1. What proof exists that the Nazis killed six million Jews?
None. All we have is postwar testimony, mostly of individual“survivors.
”This testimony is contradictory, and very few claim to have actually
witnessed any“gassing.

”There are no contemporaneous documents or hard evidence: no mounds of ashes, no crematories capable of disposing of millions of corpses, no
“human soap,”no lamp shades made of human
skin, and no credible demographic statistics.

2. What evidence exists that six million Jews were not killed by the Nazis?
Extensive forensic, demographic, analytical and comparative evidence
demonstrates the impossibility of such a figure. The widely repeated
“six million”figure is an irresponsible exaggeration.

3. Did Simon Wiesenthal state in writing that“there were no extermination camps
on German soil”?Yes. The famous
“Nazi hunter”wrote this in Stars and Stripes, Jan. 24,
1993. He also claimed that“gassings”of Jews took place only in Poland.

4. If Dachau was in Germany, and even Wiesenthal says that it was not an
extermination camp, why do many American veterans say
it was an extermination camp?
After the Allies captured Dachau, many GIs and others were led through
the camp and shown a building alleged to have been a “gas chamber.
The mass media widely, but falsely, continues to assert that Dachau was
a“gassing”camp.

5. What about Auschwitz? Is there any proof that gas chambers were used to kill
people there?
No. Auschwitz, captured by the Soviets, was modified after the war, and a
room was reconstructed to look like a large“gas chamber.
”After America’s leading expert on gas chamber construction and design, Fred
Leuchter, examined this and other alleged Auschwitz gassing facilities, he
stated that it was an“absurdity”to claim that they were, or could have
been, used for executions.

6. If Auschwitz wasn’t a“death camp,
”what was its true purpose?
It was an internment center and part of a large-scale manufacturing
complex. Synthetic fuel was produced there, and its inmates were used as
a workforce.

7. Who set up the first concentration camps?
During the Boer War (1899-1902), the British set up what they called
“concentration camps”in South Africa to hold Afrikaner women and
children. Approximately 30,000 died in these hellholes, which were as
terrible as concentration camps for Germans of World War II.

8. How did German concentration camps differ from American
“relocation”camps in which Japanese-
Americans were interned during WWII?

The only significant difference was that the Germans interned persons on
the basis of being real or suspected security threats to the German war
effort, whereas the Roosevelt administration interned persons on the basis
of race alone.

9. Why did the German government intern Jews in camps?
It considered Jews a direct threat to national security. (Jews were
overwhelmingly represented in Communist subversion.) However, all
suspected security risks not just Jews–were in danger of internment.

10. What hostile measure did world Jewry undertake against Germany as early
as 1933?
In March 1933, international Jewish organizations declared an
international boycott of German goods.

11. Did the Jews of the world“declare war on Germany”?
Yes. Newspapers around the world reported this. A front
-page headline inthe London Daily Express (March 24, 1933), for example,
announced “Judea Declares War on Germany.

12. Was this before or after the“death camp”stories began?
This was years before the“death camp”stories, which began in 1941-1942.

13. What nation is credited with being the first to practice mass civilian bombing?
Britain—on May11, 1940.

14. How many“gas chambers”to kill people were there at Auschwitz?
None.

15. How many Jews were living in the areas that came under German control
during the war?

Fewer than six million.