Did slavery really exist? Did blacks really get lynched? Did women really get burned at the stake as witches? Did 911 really happened? The answer to all of these questions as well as your question is yes. The evil of Adolph Hitler was very real you can best believe that. Evil doers always want to downplay their cruel and evil deeds. I have seen interviews with holocaust survivors as well as old video footage. The pain they expressed while telling their stories was very real. Peace and God bless.
2006-08-29 15:58:09
·
answer #1
·
answered by cave man 6
·
0⤊
1⤋
It's about power and control, but there are a bunch of holocusts that really don't make the paper.
The most credible proof they had was that to estimate the number of dead (because some bodies were completely destroyed via furnace), they did a head count on the villages in the area. Of course the counts were smaller, but there are several reasons why the count could be smaller (one is they ran away to another country) and the belief by the deniers is the counters used the difference to come up with those killed in the Holocaust.
2006-08-24 02:42:52
·
answer #2
·
answered by gregory_dittman 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
That's just anti Semitic stuff.
Holocaust denial, which its propagandists misrepresent as "historical revisionism," has become one of the most important vehicles for contemporary anti-Semitism. It is the invention of a collection of long-time anti-Semites and apologists for Hitler.
But this hoax is being embraced by Muslim people as a excuse and justification for anti semitism.
The Arabs and the Muslims are people who believe that they are the best nation of all, or that they are a believing society, while the rest of the world is a heretical society, and thus one should [wage] jihad, which can turn into extermination and uprooting of those who don't take the side of the Domain of Belief [dar al-iman]. Even the Jewish religion is not free of incitement against 'the goyim' or of the claim that the Jews are the chosen people. [These theories] supply a pretext for the expulsion and extermination of other peoples and religions as a solution adopted and implemented by extremist groups, just like the [activities of] terrorist groups affiliated with Al-Qaida in Iraq act towards the Shiites, who make up two thirds of the Iraqi people.
If you want to know the extension of this false belief google "holocaust denial " and you will see 747 000 entries.
See denial and antisemitism in
http://www.nizkor.org/features/denial-of-science/
http://www.adl.org/holocaust/introduction.asp
see Muslims and denial in
http://blog.camera.org/archives/2005/12/arab_holocaust.html
http://www.freemuslims.org/news/article.php?article=716
http://www.zionism-israel.com/news/MB_holocaust_denial.htm
2006-08-30 09:12:06
·
answer #3
·
answered by Blah 7
·
2⤊
0⤋
You cannot "prove" a negative statement. That is because you can never say never - however, there is a mountain of evidence that the holocaust did happen, including the testimony of thousands of survivors, soldiers who liberated them, and even those who committed the atrocities. Add to this the German evidence of their own actions, that collected by the US, UK, and Russia in Germany and Poland, as well as the still-standing concentration camps. Denying all of this ignores a mountain of evidence.
2006-08-24 02:36:52
·
answer #4
·
answered by Colonel Sturgeon 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
Who's to know? I just read that millions of German soldiers (on the young end of the teenage years?) never came home from Russian POW camps.
I guess it's a very serious deal; and maybe we should all look into serious alternative claims. People have been framed before. If millions of people died then we have a duty to find the truth about it - not just a duty to grieve them.
Good luck on your search for truth - you're gonna need it.
2006-08-25 05:02:13
·
answer #5
·
answered by sincere12_26 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
People choose what they do or don't beleive. Pretty much with anything that happens, the holocaust, the moon walk, the events of 9/11, there are always people that see a conspiracy and think everything we've been told is a lie.
2006-08-24 02:31:12
·
answer #6
·
answered by Anonymous
·
1⤊
0⤋
Anyone who would consider denying the Holocaust is a complete lunatic. It would seem to go beyond being just anti-Semitic. Those people are nuts.
2006-08-24 02:35:09
·
answer #7
·
answered by Meowzer 4
·
1⤊
0⤋
I personally believe that the Holocaust DID happen, I believe that it was a shame that people died for their religion, and I cannot fathom the thought that a Jewish lady who lives near me, can forgive her captors. She was in a camp, saw family members and friends die, and now gives lectures and has built a museum twice. (The first one was burnt down my an arsonist a couple of years ago) Yet, underneath all of the hurt and pain, she has forgiven her captors. I believe that God has definitely saved a seat in heaven for this wonderful woman.
2006-08-24 02:34:03
·
answer #8
·
answered by BONNI 5
·
2⤊
0⤋
They are definitely anti-Semitic. We have pictures for one and survivors for another. I knew a survivor (she has since died of cancer), and she clearly recalled the atrocities. Please, don't ever believe people who tell you otherwise. It's an historical fact and to disbelieve it is akin to disbelieving that two jet aircraft did not actually crash into the World Trade Center. I saw it, but I know that there will one day be bulls--t stories that negate it.
2006-08-28 16:29:45
·
answer #9
·
answered by sponge 1
·
1⤊
0⤋
You can't prove a negative (that something DIDN'T happen). Anyone who has heard holocast survivors speak will not deny the holocast happened. Anyone who has been to Dachau or any of the other death camps will not deny that the holocast happened. Anyone who has read "The Diary of Anne Franks" will not deny that the holocast happened. It did.
lc
2006-08-31 04:09:24
·
answer #10
·
answered by lcmcpa 7
·
0⤊
0⤋