The
Horrifying New Holocaust Discoveries
Stes de Necker
The latest revelation about the Holocaust
stuns even the scholars who thought they already knew everything about the
horrific details of Germany’s program of genocide against the Jewish people.
It’s taken more than 70 years to finally
know the full facts. And what is almost beyond belief is that what really
happened goes far beyond what anyone could ever have imagined.
For the longest time we have spoken of the
tragedy of 6 million Jews. It was a number that represented the closest
approximation we could come to the victims of Hitler’s plan for a Final
Solution.
Those who sought to diminish the tragedy claimed 6 million was a
gross exaggeration. Others went further and denied the historicity of the
Holocaust itself, absurdly claiming the Jews fabricated their extermination to
gain sympathy for the Zionist cause.
But now we know the truth.
The reality was much worse than whatever we
imagined.
The unspeakable crime of the 20th century,
more than the triumph of evil, was the sin of the “innocent” bystander.
It wasn’t just the huge killing centers
whose very names – Auschwitz, Bergen-Belsen, Buchenwald, Dachau, Majdanek,
Belzec, Ravensbruck, Sobibar, Treblinka – bring to mind the ghastly images by
now so familiar to us.
It wasn’t just the Warsaw ghetto. It wasn’t
just the famous sites we’ve all by now heard of that deservedly live on in
everlasting infamy.
Researchers at United States Holocaust
Memorial Museum have just released documentation that astounds even the most
informed scholars steeped in the previously known statistics of German
atrocities.
Here is some of what has now been
conclusively discovered:
There were more than 42,500 Nazi ghettos
and camps throughout Europe from 1933 to 1945;
There were 30,000 slave labour camps;
1,150
Jewish ghettos;
980 concentration camps;
1000 prisoner of war camps;
500
brothels filled with sex slaves;
and thousands of other camps used for
euthanizing the elderly and infirm, performing forced abortions, “Germanizing”
prisoners or transporting victims to killing centers.
The best estimate using current
information available is 15 to 20 million people who died or were imprisoned in
sites controlled by the Germans throughout the European continent.
Simply put, in the words of Hartmut
Berghoff, Director of the German Historical Institute in Washington, “The
numbers are so much higher than what we originally thought; we knew before how
horrible life in the camps and ghettos was, but the actual numbers are
unbelievable.”
And what makes this revelation so important
is that it forces us to acknowledge a crucial truth about the Holocaust that
many people have tried to ignore or to minimize – a truth that has profound
contemporary significance: The unspeakable crime of the 20th century, more than
the triumph of evil, was the sin of the “innocent” bystander.
For years our efforts to understand the
Holocaust focused on the perpetrators. We looked for explanations for the
madness of Mengele, the obsessive hatred of Hitler, the impassive cruelty of
Eichmann. We sought answers to how it was possible for the criminal elements,
the sadists and the mentally unbalanced to achieve the kind of power that made
the mass killings feasible.
That was because we had no idea of the real
extent of the horror.
With more than 42,000 ghettos and
concentration camps scattered throughout the length and breadth of a supposedly
civilized continent, there’s no longer any way to avoid the obvious conclusion.
The cultured, the educated, the
enlightened, the liberal, the refined, the sophisticated, the urbane – all of
them share in the shame of a world that lost its moral compass and willingly
acceded to the victory of evil.
“We had no idea what was happening” needs
to be clearly identified as “the great lie” of the years of Nazi power. The
harsh truth is that almost everyone had to know. The numbers negate the
possibility for collective ignorance.
And still the killings did not stop, the
torture did not cease, the concentration camps were not closed, the crematoria
continued their barbaric task.
The “decent” people were somehow able to
rationalize their silence.
Just last year Mary Fulbrook, a
distinguished scholar of German history, in “A Small Town Near Auschwitz “wrote
a richly and painfully detailed examination of those Germans who, after the
war, successfully cast themselves in the role of innocent bystanders.
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