The other folks shipped off to auschwitz

Started by Ognir, September 26, 2016, 05:32:33 PM

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Ognir

Most zionists don't believe that God exists, but they do believe he promised them Palestine

- Ilan Pappe

Scotty

New sources reveal that Anne Frank was not betrayed to the German's as supposed, but discovered because there was more going on at 263 Prinsengracht than just people being hidden in the Secret Annexe. "Illegal work and fraud with ration coupons was also taking place."  <$>

http://www.elleuk.com/life-and-culture/culture/news/a33077/anne-frank-found-by-accident-study/

Since the Anne Frank myth is crumbling the Holohoax industry has wheeled out a new heroine, who survived no less than three "death" camps, tuberculosis. bubonic plague and cancer.  :D:D

The 'miraculous' Zuzana Ruzickova:

Zuzana Ruzickova endured three concentration camps in World War Two, including Auschwitz, and was persecuted by the Communists in Czechoslovakia in the years that followed. But not only did she survive, she also went on to become one of the world's leading harpsichordists.

In 1939, though, the Nazis invaded Czechoslovakia. Not only was she unable to study in France, but three years later she and her family were deported to the Terezin labour camp.

"My childhood ended there," she says. Her grandparents and her father later died in the camp, along with thousands of other Jewish inmates.

But, she insists, music helped her survive. She remembers writing down a small section of Bach's English Suite No 5 in E minor on a scrap of paper when she left Terezin in a cattle truck bound for Auschwitz.

"I wanted to have a piece of Bach with me as a sort of talisman because I didn't know what was awaiting us."  ::)

What beckoned was more hardship. Her camp number at Auschwitz, 72389, which was tattooed on her arm, has faded now, but she has not forgotten it. She can also remember how "terribly frightened" she was.

"Seeing the gas chambers, the smoke every day. I'll never forgive myself that I always went in the evening to my mother and I wept and I said, 'I want to live, I don't want to die'," she remembers. :'(

Zuzana Ruzickova says she knows she was due to be gassed on 6 June 1944 but she thinks she was saved by the D-Day landings, which took place early that day.  <lol>

She then endured forced labour in Germany before being sent to the Bergen-Belsen death camp in 1945, where in yet another misfortune she contracted bubonic plague.

And now, in a final twist of fate, she can barely play the harpsichord. "My hands are not in order, not functioning properly. I have cancer and I had chemo," she says.

To mark her 90th birthday next month her complete Bach recordings have been re-issued. A new documentary about her, Zuzana: Music is Life will also be released.

Looking back over her tumultuous life and glittering career, Zuzana Ruzickova says she is not "proud" of anything.

But, she laughs, her greatest achievement is "to have lived until 90".

It was, she says, "miraculous that I survived".

(INDEED!)

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-38340648