Guest guest Posted June 24, 2003 Report Share Posted June 24, 2003 AUSCHWITZ MUSEUM OFFICIALLY ADMITS GAS CHAMBER RECONSTRUCION The official website of the Auschwitz Museum has bowed down before Holocaust Revisionists and has now finally admitted officially that the gas chamber and crematorium 1, which is shown to visitors as evidence of the ‘mass extermination of the Jews,' was built after the war. This dramatic admission can be found on the Auschwitz museum’s webpage at http://www.auschwitz-muzeum.oswieci...matorium_1.html where the following passage has now been inserted: “After the war, the Museum carried out a partial reconstruction. The chimney and two incinerators were rebuilt using original components, as were and several of the openings in the gas chamber roof.” The photograph on that page, by the way, shows very clearly that the "chimney" of the alleged crematoria, is not even connected to the building! karl theis jrvideo field reporterwww.RealityExpander.com Ch.10 TimeWarnerAustin,Texas cell 512 297-9875e-mail: theis888 www.exposureofthetruth.isfamous.com SBC DSL - Now only $29.95 per month! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 24, 2003 Report Share Posted June 24, 2003 In a message dated 6/24/2003 6:09:07 AM Pacific Daylight Time, k_t723 writes: The official website of the Auschwitz Museum has bowed down before Holocaust Revisionists and has now finally admitted officially that the gas chamber and crematorium 1, which is shown to visitors as evidence of the ‘mass extermination of the Jews,' was built after the war. About 8 years ago I spent 3 days in a workshop with Edith Igor who as a teenager was in Auscwitz for a year. She, her young sister and her mother were greeted by Dr. Mengela who separated the girls from their mother. Edith was a ballet dancer and as she danced for Dr. Mengela that evening at his request, she watched the smoke rise from the oven that contained her mother. You may wish to ask Edith for specific details about how many ovens were at Auscwitz and whether or not the stories of the Holocaust were true. Jay Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 24, 2003 Report Share Posted June 24, 2003 In a message dated 6/24/2003 6:09:07 AM Pacific Daylight Time, k_t723 writes: The official website of the Auschwitz Museum has bowed down before Holocaust Revisionists and has now finally admitted officially that the gas chamber and crematorium 1, which is shown to visitors as evidence of the ‘mass extermination of the Jews,' was built after the war. I misspelled Edith's last name, it is Eger. A bit of a story about her follows: Edith Eva Eger: She Teaches People to Celebrate their Lives By Lydia P. Boyle Edith Eva Eger was barely 16 years old in 1944 when she experienced one the worst evils the human race has ever been subjected to. As a Jew living in Nazi-occupied Eastern Europe, she and her family were sent to Auschwitz, the heinous death camp. On the day she arrived there, Josef Mengele, the Angel of Death himself, personally hand picked Edith and her sister Magda for his macabre human experiments. The girls’ mother was immediately put to death. "Life has a very peculiar way of teaching us important lessons that equip us for future survival," the diminutive clinical psychologist explains. Today, Edith Eva Eger is Dr. Eger, a highly acclaimed therapist in private practice in La Jolla, California, and a sought-after lecturer and public speaker. Dr. Eger says that one of the ways she was able to stay alive during her Auschwitz ordeal, was hearing in her mind the words her mother kept telling her during the unbearable cattle-car ride to the death camp. "Remember, if all is taken away from you, you still have what is in your head...they cannot touch the treasures in your mind." "The most important lesson I learned in Auschwitz was that in order to stay alive, I had to choose to not be a victim," Dr. Eger explains. "I was able to turn my anger at the guards that were torturing me into pity because they were in a much worse prison that I was." Dr. Robert Anthony Schuller introduced Dr. Eger to the Hour of Power congregation as "a living and walking example of what Possibility Living is all about." She helps people discard their limitations and discover their powers. A young GI found an unconscious Edith Eva Eger in a pile of corpses when the Allies liberated Auschwitz in 1945. The soldier noticed that her hand moved slightly and realized that she was still alive. While regaining her health in a hospital in Austria, 17-year-old Edith met a young man survivor like herself. They were married and a year later they had their first child, a daughter. "I believe God had a plan for me," Edith Eger says, "and that my parents had to die so I would be able to help people celebrate their lives and make a better world." Dr. Eger’s work is guiding people away from victimization and allowing them to shine. Dr. Eger says that when people see themselves as victims, they develop a sense of entitlement that the world owes them something. It also gives them a license to do nothing about overcoming limitations. "It is very hard to let go of something unless you have something to replace it with," Eger goes on. "I found myself crying one day after buying a dress for my granddaughter to wear to a dance," she continues. "At first, I didn’t understand why I was crying. Then I realized that I wasn’t crying because I had bought the dress, but because I had never gone to a dance when I was that age." "Anger protects you," Eger says, "that’s why when people are angry and they let go of the anger, they feel worse. But once you go through that valley of the shadows, through the tunnel to the light, you begin to see things in a very different way." The rest of it is at: http://www.hourofpower.org/interviews/dr_eger.html Ask her whether or not Auscwitz had ovens. Jay Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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