Babyhood account of holohoax in new book

Started by yankeedoodle, January 23, 2020, 02:56:03 PM

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yankeedoodle

Too Young To Remember Being At Auschwitz, Holocaust 'Survivor' Writes Book About It Anyway
https://christiansfortruth.com/too-young-to-remember-being-at-auschwitz-youngest-holocaust-survivor-writes-book-about-it-anyway/

Only 2 years old and so ill she had to stay on for weeks after liberation, Eva Umlauf was one of the youngest prisoners to be freed from Auschwitz, and although she has no conscious memories stretching so far back, her early childhood in the Nazi death camp was to cast a dark shadow over her entire life:

Quotehttps://www.timesofisrael.com/auschwitz-survivor-who-was-just-2-at-liberation-still-nurses-scars/
Auschwitz is deeply burned inside my body and soul," Umlauf said on a January day almost 75 years after Auschwitz was freed by the Soviet Red Army. A petite woman with a pageboy haircut and eyes as blue as the camp tattoo on her arm, the 77-year-old doctor reminisced about her post-war childhood.

"There was an emptiness growing up after Auschwitz, so many of our family members were gone," she said.

"It was just my mom, my sister and me who survived," Umlauf added in a calm, measured voice, sitting in her elegant apartment on the outskirts of Munich. "We saw my father for the last time at the ramp at Auschwitz when we were taken off the train."

It's a miracle that Umlauf survived the death camp in German-occupied Poland. More than 1.1 million people, mostly Jews, were murdered there by the Nazis and their henchmen. In all, about 6 million European Jews died during the Holocaust.

When families from across Europe reached Auschwitz in cramped windowless cattle trains, the Nazis selected those whom they could still use as forced laborers. The others, old people, many women and especially children and babies, were gassed to death soon after arrival.

But the gassing stopped two or three days before little Eva, her pregnant mother and father arrived in November 1944 from the labor camp Novaky in Slovakia. Germany was losing World War II and the Red Army was drawing ever closer to the camp.

"Our transport was the first one that didn't go straight to the gas," Umlauf said.

She was still tattooed on arrival — and promptly fainted. The blue number on the inside of her lower left arm remains visible today: A-26959.

"After the war, we] lived a seemingly normal life," Umlauf remembered as she looked through old black-and-white family photos that are the only tangible reminders of those missing.

"My mom barely talked about the Holocaust and I never asked questions," Umlauf said...

At that time, the memories of Auschwitz were mostly subdued by daily routine — building a home, raising her children and working in the hospital. But off and on the horror would force its way to the surface. When Umlauf was pregnant with her third child, she had nightmares of babies being thrown into fire alive and gas chambers full of dead babies. Still, it was only after her three boys had grown up and she had semi-retired that she finally turned her full attention to the silenced past.

Umlauf traveled to archives across Europe and Israel to seek glimpses of the fates of the family members she was never able to meet. In the end, she wrote her autobiography, which includes stories about relatives who perished in the Shoah. It was published in 2016 in Germany under the title, "The number on your lower arm is as blue as your eyes" — a line from a poem a fellow survivor and friend wrote about her.

She remembers nothing about being in Auschwitz, but writes a book about her 'experience' anyway.  Talk about chutzhpah.

No wonder even many Jews themselves are starting to doubt the official, state-mandated version of the so-called "Holocaust".

Here, no one can dispute that every word in this book is pure fabrication, and yet, like Schindler's List and Elie Wiesel's Night, it will be sold as "non-fiction".

The Germans 'miraculously' stopped gassing Jews only the day before she happened to arrive at Auschwitz, but the evil "Nazis" decided to tatoo her, as a one year old, anyway.  The Russians are quickly pushing toward the camp, but the Germans still have time to tattoo infants upon arrival.

Every single survivor story contains some inexplicable 'miracle' like this one because every story is so improbable that most rational people would never believe them for a second.

To believe in the Holocaust requires more 'blind faith' than any improbable religion, which is why it's the only religion in the world that is illegal to not believe.

'Survivor' Herman Rosenblat explains how Jews are able to write books about the Holocaust that aren't true:  see video here:  https://christiansfortruth.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/In-My-Mind-It-Was-True.mp4