Memorabilia: Students, the Holocaust and Free Speech (part 1 of 3)
A young black female high school student is assigned an interview with Ernst Zundel as a school project. The results are unexpected for student and teacher. Late 1990s.
Ernst Zundel (1939 – 2017) emigrated from his native Germany to Canada in order to avoid military service with the Federal Republic of Germany (FROG) as he was a pacifist. In Canada, he became a successful artist and publisher. He learnt to speak English and French, fleuntly. Ernst, was appalled by the continual trashing of Germany in the "Canadian" media and began to actively campaign against it. Soon, enemies of the truth and of Germany showed their ugly face and began to not only engage in a campaign of abuse and lies, but to drag him through the courts on trumped up charges. After decades of legal charges, the case against Ernst was defeated, as the law on which he was charged, was declared unconsitutional. This seemed to incite the traditional enemies of the truth to mount further attacks against Ernst. Eventually, Ernst fled to America, and was then sent to Germany, where he was arrested for exposing the "Holocau$t" as a lie.
This is part 1 of 3 (27 minutes).
Bibliographic information about this document: n/a
Other contributors to this document: n/a
Editor’s comments: n/a