Ernst Zündel Interviews Richard Butler 1984, in this (one hour 8 minutes) video. Ernest Zundel (1939 – 2017) interviews Pastor Richard Grant Butler (1918 – 2004) at his home in Toronto in 1984. Richard Butler was an Aerospace Engineer, an co-inventor of tubeless tires, and the Senior Manufacturing Engineer for Lockheed Martin. Lockheed Martin is an aircraft manufacturing company which produced such aircraft as the SR-71, the F-16 and a long list of others. Richard Butler was interested in the Christian religion, especially Christan Israelites, which associated the European peoples with 12 tribes of Israel. In the 1970s, Pastor Richard Butler moved from California to Idaho, where he established a church based on his ideas. Ernst asks Richard a series of penetrating questions which Richard answers with full answers, based on the bible.
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Ernst Zündel was born on April 24, 1939, in a small town in the Black Forest region of southwestern Germany. He emigrated to Canada at the age of 19, where he soon married and became the father of two sons. His career as a graphic artist was successful. Then he dedicated himself to the great task, as he saw it, of redeeming the sullied reputation of his fellow Germans. Through his Samisdat publishing house he distributed worldwide a prodigious quantity of revisionist material. Zündel is perhaps best known for his role as defendant in the “Holocaust Trials” of 1985 and 1988. He was brought to court in Toronto on a charge of “publishing false news,” and specifically for publishing a reprint edition of a booklet entitled Did Six Million Really Die?. Zündel’s next great legal battle was fought out before the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal in Toronto for his Internet web site (www.Zündelsite.org). In 2000, he moved to the United States, where he was arrested in 2003 and deported to Germany after two years of solitary confinement in Canada. Put on a show trial in Germany, he was sentenced to five years' imprisonment in 2007. He was finally released from prison on March 1, 2012, and lived in his parental home in Germany until his death on 5 August 2017.
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