisenhower, stating: , "We have been unable to unearth one tangible piece of evidence of Hitler’s death. Many people believe that Hitler escaped from Berlin. For what it’s worth, so do I." The BBC describes the documentary as follows: "This intriguing Secret History follows the FBI’s subsequent 11-year hunt for the man."
The holocaust story rests on the foundation of the "Zyklon-B" gassings. Strangely enough, of all countries it is Germany that is cracking this very foundation. Fritjof Meyer is a leading editor of Germany's renowned political magazine "Der Spiegel". With a profound article in the scientific magazine "Eastern Europe" (no. 5/2003) Meyer attacked, together with the publisher, Mrs. Rita Süßmuth, ex-Parliament-President of Germany, the holocaust gassings at Auschwitz. That only complicates the cause for the Holocaust-Memorial in Berlin. In all sincerity Mr. Meyer wrote that the mass gassings of the Jews did not take place in Auschwitz-Birkenau but in two unknown farm houses nearby: "The actual genocide probably took place in the two farm houses, adopted to these needs, not in Birkenau."
There are no forensic traces of these so-called farm houses today, despite Meyer's reference to residues of a foundation. Anyway, these sites are not important since the Great Auschwitz-Trial of 1963-65 in Frankfurt established that the mass gassings took place at Krema II in Birkenau. The political correct holocaust history claims the same. Thus, Fritjof Meyer has "denied" the political correct holocaust version. He should therefore be convicted according to the German holocaust-denial-law. However, the prosecution services in Berlin declared, he did not infringe the German "denial-law".
Furthermore, Gitta Sereny, a foremost British Jewish writer said: "Auschwitz was not a death camp". [Times, Aug. 29, 2001]
It is obvious that under such conditions no confident mood for the Holocaust-Memorial could evolve. The more since German Chancellor, Gerhard Schröder, insinuated "that the relentless holocaust remembrance gets a on his wick." [Die Welt, Aug. 17, 1999, p. 3]
Besides that, Germany has reduced itself into a multicultural society which will cause far graver problems than potential graffiti spraying Neonazis could ever achieve. The Islamic world, which is over proportionally represented in Germany's multicultural society and is growing daily, does not believe the holocaust story. The Israeli Foreign Secretary, Siwan Shalom, whaled bitterly about this fact when visiting Berlin in October 2003: "We are confronted with a phenomenon in the Arabic-Muslim world that spreads more and more like wildfire. That anti-Semitism denies not only resolutely the holocaust, but agitates every day against the Jewish people." [Die Welt, Oct. 23, 2003, p. 4]
However, even 50 percent of the Germans don't believe the holocaust story anymore as foremost Jewish author and writer Henryk M. Broder reports: "One part 'believes' or 'claims', the holocaust happened, the other part 'believes' or 'claims' the opposite." [Potsdamer Neueste Nachrichten, Aug. 3, 2001]
Therefore it is more than understandable, that the Germans, more yet the Muslims in Germany, reject the Holocaust-Memorial in Berlin. Prominent Jewish Journalist and author, Rafael Seligman, admits that the Memorial is enforced on the German people by the politically correct curatorship and politicians, who want to be liked by the Jews and Israel. Seligman calls these politically correct clique "mendacious". The writer and other leading spirits of the Jewish community have obviously analysed the situation, as described above, and demand now as a consequence, the cessation of the entire construction for good. Seligman stated:
"The entire common sense of the 'political correctness' is mendacious. ... I am convinced, the works on the Holocaust-Memorial should be stopped, the project should be terminated. ... I therefore appeal, to stop the building process. The vast majority of the Berlin population does not support the Memorial. We are dealing with a demonstration of a forcibly imposed political correctness of the curatorship and politicians. These people look at world's opinion. For them it is important what 'the' Americans say, 'the' Israelis and 'the' Jews. ... But you cannot, against the clear will of the majority, enforce a Memorial on the people. Such an endeveour can only be counter-productive." [Die Welt, Oct. 30, 2003, p. 27]