[Thies Christophersen was the second witness called by the defence.
He testified on March 7 and 8, 1988.]
Thies Christophersen confirmed that he was the same Thies Christophersen
referred to on page 17 of Did Six Million Really Die? and that what was
written in the booklet was correct (20- 4933).
Christophersen testified that as a member of the German army he was in
Auschwitz from January, 1944 to December, 1944 working at sub-camp Raisko
growing Kok Sagis, a type of dandelion which produced a white latex used
in the production of synthetic rubber. (20-4933, 4934, 4935)
As well as about two hundred women internees who lived at Raisko itself,
the work was done by women inmates from Birkenau, located about 2 km. away,
and men from the main camp of Auschwitz, located about 1 km. away. Christophersen
supervised their work. There were civilian employees as well (20-4937,
4938) including Russian agronomists. (20-4942) Many of the internees were
academics who spoke German. (20-4960) Workers at Raisko worked in a greenhouse,
a laboratory, a garden and the fields. (20-4944, 4945)
The internees at Raisko were accommodated like soldiers in barracks. (20-4945)
There were about 70 internees per barrack. (20-4967) There were bunk beds,
a closet for each internee, running hot water and showers. Internees changed
their laundry once a week and every second week changed their sheets and
linens.
In Birkenau, the accommodation was not as good. There were three bunks
on top of each other and internees did not each have a closet. (20-4945)
He could not say how many internees were in each barrack. (20-4967) Birkenau
was overcrowded and he felt sorry for the children of gypsies whom he saw
playing there. (21-5008, 5009)
The inmates worked eight hours a day and after work walked back to Birkenau
in lines of three. Four to six SS guards accompanied the women. They were
counted when they arrived. (20- 4939) The women comprised many nationalities,
including Poles, Russians, French, even Germans. (20-4939) Of the women
that came from Birkenau, he could not tell how many were Jewish, but thought
perhaps half. (20 4940) There were also Jewish internees at Raisko. (20-4968)
He got on well with the Jewish workers. (20-4963, 4964)
While there was fraternization between the staff and internees at Raisko,
which resulted in one marriage while he was there, Christophersen did not
think this was possible at Birkenau. He did not know why, but stated that
his superior at Raisko, Dr. Caesar, was a very friendly and humane boss.
Caesar was imprisoned by the Poles for two years after the war. (20-4969)
At Raisko, mail was delivered to the internees. Parcels were opened in
the presence of the person who received them. Some things, such as money,
drugs, chemicals or propaganda material, were not allowed to be received.
(20-4946)
Christophersen attended concerts in Auschwitz on Sundays where there was
a weekly concert held under the camp gate by internees who were professional
musicians. Anyone could listen to the concert who was walking around. (20-4960)
Mistreatment of internees was not tolerated and was punished severely but
it did, on occasion, happen. (20-4946) Christophersen himself saw an SS
man kick a prisoner and reported it. (20-4968) An order originating with
Commandant Hoess provided that the internees could talk to the commandant
and this order was posted. (20-4947) He never saw a prisoner die at Auschwitz-Birkenau,
nor did he believe the Jews were treated any differently from the rest
of the prisoners. He noted, however, that Jehovah's Witnesses were treated
particularly well and were not guarded. (20-4965) Internees who were sick
returned to their work after being away. (20-4966) Sports were played at
all three camps by the internees. (20-4968) Christophersen himself had
friendly relations with the internees (20-4938, 4965), and granted them
permission at times to pick berries or mushrooms or to swim in the Sola
River. (20 4945)
Christophersen was never under any prohibition not to discuss things at
Birkenau with anyone in civilian life. (20-4965) Although he lived 500
metres from the railroad to Auschwitz- Birkenau, he never noticed anything
with regard to the transports which struck him. (20-4964) His wife visited
him frequently in Auschwitz and that his mother also came. (20-4941)
Christophersen went to Birkenau perhaps twenty times in the entire time
he was at Auschwitz to get workers for Raisko or to fetch material from
Kanada, the storage place for internees' property. It was very difficult
to obtain any of this property and only pursuant to an authorization. (20-4945,
4946) Very often, he would obtain material such as tubes for radios from
the airplane detachment division, which stored parts of crashed airplanes.
(20-4948) On cross- examination, he agreed that in the first Zündel
trial in 1985, he testified that he had been in Birkenau about seven times.
He reiterated, however, that he went very frequently to the airplane disassembling
plant, which was next to Birkenau. (21-5003) He could go anywhere in the
camp, as he was wearing the uniform of an officer. During the times he
visited the camp he would be there about an hour. (20-4948)
Christophersen knew Birkenau had crematories and had seen them from the
outside. (20- 4947) But he never saw smoke or flames shooting out of the
chimneys nor did he ever smell the alleged stench of human bodies. (20-4948)
He did not know the number of crematories. (21-5005) He only heard about
the gas chamber allegation after the war. (20-4949)
He saw Red Cross vehicles at Raisko in September of 1944. He watched them
driving towards Birkenau, but had no contact with them. (20-4966)
Although he was never informed of anything in the nature of atrocities
to internees when he was at the camp, Christophersen testified that his
maid, a Polish woman, once told his mother that there were corpses being
burned at the camp. Christophersen called the maid and asked her about
the story, but she couldn't give him any details. He got on his bicycle
and toured around the entire camp and inspected every fire location but
found nothing. Christophersen stated that today he knew that there were
indeed corpses burned during the first while. The corpses had been buried
in the ground but because of the high water level, it had to be discontinued.
The corpses were dug up again and burned in the open. He stated there were
incredible stories told about this incident. (20-4949, 4950)
Christophersen testified that the stories of six metre deep pits where
corpses were buried were impossible because of the water level at Birkenau.
Although it varied, depending on the water level of the Vistula and Sola
Rivers, the water level ranged from one metre to two metres. (20-4951)
There was a typhoid epidemic at Auschwitz-Birkenau that he was aware of.
His superior's wife died from typhus. (20-4949)
Horses were used almost exclusively in Raisko because of the scarcity of
gasoline. (20- 4943)
Auschwitz was bombed once while he was still there, in perhaps September,
1944. (20- 4964
After the war, Christophersen was never questioned about his activities
in Auschwitz. He became a farmer in the area of Angeln. (20-4973, 4974)
He later wrote a book on his experiences, Die Auschwitz-Lüge (The
Auschwitz Lie.) Prior to publishing the book in 1973, he talked to his
superiors about it, including Dr. Caesar. They thought it was still too
early and were afraid of repressions. The book was later published in Spanish,
French, Dutch, Danish, Portuguese, English and German. ((20-4950, 4951,
4961, 4970, 4975)
Zündel visited Christophersen twice to speak with him of his experiences.
(20-4961, 4979) On a visit by Zündel to Christophersen in around 1973,
after the publication of the book, Zündel requested the copyright.
Christophersen testified he gave the copyright to everybody, that he had
made it publicly available. (20-4935, 4936)
Zündel changed the title of the English language edition of the book
to Auschwitz: Truth or Lie. Christophersen did not add the parts of the
book dealing with Rudolf Hess, appeals for donations, or advertisements
for the book U.F.O's: Nazi Secret Weapon?. Christophersen thought Zündel
published the book in 1973, but he didn't know for sure. (20-4976, 4980;
Auschwitz: Truth or Lie entered as Exhibit 94, 20-4936) Other people had
also published English language editions of Christophersen's book, although
he did not think the Institute for Historical Review had ever done so.
(20-4978)
The book was subsequently prohibited in Germany and Christophersen was
convicted of defaming the German Federal Republic. (20-4952, 4953) The
charge provided that the denial of mass gassings was an insult to survivors.
(20-4971) He was 67 years of age when he served one year of a one and a
half year sentence in 1985. (20-4952, 4953) Notwithstanding its prohibition,
the book continued to come into West Germany from Switzerland and Denmark
and was available in bookstores. (20-4970) Because of a revision to the
penal code in Germany, however, it was no longer possible for Christophersen
to tell of his experiences. (20-4972) Christophersen had lived in Denmark
for the past one and a half years because there were no prohibitions there
against books. (20-4973, 4974)
Asked if he was part of a conspiracy to rehabilitate Adolf Hitler and re-establish
National Socialism, Christophersen stated that he had absolutely no political
ambitions, but he definitely wanted to express his opinion for persecutees
and repressed people and minorities. In his opinion, today the Jews were
no longer persecuted, but Ernst Zündel was. (20-4963)
He believed the first time he spoke to Zündel was in 1973. (20-4981)
He visited Zündel in 1979 and at that time spoke to some people Zündel
had invited about his experiences in Auschwitz. (20-4980, 5068) He thought
it was possible that in 1973 Zündel found the gas chamber story to
be unbelievable and that was why he wanted to publish Christophersen's
book. He pointed out, however, that the book did not deal with gas chambers
as such, but was a counter- representation to the atrocity stories. (20-4981)
The only part which dealt with the gas chambers was a foreword written
by Manfred Roeder. (20-4982)
Christophersen, asked if he denied there were gas chambers at Auschwitz,
replied that he had not found anybody who could give him details about
the gas chambers although he had made efforts to do so. (20-4982) He had
read the book by Kogon, Langbein and Rückerl, Nationalsozialistische
Massentötungen durch Giftgas (National Socialist Mass Killings Through
the Use of Poisonous Gas), a book which he saw as an attempt to bring many
different statements or opinions into one line. (21-5091) He knew Kogon
was a professor, and that Langbein had been interned at Auschwitz and spent
his time there working in an office. Rückerl was the head of an institute
in Germany. (21-5092)
Christophersen had also distributed Did Six Million Really Die?. He saw
the booklet as a counter-representation. On the one hand, he said, "we
hear all these terrible lies, soap and lamp shades from human beings and
those burnings in ditches," and on the other hand, there was the Harwood
publication which, in his opinion, was more credible. (20-4962, 4963)
On cross-examination, Crown counsel pointed out that Did Six Million Really
Die? quoted Christophersen as having written that:
€ "...In the vicinity of the main camp (Auschwitz I) was a large farrier's
works, from which the smell of molten iron was naturally not pleasant."
Christophersen agreed this was incorrect. What he had written was that
it was not molten iron that created the stench, but the horn of the horses'
feet at a smithy's work.
The Crown quoted from page 5 Auschwitz: Truth or Lie?:
The leading Austrian Social Democrat, Dr. Benedikt Kautsky - himself a
Jew - who spent the years from 1938 to 1945 in concentration camps, three
of these in Auschwitz, said: "I was in the big concentration camps
in Germany. I must truthfully state that in no camp have I ever seen anything
that might have resembled gas chambers."
Christophersen agreed that the same quote appeared in Did Six Million Really
Die?. (21- 5041) The Crown showed Christophersen the 1948 edition of the
Kautsky book (it was the 1946 edition which was quoted in Did Six Million
Really Die?), and read him the following quotation:
I would like to include here a short description of the gas chambers which
I have, it is true, not seen myself, but which was described by me by so
many different parties in a credible fashion that I am not afraid to render
the description here.1
Christophersen stated he obtained the quote from a source known to him;
he had tried very hard to get the Kautsky book but could not find it anywhere.
Accused of printing a quote from a book he had never read, Christophersen
replied that he had done so frequently, even quotes from the Bible. He
agreed, that, "naturally," he had quoted it because it supported
his position. (21-5045) Asked if he quoted half of the quote because the
whole quote didn't support his position, Christophersen stated he did not
know the other half. (21-5046)
Christophersen wrote the synopsis of the Red Cross Report which appeared
on page 11 of his book. He received the information from a reliable source,
Dr. Stäglich, but noticed after publication that the synopsis contained
a small mistake. (21-5043, 5044, 5045) He agreed that it was very important
to check sources before publication but pointed out that he had corrected
it in later editions of his book. He had also published correspondence
between Dr. Stäglich and the Red Cross. (21-5051)
Christophersen agreed that in his synopsis he stated that the Red Cross
delegate made a "careful inspection" and that nowhere in the
report of the delegate did it say a "careful inspection" was
made. In Christophersen's opinion, the delegate's claim that he was only
at the door of the commandant was not true; the delegation had been at
Raisko and also in Birkenau. (21-5052 to 5059) He himself had seen the
vehicles at Raisko and watched them drive in the direction of Birkenau.
He had heard later in the officer's mess that they also visited that camp.
(21-5082, 5083) The delegate did not have the courage to say the truth;
perhaps he expected repressions and punishments. (21-5052 to 5059) Christophersen
agreed that in the previous Zündel trial in 1985 he answered "no"
when asked if he knew where the Red Cross went after they left Raisko.
He saw no contradiction between the answers. (21-5083, 5084)
Christophersen agreed that on page 4 of his book he had written:
In 1938 there were supposed to be 15,688,259 Jews in the world. This figure
is derived from the "World Almanac" of the American Jewish Committee.
In 1948, according to an article in the New York Times by W. Baldwin, there
were supposed to be 18,700,000 Jews in the world. Baldwin is a well-known
population expert, entirely neutral, and even the most far-fetched imagination
could not describe him as "anti-semitic."
Christophersen obtained this information from a Mr. Einar Aberg in Sweden,
who informed Christophersen that he had published it for several years
without the information being contested. On the basis of that, Christophersen
believed he could do the same thing; that as a journalist, that was sufficient.
Christophersen pointed out that the Crown had not read the sentence in
the book which clearly stated that the information came from Aberg. (21-5061
to 5063) Christophersen had checked the figures in an encyclopedia. He
agreed that the figures used were the same ones used in Did Six Million
Really Die?. (21-5064)
Christophersen agreed that on page 4 of his book he had written:
The losses of the Jewish people during WW II, certainly regrettable, were
not 6 million, but approximately 200,000, according to facts compiled by
the UNO, which body surely has no reason to grant special protection to
any one nation in particular.
This paragraph, said Christophersen, referred to a United Nations report
he had received about 15 years before. He tried to have the figure confirmed
by letter but received no reply. He took no answer as an answer. (21-5065)
Christophersen agreed his book contained the following statement:
A book published in Brazil contains the following statement: "...These
facts were used by the Canadian Anti-Defamation Committee of Christian
Laymen in ascertaining that 200,000 Jews died in the twelve years of Hitler's
rule (1933-45), regardless of how they died, i.e. whether they were killed,
sentenced and shot as guerillas or saboteurs, or in air raids on camps,
or through other circumstances due to war, including sickness and old age."
Christophersen testified this quote came from a book by Juan Maler in Brazil.
He did not know what the Canadian Anti-Defamation Committee of Christian
Laymen was, and would have to ask Mr. Maler. He agreed he published a statement
that he read in a book without checking it. (21-5067)
The Crown read the following passage from Christophersen's book at page
19:
The Jews were intelligent and so far as I got to know them in Auschwitz,
quite nice too. In the summer my mother came for a visit and stayed several
days. Of course, a fat friendship developed between her and Olga. One evening
my mother asked about the crematorium where corpses were supposed to be
burned. I knew nothing about this, so I asked Olga. She could not tell
me anything definite either. She did intimate, however, that around Bielitz
there always was what seemed to be a reflection against the sky, as if
from a fire.
So I went in the direction of Bielitz and there found a mining camp in
which some inmates also worked. I travelled around the entire camp and
examined all fire grates and all smoke stacks, but found nothing. I asked
my colleagues; the answer... a shrug of the shoulder and "don't pay
any attention to those rumors."
Pearson suggested to Christophersen that he never went to Birkenau. Christophersen
denied this, stating that this edition was written differently from his
original German edition. (21- 5105, 5106) On re-examination, he testified
that where the excerpt spoke of "the whole camp," he was speaking
of the entire camp complex, Auschwitz I with the surrounding plants, Birkenau,
the aircraft disassembly plant, and an industrial plant. (re-ex., 21-5111,
5112)
Christophersen preferred the word "internees" rather than "prisoners"
to describe the inmates of the camps. There was a difference: "prisoners"
were jailed in a cell while the "internees" could move around
freely and were able to work. (21-5085) The internees were paid in something
like camp money. (21-5085)
When he went to Birkenau to get workers, Christophersen would ask who wanted
to do the work. Mainly Polish people would volunteer for agricultural labour
because they wanted to do that type of work. Asked if these people were
used as slave labour, Christophersen pointed out that during the war, everybody
had to work, to do their duty and in that way all were slaves. (21-5087)
The Jewish internees wore a yellow star. Other triangles worn by the internees
included red for political prisoners, pink for homosexuals and violet for
the Bible Researchers (Jehovah's Witnesses). (21-5089)
Asked if race was important to the Nazi regime, Christophersen stated that
it was important not just for Adolf Hitler but also for Israel since the
latter country, upon its establishment, took over the Nuremberg race laws.
(21-5088) The Jews were internees in Germany, just as Germans were internees
in Canada. International Jewry had declared war on Germany. It wasn't taken
very seriously at the time because no state of Israel existed, but when
the war grew hotter, the members of this enemy state, International Jewry,
were interned. Christophersen knew they were innocent people but believed
the internment was necessary. He could not say "justified" as
the whole war was not just. (21-5089, 5090)
Christophersen met Adolf Hitler twice. The first time, as a young man,
he had seen Hitler give a speech at Nuremberg and had thereafter gone to
have his lunch outside under an apple tree. Three vehicles which were passing
by came to a stop and out of one of the cars came Hitler. He and Christophersen
had a conversation about Christophersen's farm and the type of cattle and
pigs they were breeding. Christophersen was amazed at his knowledge of
agriculture. Hitler wrote down his address and invited him to his birthday
on the 20th of April. On this occasion, Christophersen met Hitler again.
A year later, in 1938, he again went to Hitler's birthday celebrations
to bring greetings from his area, Schleswig-Holstein. These meetings had
a substantial impact on Christophersen and he was emotional talking about
it. (21-5094) When Christophersen married, it was on the 20th of April.
(21 5107)
Christophersen agreed that he told his audience in New York in 1979 that
to him, Adolf Hitler had always been and still was the greatest person
whom history had brought forth in the last 2,000 years and not only for
the Germans. He saw Hitler as a saviour, not only for himself but also
for six million other unemployed Germans. Hitler performed wonders and
Germans loved him. The high point of Christophersen's life came in 1937
when he was able to hold a lengthy conversation with Hitler. (21-5107 to
5110)
On re-examination, Christophersen testified that sympathy for National
Socialism was not a justification for lying. His motives for testifying
were as follows: he had come to the conviction that the gas chamber stories
were a hoax, a swindle. He admitted he was not a scientist or a historian,
but he felt like the child in the fairy tale who pointed out that the emperor
had no clothes. Professor Hilberg collected everything that served his
thesis and Christophersen would collect and publish everything that served
his. Every criminal had a right to defend himself, and he wanted the same
right for his people who were represented as a criminal people. (21-5114,
5115)
Asked if he was so emotional about Hitler that he could not tell the truth,
Christophersen replied that people who had been very enthusiastic about
Hitler denied him from one day to the other. People were usually inclined
to applaud the victor. He didn't do that. He could not say Hosanna one
day for Adolf Hitler and crucify him the next. Those who lived through
the Hitler times and experienced the enthusiasm of those years would never,
if honest, forget those times. (21-5115) But he would not tell lies for
Adolf Hitler. (21-5116)
When visiting North America in 1979, Christophersen gave speeches in various
cities, Toronto, New York, Chicago, on a tour organized for him. He could
not remember who organized it. (21-5095) He believed Matt Koehl was an
organizer for something later, but he could also have helped organize the
1979 tour. (21-5096)
Christophersen was shown the newspaper White Power: The Revolutionary Voice
of National Socialism, April 1979 edition, and stated that he saw the name
"Matt Koehl," and assumed it was the same person, but pointed
out there was no photograph of the man. (21-5096) Christophersen had seen
the newspaper before. It was sent to him occasionally. (21-5098) He knew
the newspaper advertised his book; the advertisement in this particular
edition advertised the book as Auschwitz: Truth or Lie which Christophersen
agreed was the title under which Zündel published the book. (21-5099)
Christophersen did not think he asked for his book to be advertised there.
The newspaper didn't get the books from him, it must have gotten it from
either Mr. Deitz or Zündel. He could read enough English to make out
the titles of the advertisements and his name. (21-5112, 5113) Also advertised
in this edition were the books Six Million Lost and Found (formerly published
as Did Six Million Really Die?), Drama of the European Jews by Paul Rassinier,
The Hoax of the Twentieth Century by Prof. Arthur Butz, and Mein Kampf
by Adolf Hitler. Christophersen also identified the title Auschwitz: Truth
or Lie in the "Worldwide Bibliography of 'Holocaust' Revisionism"
published in the IHR Special Report on the Holocaust. (21-5100, 5101)
Christophersen pointed out that his books were being advertised and spoken
of positively in other media which were not National Socialist in viewpoint.
(21-5100) White Power filed as Exhibit 96;21-5104)
1 Not compared with original.