08/08/17 21:05:45 F3Qvy0jw0
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その1
After rereading the article, we found it had a superficial understanding of
Jewish issues and lacked lairness. -- Tadashi Saito of Bungei Shunju,
which published Marco Polo.
Holocaust denial is as old as the Holocaust, and the first deniers were
the Jews. Elie Wiesel, writer, Nobel Peace Prize laureate, survivor of
Auschwitz and Buchenwald, told the story in Night, his camp memoir.
One day in 1943 all the foreign-born Jews of his hometown in Hungary
ware rounded up and "crammed into cattle trains." They disappeared from
view and vanished from memory. Months later, one returned. He had
escaped. He told how the Jews were taken into a forest and made to big
graves. "And when they had finished their work, "Wiesel writes, "the
Gestapo began theirs. Without passion, without haste, they slaughtered
their prisoners. "The lone survivor went from house to sound a
warning. No one believed him. They thought him mad.
Not long afterward, the cattle trains came for the native-born Jews.
More recent exercises in Holocaust denial, less respectable and far
more sinister, are generally linked in the public mind to Nazi revival
movements in Germany and elsewhere. Nishioka, however, is at pains