To come back to an earlier illustration, let's say there are two families
who argue. Let's say that someone claims he overheard that so-and-so has
said that he would like to "kill" somebody. Does this "prove"
that he actually went out and killed this opponent? Would an investigation
not be in order first?
One might start an investigation first by 1) checking if anyone is missing,
2) if so, where the body might be, 3) what the cause of death was, given
that there is a body, and 4) the hypothesized murder weapon.
One might then proceed to question the alleged "killer" 5) for
an alibi, 6) test the alibi, 7) check dates, places, orders, etc.
In other words, check up on verbal claims!
What Nizkor is doing, instead, is to rely on hearsay - the weakest kind
of evidence there is. Worse yet, Nizkor is confusing two entirely separate
issues that have nothing to do with each other.
One is: Did Adolf Hitler order genocide of people based on race? The second
is: Were orders given for mass executions during the war for reasons other
than race?
The answer to the first question is a simple and straightforward "No."
No order for the extermination of the Jews written or authorized by Adolf
Hitler has ever been discovered.
Consider these sources, as summarized by CODOH
in a paper called The Missing Hitler "Orders":
- "There does not exist, then, anything like a written order signed by [Hitler] for the extermination of the Jews in Europe." Colin Cross, Adolf Hitler, (Milan, 1977), p.313.
- "Despite the great harvest of Nazi documents captured by the Allies at the end of the war, it is precisely the documents concerning the process of the formation of the idea of the final solution of the Jewish question that are missing, to the point that up until the present it is difficult to say how, when, and exactly by whom the order to exterminate the Jews was given." Lilliano Picciotto Fargion, La congiura del silenzio (The Conspiracy of Silence), La Rassegna mensile d'Israel, May-August 1984, p.226.
- "For in the table talk, the speeches, the documents or the recollections of participants from all those years not a single concrete reference of [Hitler's] to the practice of annihilation has come down to us. No one can say how Hitler reacted to the reports of the Einsatzgruppen, whether he asked for or saw films or photos of their work, and whether he intervened with suggestions, praise, or blame. When we consider that he ordinarily transformed everything that preoccupied him into rampant speechmaking, that he never concealed his radicalism, his vulgarity, his readiness to go to extremes, this silence about the central concern of his life- involving, as it did in his mind, the salvation of the world - seems all the stranger." Joachim C. Fest, Hitler (New York: Vintage Books, 1975), p.681.
- "Insofar as no one has yet discovered a written trace of this order [to liquidate the Jews under German control] in the sources which have been exploited up to the present, and insofar as it seems unlikely, it is incumbent on the historian to date it as precisely as possible by appealing to interpretation. Since the methods and the hypotheses on this subject are very numerous, we find ourselves confronted with very diverse opinions." Saul Friedländer, L'Allemagne nazie et le genocide juif, Gallimard, Le Seuil, 1985, pp. 177-178.
- "For the want of hard evidence -- and in 1977 I offered, around the world, a thousand pounds to any person who could produce even one wartime document showing explicitly that Hitler knew, for example, of Auschwitz -- my critics resorted to arguments ranging from the subtle to the sledgehammer (in one instance, literally). They postulated the existence of Fuehrer orders without the slightest written evidence of their existence. ...Of explicit, written, wartime evidence, the kind of evidence that could hang a man, they have produced not one line." David Irving, Hitler's War (London: Focal Point, 1991), pp.19-20.
- "To the present day a written order by Hitler regarding the destruction of the European Jewish community has not been found, and, in all probability, this order was never given." Walter Laqueur, "Was niemand wissen wollte: Die Unterdrückung der Nachrichten über Hitlers Endlösung" (What Nobody Wanted to Know: The Suppression of News About Hitler's "Final Solution"), (Berlin-Vienna, 1981), p.190.
- " The New York Times' ... editorial (December 2, 1942) claimed that 'Of Germany's 200,000 Jews in 1939 all but 40,000 have been deported or have perished,' while going on to assert that 'according to evidence in the hands of the [U.S.] State Department, an order of Adolf Hitler demanding the extermination of all Jews in all territories controlled by Germany' was known to exist. Researchers nearly 40 years later were still searching for that order, or information leading to anyone who might have ever seen it at any time." James J. Martin, The Man who invented 'Genocide': The Public Career and Consequences of Raphael Lemkin (Torrance: Institute for Historical Review, 1984), p.40.
- "No written document containing or reporting an explicit command to exterminate the Jews has come to light thus far. This does not of course mean that such direct evidence will not appear in the future. In the meantime, the presumption must be that the order or informal injunction to mass-murder Jews was transmitted orally." Arno J. Mayer, Why did the Heavens not Darken?: The 'Final Solution' in History (New York: Pantheon Books, 1990), pp.235-36.
- "The process by which total extermination replaced resettlement in Madagascar or 'the East' as the so-called final solution of the Jewish question remains unclear. No written order by Hitler for the extermination of the Jews has been discovered and the evidence of an oral order is only indirect. The chronology of the development of the extermination programme is also confused." J. Noakes and G. Pridham, eds., Nazism: A History in Documents and Eyewitness accounts 1919-1945 - Vol. 2, (New York: Schocken Books, 1988), p.1136.
- "The archives torn from the bowels of the Third Reich, the depositions and accounts of its chiefs permit us to reconstruct in their least detail the birth and the development of its plans for aggression, its military campaigns, and the whole range of processes by which the Nazis intended to reshape the world to their pattern. Only the campaign to exterminate the Jews, as concerns its completion, as well as in many other essential aspects, remains steeped in fog. Psychological inferences and considerations, third- or fourth-hand accounts, allow us to reconstruct the developments with a considerable verisimilitude. Certain details, nevertheless, will remain unknown forever. As concerns the concept proper of the plan for total extermination, the three or four principal actors are dead. No document remains, and has perhaps never existed." Leon Poliakov, Breviaire de la haine (Breviary of Hate) , Paris, 1979, p. 134.
- "What became known in high Nazi circles as the Fuehrer Order on the Final Solution apparently was never committed to paper -- at least no copy of it has yet been unearthed in the captured Nazi documents. " William Shirer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich (New York: Fawcett Crest, 1960), p.1256.
- "One cannot fix the exact moment when Hitler gave the order- without doubt never drawn up in writing - to exterminate the Jews." Christian Zentner, Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf. An edition with commentary by Christian Zentner, Munich, 1974, p. 168.
So, then. What does that mean? It means there is NO EVIDENCE. It means
that someone was mistaken to claim there was a Hitler Order that led to
the Final Solution.
That someone is one Dr. Raul Hilberg, commonly known as the Holocaust Pope.
Hilberg had made such a claim in a tome he published in the very early
1960s. (The Destruction of the European Jews, Quadrangle, 1961) It was
an irresponsible claim. That claim was demolished once and for all in the
First (1985) and Second (1988) Great Holocaust
Trial of Ernst Zündel in Toronto, Canada. It died not with a bang
but with a whimper.
The demise of that claim, chronologically, is as follows: [Click
here for most of Hilbergs Testimony]
In summary, the "Final Solution" claim has now been put to
rest. For details and nuances, some of them quite hilarious, read what
was read in 1988 to the jury as Ernst Zundel and his defense team wound
themselves through the Second Great Holocaust Trial.
Why was it read? Because the Honorable Raul Hilberg did not choose to show
his face, although he was asked by the Crown Prosecutor to re-appear as
a witness. (He would have been paid $150 an hour, as Browning was paid
who made more than $20,000 out of his "guest appearance" at the
Zundel Trial after Hilberg bowed out, for reasons best known to himself.
)
Professor Hilberg wrote as his excuse:
"Were I to be in the witness box for a second time, the defense would be asking not merely the relevant and irrelevant questions put to me during the first trial, but it would also make every attempt to entrap me by pointing to any seeming contradiction, however trivial the subject may be, between my earlier testimony and and an answer that I might give in 1988."
The demolition of the claim of the "Final Solution" order
is hardly a trivial matter. It is central to the whole issue of the Holocaust.
For details, read the "Hilberg"
Chapter in Barbara Kulaszka's book, mentioned throughout this rebuttal!
====
Now to the second question: Did mass executions occur, some of which
might have been on highest orders?
An honest answer must be: Yes. These things are known to have taken place
during World War II. They happen during war. See Bosnia today. Check on
the American conduct in Viet Nam. Check Israeli executions of Egyptian
prisoners in the 1972 War.
Check any war, and you will find that executions for reprisal reasons happen.
These executions during World War II had to do with controlling a guerilla
war that was being fought behind the front, both in the East and
West, but especially in Soviet Russia. More than 700,000 German soldiers
were killed by "partisans" or guerillas in the East alone - in
other words, plain terrorists.
As has been previously pointed out, these "commissars", most
of them Marxist Jews, operated in the back of the desperately fighting
German forces. No serious Revisionist has challenged the Einsatzgruppen
role in war-related executions in the East.
We quote here from "Manstein: His Campaign and His Trial" by
R. T. Paget:
"At the very onset of the Russian war Hitler issued a highly secret order to the effect that the political commissars employed by the Russians to keep their soldiers at the right pitch of communist frenzy were upon capture to be summarily executed. What were these commissars? The prosecution said that they were part of the Soviet Armed Forces. They did not say that they were soldiers, and indeed of course they were not. They were in fact part of an organization quite unknown in any other nation, although it was one not by any means new to the Russians themselves." (P. 94)
In other words, there existed a largely Jewish underground terrorist
system. And given that, one should define what counts as "evidence"
and carefully analyze and examine each claim. The judicial expert literature
doesn't agree completely that eyewitness accounts or confessions should
count as evidence at all. Some expert authors state that there is only
circumstantial evidence (cp. e.g. R. Bender, S. Räder, A. Nack, "Tatsachenfeststellung
vor Gericht", 2 Bände, Beck, München 1981, Band 1, S. 173;
see also: M. Köhler, in: Ernst Gauss (ed.) "Grundlagen zur Zeitgeschichte",
Grabert, Tübingen 1994).
The weak "witness-evidences" Nizkor quotes as "proofs"
for the mass extermination of Jews - simply because they were Jews - are
flimsy in the extreme. The so-called "Einsatzgruppenberichte"
are absolutely not reliable.
Here is just one example, again quoted from "Manstein: His Campaigns
and his Trial", page 170:
"Single companies of about 100 with about 8 vehicles were reporting the killing of up to 10,000 and 12,000 Jews in two or three days. They could not have got more than about 20 or 30 Jews who, be it remembered, thought they were being resettled and had their traps with them, into a single truck. Loading, traveling at least 10 kilometers, unloading and returning trucks would have taken nearer two hours than one. The Russian winter day is short, and there is no traveling by night. Killing 10,000 Jew would have taken at least three weeks . . .
By a series of cross checks we were able to establish that the execution of the Jews in Simferopol had taken place on a single day, 16th November. . . The place of execution was 15 kilometres from the town. The numbers involved could not have been more than 300.
These 300 were probably not exclusively Jews, but a miscellaneous collection of people who were being held on suspicion of resistance activity. The Simferopol incident received a good deal of publicity because it was spoken of (in the Manstein trial) by only live witness, an Austrian corporal called Gaffa who said that he heard anti-Jewish activities mentioned in an engineers' mess. . . "
So here you have a claim of 10,000 to 12,000 Jews "executed",
based on a comment heard in passing!
Most historians and experts would agree that it is necessary to find more
reliable evidences than mere accounts or "confessions" frequently
tortured out of prisoners, as proven in the case of Auschwitz Kommandant
Hoess in the book "Legions of Death" by Rupert Butler.. Documents
and physical forensic proofs are in fact the only kind of real "hard"
evidence there is.
Instead, let's look at some Nizkor examples:
October 1, 1996