Post by 𝝥𝝰𝘇𝗴𝝻𝝸 on Jan 9, 2023 3:23:17 GMT
"Christophersen was born in Kiel. A private in the Wehrmacht, he was deployed as a Sonderführer "special leader" by the Waffen-SS during World War II, and was stationed during this time at the pest control facility Rajsko, located three kilometres (1.9 mi) from Auschwitz konzentrationslager. Christophersen insisted that, staying in the area, he would have been certain to identify mass killings and claimed that he never witnessed or made aware of any such incidents.
Since 1993 the book has been included on a list of materials that may not be distributed to young people, as ruled by Germany's Federal Department for Media Harmful to Young Persons, due to its Holocaust-denying content. The foreword by Manfred Roeder was characterised by that department as inflammatory anti-Semitic propaganda, which constitutes an infringement of Germany's Volksverhetzung law (incitement to hatred).
The book, "Auschwitz lie" (German Auschwitzlüge) was first published in German in 1973 under the title Die Auschwitz Luge. The first English edition appeared in 1974 under the title The Auschwitz Lie. In August 1979, it was published in a completely revised and supplemented new edition." link
You may read his book in the links below:
From the book
Since 1993 the book has been included on a list of materials that may not be distributed to young people, as ruled by Germany's Federal Department for Media Harmful to Young Persons, due to its Holocaust-denying content. The foreword by Manfred Roeder was characterised by that department as inflammatory anti-Semitic propaganda, which constitutes an infringement of Germany's Volksverhetzung law (incitement to hatred).
The book, "Auschwitz lie" (German Auschwitzlüge) was first published in German in 1973 under the title Die Auschwitz Luge. The first English edition appeared in 1974 under the title The Auschwitz Lie. In August 1979, it was published in a completely revised and supplemented new edition." link
You may read his book in the links below:
or
From the book
Richard Baer, the last commander at Auschwitz [from 1943)and therefore the most important witness of whom the Parisian weekly “Rivarol” reported that he could not be dissuaded from his insistence that during all the time he was in Auschwitz, he had never seen gas chambers nor had he known that any existed. "Commander Baer died suddenly on June 17th 1963 whilst being held under investigation although two weeks previous to this he had been given a clean bill of health.