Smith’s Report, no. 175
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By Bradley R. Smith ∙ September 1, 2010
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By Carolyn Yeager ∙ September 25, 2010
By Carolyn Yeager Part III: Nine reasons why Elie Wiesel cannot be the author of Un di Velt Hot Gesvign (And the World Remained Silent). 1. The only original source for the existence of an 862-page Yiddish manuscript is Elie Wiesel. Wiesel’s 1995 memoir All Rivers Run to the Sea is the first time he…
By Carolyn Yeager ∙ September 24, 2010
By Carolyn Yeager Part Two: Can the books Night and And the World Remained Silent have been written by the same author? What one critic reveals. We know a lot about the man who calls himself Elie Wiesel from his own mouth and pen, but we know of the Lazar Wiesel born on Sept. 4,…
By Carolyn Yeager ∙ September 23, 2010
By Carolyn Yeager In literature, Rebbe, certain things are true though they didn’t happen, while others are not, even if they did. … – Elie Wiesel, All Rivers Run to the Sea Part One: When and how was Un di Velt Hot Gesvign written? The question I present to you, the interested public is: Was…
By Thomas Kues ∙ September 6, 2010
After the publication of “Evidence for the Presence of ‘Gassed’ Jews in the Occupied Eastern Territories, Part 1”1 in the summer issue of Inconvenient History I have came across numerous pieces of information prompting additions to the same text, which were incorporated in a recently published online Swedish version of the article.2 Since many of…
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