Barbara Kulaszka

A moving and remarkable testimony by Ernst Zündel

Our friend Joe Fallisi has struck again! Thanks to him I’ve just discovered a remarkable video recorded interview given in English by Ernst Zündel to a black female high school student in the late 1990s. This video, Students, the Holocaust and Free Speech (running time 1h 23min), was completely unknown to me. It is remarkably limpid, instructive and unsettling.It deals in particular with the two major trials that Zündel had to face in Canada in 1983 (lasting seven weeks) and in 1988 (lasting over four months).

"Le Monde", journal oblique, annonce la mort d’Ernst Zündel

p.p1 {margin: 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px; text-align: justify; line-height: 15.0px; font: 14.0px Helvetica; color: #000000; -webkit-text-stroke: #000000} span.s1 {font-kerning: none} Dans sa livraison datée du samedi 12 août, en page 16, Le Monde publie sur deux colonnes un long article signé de Thomas Wieder, un journaliste dont la dévotion au culte de la Shoah est connue. Intitulé « Ernst Zündel, Editeur négationniste », l’article s’orne d’une photographie du défunt, disparu le 5 août.

"Le Monde", pseudo-objektive Zeitung, verkündet die Nachricht des Todes von Ernst Zündel

In seiner Ausgabe vom Samstag, den 12. August, Seite 16, veröffentlicht der Le Monde auf zwei Spalten einen langen Artikel, gezeichnet von einem Thomas Wieder, einem Journalisten, dessen Hingabe an den Kult der Schoah hinlänglich bekannt ist. Betitelt „Ernst Zündel, Holocaust-leugnender Verleger“, schmückt sich der Artikel einer Photographie des Verstorbenen, verschieden am 5. August.

The slanted French newspaper "Le Monde" announces the death of Ernst Zündel

In its edition of Saturday, August 12, Le Monde published a long, two-column article by Thomas Wieder, a journalist whose devotion to the “Shoah” cult is well known. Entitled “Ernst Zündel, Holocaust denial publisher” and adorned with a photograph of the deceased, who died on August 5, its tone is set by the first two sentences:The French Holocaust denier Robert Faurisson called him “dear friend”, considered him a “source of inspiration”, and said that he was “the man he admired most”.