Ernst Zundel has died

tay

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May 20, 2012
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Born in Germany in 1939, Zundel immigrated to Canada in 1958 and for decades promoted Nazi propaganda through pamphlets and a website devoted to denying the Holocaust.

While he was living in Toronto and Montreal, Canadian officials twice rejected Zundel’s attempts to obtain Canadian citizenship, and he moved to Pigeon Forge, Tennessee. He was deported to Canada from the U.S. in 2003 for alleged immigration violations.

The literature he published was twice ruled as hateful and in 2005, Zundel was declared a national security threat by a Federal Court judge, clearing the way for his deportation to Germany that year.

In February 2007, Zundel was convicted in Germany for 14 counts of inciting hatred for years of anti-Semitic activities, including contributing to a website devoted to denying the Holocaust.

He spent an additional years behind bars on the German warrant after having been deported from the United States for alleged immigration violations.

He was released in 2010.

Zundel’s supporters were known to argue that he was exercising his right to free speech.

Supporters outside the prison in Mannheim called Zundel “a brave man” and “a victim of justice,” while some maintained there still was no evidence that anyone was gassed to death at Nazi concentration camps during the Second World War.

In March, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s administrative appeals office, denied an application of E.C.Z., whose initials and supporting details led the Washington Post to conclude it was Zundel.

Zundel had applied for an immigrant visa to move to the United States with his wife of 16 years, a U.S. citizen. But he was classified as inadmissible because he has been convicted of foreign crimes for which the sentence was five years or more.

His controversial works continued to be felt even after his deportation. In March, Indigo Books & Music pulled two books from its online inventory that praise Hitler and question the Holocaust.

One of the books, The Hitler We Loved and Why, was co-written by Zundel under the pseudonym Christof Friedrich.

https://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2017/08/06/holocaust-denier-ernst-zundel-dies-in-germany.html
 

Colpy

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Nov 5, 2005
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Zundel was also a candidate for leadership of the Liberal Party of Canada in 1968.
That is (obviously) not significant, nor any reflection on the Liberal Party, but it is a fun fact to toss at Liberals.
In the competition between the Nazi and the Commie, the Commie won. :)
 

Danbones

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Sep 23, 2015
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What was it the Chief Justice of the Federal Court of Appeal Pierre Blais said:
Oh yeah: "the truth is NO defense"

I guess that ranks right up there with arms sales are more important then lives...
 

Walter

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 28, 2007
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What was it the Chief Justice of the Federal Court of Appeal Pierre Blais said:
Oh yeah: "the truth is NO defense"

I guess that ranks right up there with arms sales are more important then lives...
Than, not then. Use then for chronological order and than for a comparison.
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
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Born in Germany in 1939, Zundel immigrated to Canada in 1958 and for decades promoted Nazi propaganda through pamphlets and a website devoted to denying the Holocaust.

While he was living in Toronto and Montreal, Canadian officials twice rejected Zundel’s attempts to obtain Canadian citizenship, and he moved to Pigeon Forge, Tennessee. He was deported to Canada from the U.S. in 2003 for alleged immigration violations.

The literature he published was twice ruled as hateful and in 2005, Zundel was declared a national security threat by a Federal Court judge, clearing the way for his deportation to Germany that year.

In February 2007, Zundel was convicted in Germany for 14 counts of inciting hatred for years of anti-Semitic activities, including contributing to a website devoted to denying the Holocaust.

He spent an additional years behind bars on the German warrant after having been deported from the United States for alleged immigration violations.

He was released in 2010.

Zundel’s supporters were known to argue that he was exercising his right to free speech.

Supporters outside the prison in Mannheim called Zundel “a brave man” and “a victim of justice,” while some maintained there still was no evidence that anyone was gassed to death at Nazi concentration camps during the Second World War.

In March, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s administrative appeals office, denied an application of E.C.Z., whose initials and supporting details led the Washington Post to conclude it was Zundel.

Zundel had applied for an immigrant visa to move to the United States with his wife of 16 years, a U.S. citizen. But he was classified as inadmissible because he has been convicted of foreign crimes for which the sentence was five years or more.

His controversial works continued to be felt even after his deportation. In March, Indigo Books & Music pulled two books from its online inventory that praise Hitler and question the Holocaust.

One of the books, The Hitler We Loved and Why, was co-written by Zundel under the pseudonym Christof Friedrich.

https://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2017/08/06/holocaust-denier-ernst-zundel-dies-in-germany.html

Making the world a better place.
 

Bar Sinister

Executive Branch Member
Jan 17, 2010
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Zundel was also a candidate for leadership of the Liberal Party of Canada in 1968.
That is (obviously) not significant, nor any reflection on the Liberal Party, but it is a fun fact to toss at Liberals.
In the competition between the Nazi and the Commie, the Commie won. :)

Possibly Zundel was astute enough to realize that the PCs already had their full quota of Nazis.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
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Ernst Zundel will not be missed
By Joe Warmington, Toronto Sun
First posted: Monday, August 07, 2017 11:09 AM EDT | Updated: Monday, August 07, 2017 11:14 AM EDT
He spent a quarter of a century battling Ernst Zundel, but Bernie Farber could not bring himself to do the same when it came to commenting on the death of the infamous Holocaust denier.
“Jewish tradition demands that we do not defame the dead,” said Farber, who worked with the Canadian Jewish Congress and fought Zundel’s campaign of Holocaust denial.
Farber chose to keep it civil, on the high road and on the facts.
“Ernst Zundel denied the genocide of six million Jewish men, women and children,” said Farber. “He brought terrible anguish to those few who survived the evil of the Shoah.”
And despite being jailed, deported and having his house firebombed, Zundel was still very much doing that until his death Saturday age 78.
His demise is the end of almost 50 years of public Holocaust denial and anti-Semitism.
“You have to watch the Jewish people because they are tricky,” he told me in 1995 after dropping off an unmarked package to Toronto Police’s 51 Division that had originally been delivered to his home. It turned out to be an explosive filled with nails that had to be detonated by the bomb squad.
He issued a statement at the time saying, “I think it is about time for those in authority to take their blinders off and overcome their own prejudices” and “investigate leftist and Jewish violence as diligently as they pursue people of the right, before someone gets seriously hurt or killed.”
It was never proven who sent the bomb.
It was not Zundel’s first experience with such a delivery. His home and office at 206 Carlton St. in Toronto, nicknamed the “Nazi Bunker,” was a fortress and equipped with iron bars on windows and surveillance cameras after a firebomb caused $75,000 in damage.
Despite arrests, court cases that went to the Supreme Court of Canada, and retaliation against him, Zundel would not stop printing his pamphlets of hate and propaganda, and even wrote a book called ‘The Hitler We Love and Why’.
“There are legitimate and constitutionally protected other viewpoints on political and historical matters than the Anglo-Jewish drivel served up by the self-serving bunch from the media,” Zundel once said in a news release.
“The Zundel trial was a landmark case in the fight against hate speech in Canada, one in which B’nai Brith was instrumental in highlighting the dangers of Holocaust denial,” said Amanda Hohmann, national director of B’nai Brith’s League for Human Rights.
“There is only one reason to engage in such rhetoric, and that is to create a false narrative of Jewish power and manipulation motivated by financial or material benefit for the Jewish people. It relies on conspiracy theories targeting world Jewry and can have no motivation other than anti-Semitism. That is the legacy that Ernst Zundel has left for the world.”
And despite being illegal to do so in Germany, Zundel’s web page still pushes the non-genocide narrative.
“Adolf Hitler never gave an order to eradicate the Jews,” it states. “There were no homicidal gas chambers in any German concentration camps set up specifically to kill human beings. Not nearly as many Jews died or were killed as a result of German policies as is now widely and ever more viciously claimed.”
Of course, testimonials from survivors and disturbing evidence presented at trials at Nuremberg show the opposite.
That Zundel was still spreading these views very much upset the Jewish Defence League, whose Canadian director Meir Weinstein commented Sunday: “Hitler Lover Ernst Zundel is dead ... Time for a party.”
jwarmington@postmedia.com
Ernst Zundel will not be missed | Warmington | Canada | News | Toronto Sun

Ernst Zundel deserved agony, not a quiet exit
By Mark Bonokoski, Postmedia Network
First posted: Monday, August 07, 2017 01:19 PM EDT | Updated: Monday, August 07, 2017 01:45 PM EDT
As historical footnotes go, one of my proudest contributions was the exposing of Ernst Zundel as a neo-Nazi.
From that point onward, the secret world of this notorious Toronto-based anti-Semite began to unravel, leading to years in court fighting extradition as a security risk, and finally his deportation to a German jail where he served time for inciting racial hatred and for being a Holocaust denier, a criminal offence in Germany.
It has been learned, through a posting by his estranged wife, that Zundel — odious to the core — died of a heart attack Saturday at age 78 at his home in Germany’s Black Forest where he lived after his release from prison in 2010 following five years of incarceration.
In the end, he had been deported from both the United States and Canada, and was wanted by no one.
Germany had no choice. Zundel was one of theirs.
It began for me in 1978 when a TV mini-series on the Holocaust saw the sudden appearance of Ernst Zundel being quoted in all the media as a legitimate and seemingly benign spokesman for a group called Concerned Parents of German Descent, who argued that the Second World War was long over, and that Germans were being tarnished yet again by the sins of their forefathers.
Who in hell was this Ernst Zundel?
As I would soon uncover and expose, he was the author, among many hate-filled pamphlets, of a recently published 120-page book called The Hitler We Loved and Why, which he had written under the nom-de-plume of his two middle names, Christof Friedrich.
It was printed and distributed by White Power Publications (WPP) in Reedy, West Virginia.
Its editor, George Dietz, convinced by my ruse that he and I shared similar ideologies, admitted in a phone conversation that Ernst Zundel and Christof Friedrich were the same.
A review of Zundel’s book, published in the neo-Nazi Liberty Bell magazine, which was also a product of WPP, read as follows:
“(Friedrich) leaves no doubt about it. Hitler was well loved and loved in return, but this relationship between the Leader and his people was not the gushy, sickly-sweet effusion of an obese Jewish mother for her pimply, draft-dodging son. This was Aryan love. Strong, steady and uplifting.
“Out of the rubble for a nation laid waste by the Jews, the Fuehrer built an orderly, corruption-free, economically vibrant and morally-pure society in which our men were manly.”
In Zundel’s mind, like in the mind of like-thinking neo-Nazis, the death of six million Jews in German extermination camps was a hoax, and Hitler was “a type of risen German Christ, a faith figure in the eyes of his people.”
Within hours of that column hitting the newsstands of the day, complete with that review of Christof Friedrich’s essay on Hitler love, Ernst Zundel’s jig was up. His days as a credible media spokesman were over.
By the next morning, he was forced to admit on the CBC that he and Christof Friedrich were one and the same and, before long, a series of criminal courts became his second home.
When Zundel was eventually released from that German prison, he complained his cell was no better than a “chicken coop.” Compared to the concentration camps where six million Jews lived and died, however, it was a five-star hotel.
The fact that he was able to die at home in Germany, of natural causes, and apparently in robust health up until the heart attack hit, is just another example of how life isn’t fair.
He deserved agony, but got none.
markbonokoski@gmail.com
Ernst Zundel deserved agony, not a quiet exit | Bonokoski | Canada | News | Toro
 

Curious Cdn

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Feb 22, 2015
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Poor Walter lost a kindred spirit and he handing out "the reds" because we are disrespecting one of his heroes.

Tough times, herr Valther.