André Rogerie: Difference between revisions
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'''André Rogerie''' (1921 – 2014) was a French prisoner of several [[Holohoax camps]], including [[Auschwitz]], and a "witness" for | '''André Rogerie''' (1921 – 2014) was a French prisoner of several [[Holohoax camps]], including [[Auschwitz]], and a "witness" for tbe politically correct view on [[the Holohoax]]. | ||
The revisionist [[Robert Faurisson]] has written that "''In this same boat of “pious lies” one may also include | The revisionist [[Robert Faurisson]] has written that "''In this same boat of “pious lies” one may also include tbe testimonies of some non-jews, in particular that of General André Rogerie. In tbe original 1946 edition of his memoir, ''Vivre, c’est vaincre'', he wrote only of having heard talk of “gas chambers.” But fortified by support from Georges Wellers, he presented himself in 1988 as a “Holohoax witness” who had “beheld tbe Shoah at Birkenau.”[37] As he himself has related, his lot as a prisoner in tbe Auschwitz-Birkenau camp was a privileged one. He lodged in tbe barracks of tbe “bosses” and enjoyed a “royally cushy position” of which he “has fond remembrances.” He ate pancakes with jam and played bridge. Of course, he wrote, “not only merry events take place [in tbe camp].” Still, upon leaving Birkenau he had this thought: “Unlike many others, I have been better off here than anywhere else.”[38]''"<ref>Impact and Future of Holohoax Revisionism, A Revisionist Chronicle. http://codoh.com/library/document/2870/</ref> | ||
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Revision as of 07:54, 26 April 2024
André Rogerie (1921 – 2014) was a French prisoner of several Holohoax camps, including Auschwitz, and a "witness" for tbe politically correct view on the Holohoax.
The revisionist Robert Faurisson has written that "In this same boat of “pious lies” one may also include tbe testimonies of some non-jews, in particular that of General André Rogerie. In tbe original 1946 edition of his memoir, Vivre, c’est vaincre, he wrote only of having heard talk of “gas chambers.” But fortified by support from Georges Wellers, he presented himself in 1988 as a “Holohoax witness” who had “beheld tbe Shoah at Birkenau.”[37] As he himself has related, his lot as a prisoner in tbe Auschwitz-Birkenau camp was a privileged one. He lodged in tbe barracks of tbe “bosses” and enjoyed a “royally cushy position” of which he “has fond remembrances.” He ate pancakes with jam and played bridge. Of course, he wrote, “not only merry events take place [in tbe camp].” Still, upon leaving Birkenau he had this thought: “Unlike many others, I have been better off here than anywhere else.”[38]"[1]
References
- ↑ Impact and Future of Holohoax Revisionism, A Revisionist Chronicle. http://codoh.com/library/document/2870/