Sunday Telegraph,
June 19, 1977, p.17, "Letters to the Editor"
Hitler and the Jews
As a Jew who managed to escape from nazi Germany, I was
a little surprised to hear that an author has actually claimed
"hitler knew nothing about the mass-murder of six million
Jews," having " sked" only for their "deportation".
Hitler demanded the extermination of the Jews from the very beginning
of his carreer. He expressly rejected what he called the "motional
antisemisism"" of his forerunners and rivals as it worked
merely on and off; he urged "a rational antisemisism"
which would do way <with the Jews (root and branch). How else
was he to deal with creatures he described as "the racial
tuberculosis of the nations," "bacilli worse than Black
Death"? By deportation? Yes, to the ante-(gas)chambers of
extermination.
He wrote about it, he shouted it from the roof-tops, and "wherever
Hitler spoke, murder could be excepted to follow" (writes
Konrad Haiden, the classic historian of the Nazi movement, who
knew first hand what he was talking about). At the pick of his
power, in 1941, Hitler had every right to jeer at those "silly
fools" who could not beleive the mounting evidence of Nazi
bestiality: they "ought to have read what I have written
not once, but a thousand times.
C. C. Aronsfeld, Harrow.
Sunday Telegraph, 26 juin 1977
No evidence offered
Your correspondent C.C. Aronsfeld implies that I ignore in pmy
book (Hitler's war" the evidence proving hitler's guilt in
the extermination of the Jewzs. But Aronsfeld himself was one
of the authorities on the Jewish Holocaus to whom I appealed for
such evidence when completing mly research. (the others included
the Yivo Institute for jewish research, the wiener library, Lucy.
S. Dawidowicz, and the antidefamation league) and all offered
their apologies, except Pr Raul Hilberg, author of the standard
history on the subject, who honourably conceded that he too has
come to the view tht Hitler may not have known.
Davdi Irving, London W1.