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Tuesday, 17 April 2012
Nazis crimes inspired by a 1960 event
"I never saw an SS marking on a dog."
The above are stills from the footage of
Adolf Eichmann's trial on June 6, 1961,
the lady is Auschwitz survivor Vera
Alexander, the woman who claimed that
Dr. Josef Mengele stitched two twins
intoSiamese
twins. The cartoons (video)
are "evidence" that was submitted to the
trial byMr
Dobkinof the Jewish
Agency, which was the
de-facto government of the Zionist
settlements in Palestine prior to the
State of Israel being declared.
The cartoons were supposedly drawn
by Sophia Rosenstock an Auschwitz inmate
after the camp was liberated, and
presented as a gift toMr
Dobkin, and according to the Israeli
State prosecutor Gideon Hausner, they
attempted but did not succeed in
locating her to authenticate her
cartoons.
On being shown the cartoon above Vera
Alexander said"I never
saw an SS marking on a dog."or"The
sign of the SS on a dog - that I never
saw."Depending on
which translation from Hebrew is used (AorB).
So where did the phantom Sophia
Rosenstock get the idea that dogs at
Auschwitz wore little waistcoats
featuring the SS insignia, to include in
herpost-liberation cartoon
evidence? I think I've found the
answer—from television footage of an
American Nazi Party demonstration
outside the White House onNovember
20, 1960.