Ernst Zündel: on Race Part (1 of 2) 1996 (1:13:02)
Ernst Zundel on Race Part (1 of 2) 1996.
Ernst Zundel talks about race in this first part (one hour 13 minutes) of a two part interview. Ernst answers questions about his origins, his background, his parents, his humble origins in the Black Forest area of Germany. Ernst talks about his emigration from Germany to Canada and his subsequent life in Canada. He explains that his decision to move to Canada was his refusal to be conscripted in the post war "German" army due to his pacifist beliefs. Ernst relates his struggle to become a citizen of Canada, which was turned down without explanation by the "Canadian" government. Ernst talks about his continual struggles in the court after a Zionist group took him to court for spreading "false news". The legal battle against Ernst was taken up by the "government" of Canada, and it resulted in the great "Holocau$t" trial of 1985. [Note: The "false news" law was eventually declared unconsitutional.] Asked about his citizenship and that he had became not a Canadian or a German, Ernst replies that postwar Germany is something of disgust to him. Ernst talks on many other issues involving race, nation, citizenship in this fascinating and interesting video.
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