Jack Werber was a Polish Jew who
survived over 5 years in Buchenwald
concentration camp.
After surviving the Holocaust he
moved to New York where he made his
fortune killing animals and turning
them into Davey Crockett style hats.
On his death in 2006 he owned over
30 houses and and several apartment
buildings, mostly in Queens.
His inspiration for turning animals
into hats probably came from the
FACT, during his time at Buchenwald:
Isla Koch turned his friend Hans
into a lampshade
Isla Koch shrunk people's heads to
use as whip handles
In 1996 Jack Werber got into the
Holocaust Industry, co-writing his
memoirs Saving
Children with
Professor William B. Helmreich,
another Jew. It tells the tale of
how Werber saved the lives of more
than 700 Jewish kids bound for the
gas chambers, by hiding them around
Buchenwald concentration camp.
Stupid, stupid ho£ocau$t lie
If the lies about the lampshade,
shrunken-human-head whip-handles and
700+ kids wasn't bad enough.
Professor Helmreich went and
completely discredited himself by
claiming in Werber's obituary in the New
York Times on
November 23, 2006 - Jack Werber is
featured in the above famous
holocaust photo.
What the liar Helmreich should have
found out before claiming his
business associate featured in the
above holocaust photo, is that it is
not a holocaust photo the Nazis took
of themselves torturing prisoners,
but a scene created by the Soviet
controlled East German film studio
Deutsche Film-Aktiengesellschaft
(DEFA) in 1958, 12 years after Jack 'coonskin'
Werber had moved to the United
States. As proven by Jewish
holocaust historian Harold Marcuse.
But Helmreich wasn't the first
Jew to tell lies about this fake
photo
Concentration
Camp guard, with victims, in
Buchenwald.
This was the caption in the West
German weekly news magazine Der
Spiegel on
the 10th October 1966. The same
picture was also used on postcards
with the slogan: This
War Criminal Has Not Been Found! which
were distributed by American Zionist
organizations in the Spring of 1979.
The cards were to be mailed to the
German prime minister demanding an
extension of the statute of
limitations. The campaign was
successful.