View Full Version : Simon Wiesenthal JEWISH NAZI HUNTER DIES!!!!


vincent28uk
09-20-05, 12:48 PM
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/1170395.stm

Obituary: Simon Wiesenthal



Simon Wiesenthal: Tireless pursuit of justice


Simon Wiesenthal survived the Nazi death camps, but was haunted for the rest of his life by the need to track down those responsible for them.

Born in Lviv, then part of the Austro-Hungarian empire, into a family of Orthodox Jews, Simon Wiesenthal survived the Soviet invasion of the area in the late 1930s, and suffered the arrival of the Nazis in 1941.

As a young architect, Wiesenthal watched his mother being transported away for execution. He believed his wife Cyla had died too. In fact, she had escaped persecution by pretending to be a Pole.

He spent four years in concentration camps, once spared by a firing squad that stopped before it reached him.

Unaccounted for

As the advancing Red Army pushed into Germany, Wiesenthal was forced to march westwards by his SS guards. The survivors of this arduous trek were liberated, finally, by American troops at the Mauthausen camp in Austria, in May 1945.


Holocaust horror: Wiesenthal's drawings

He cried from loneliness and then dictated a list of 91 names of camp officials. He later tracked down more than 70 of them.

In 1947, Wiesenthal helped establish a centre in Linz, Austria, devoted to collecting information for use in future war crimes trials.

Despite the successes of the Nuremberg trials, many of the Nazi regime's most notorious killers remained unaccounted for.

And while the Cold War brewed between East and West, Nazi hunting fell from the political agenda. Dispirited, Wiesenthal closed the Linz office in 1954.

Worldwide network

But his enthusiasm was rekindled with the capture by Israeli agents of Adolf Eichmann, the architect of the so-called Final Solution.

Buoyed by the trial and execution of the Nazi technocrat, Wiesenthal opened the Jewish Documentation Centre in Vienna.

Collating sightings and tip-offs from a worldwide network of sympathisers, human rights activists and even former Nazis themselves, he pursued the 90,000 people named in the German war crimes files.


Both the Wiesenthals survived the war

His biggest success was bringing Franz Stangl to justice in West Germany in 1967. Stangl was commandant at Treblinka where an estimated 800,000 Jews died.

In all, he was believed to have brought 1100 war criminals to trial. The Simon Wiesenthal Centre, set up in the United States in 1977, has pressed for the extradition of numerous war crimes suspects, as well as campaigning for the rights of Holocaust survivors and an end to pensions for SS officers.

In 1986, he succeeded in having gypsy representatives included on the Holocaust Memorial Council in Washington DC.

His biggest disappointments were his failure to secure the capture of Gestapo chief, Heinrich Muller, and Auschwitz doctor, Josef Mengele, who died in Brazil in 1978.

Dogged perseverance

Simon Wiesenthal's career was not without its controversial aspects. He was accused of egocentricity by those who claimed he took more than his fair share of credit for the arrest of Adolf Eichmann.

He was also involved in a personal spat with the former, and first Jewish, Chancellor of Austria, Bruno Kreisky.


Eichmann's capture rekindled Wiesenthal's enthusiasm

Wiesenthal objected to Kreisky's overtures to a far-right Austrian party leader to save his coalition government. Kreisky, a socialist, falsely accused Wiesenthal of having collaborated with the Gestapo at the end of the war.

Wiesenthal also fell out with the World Jewish Congress when he refused to support their case for blacklisting the former UN Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim, who had sought to become Austrian chancellor.

He dismissed the WJC's allegations that Waldheim had assisted in the deportation of Jews during the war.

But his dogged perseverance in hunting down those who had colluded in the most barbarous of crimes made him a legend in his lifetime. He always claimed he sought justice not vengeance.

"I might forgive them for myself," he once said, "but I couldn't speak for the millions they killed."
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What a amazing man
he compiles a list of 91 nazi camp parasites. He later tracked down more than 70 nazi parasites.
To devote your life, to such a horrific event, that he and his wife endured also, to lose 19 members of your family, to these animals, i guess he was on a mission from god, because very few humanbeings could endure, this madness on a day to day basis, never letting go of it, so time can heal the wounds, in his case it has been a open wound, all his life


His biggest disappointments were his failure to secure the capture of Gestapo chief, Heinrich Muller, and Auschwitz doctor, Josef Mengele, who died in Brazil in 1978.

This man had nothing to be disappointed about, he achieved more than most people do in a life time.

Japan i forgived along time ago, they were driven by blind loyalty to there emperor,
but i am a european i know the system there, and there is no blind loyalty there, which is why alot of people, in this world can not forgive the germans, to follow hitler, who was nothing more than a redneck inbreed, as he tried to rid the world of jews, and create a master race, of blue eyed blonds, yet he was niether, there was no excuse for germans to follow this, absolute madmen, of all time.

Avatar
09-20-05, 01:22 PM
Ah, finally dead he is!
No really, living all your life with such a hate for someone.. :rolleyes:
Besides the branch of his organization in Latvia is really annoying, always screaming how everyone is oppressing "poor jews" and how jews and their deaths are much more important than any other human being of other nationalities who suffered too, and how they (the jews) need to be compensated and loved. Sick!

Heh, btw, I know a few people who are throwing together a party to mark this event.
I don't think that death is something to be celebrated though.

Hapsburg
09-20-05, 02:06 PM
Why am I not surprized to that response- from Avatar, the Latvian nazi.
Sicko.:rolleyes:

SpyMoose
09-20-05, 04:55 PM
i guess he was on a mission from god
Your god, the one who slaughtered the jews over and over again from the middle ages to the holocaust, or his god the one who sustained his people?