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Thread: A book on the collobration between Armenians and Nazis during holocaust

  1. #1
    Night_Flight
    Guest

    A book on the collobration between Armenians and Nazis during holocaust

    AUTHOR SAM WEEMS’ THIRD BOOK IN "ARMENIA—THE GREAT DECEPTION" SERIES WILL EXPOSE THE ARMENIAN-NAZIS AND THEIR ROLE IN THE GENOCIDE OF HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF JEWS DURING WORLD WAR II.

    The author has begun research that proves Armenians worked hand and hand with Hitler and the Nazis from the early 1930s to late 1944. The Armenian Nazis were a vital and effective part of the overall Nazi Jewish killing machine. The Armenian Nazis captured and sent hundreds of thousands of Jews to the death camps of World War II. The author is working with teams of scholars who are studying Armenian Nazi unit histories and the arrest reports issued by Armenian Nazis in Holland and other countries occupied by Armenian Nazi troops. Help from Holocaust survivors who were captured by Armenian Nazis is urged, encouraged, and welcome.

    If any Holocaust survivor who lived in Holland during World War II and was arrested and tortured before being sent to the concentration camps by individuals who didn’t look like the blond and blue eyed Germans, but who were dark skinned and brown eyed, were probably Armenians. This was the heinous 812th battalion of Armenian Nazis under the command of the infamous Armenian General Dro. This is the general who made his reputation by massacring women and children of Muslim villages during World War I and who thereafter put his "skills" to work for the Nazis. The pages of history record that Dro and his Armenian troops were very good at hunting down Jews and sending them to the death camps.

    The author is seeking the memories, documents, and accounts of Jewish survivors and their family members who were subjected to Armenian Nazi terror during World War II. It is estimated that this book will be ready for publication in about 18 months.

    The author is absolutely baffled by the audacity of the Armenian lobby to erect reportedly $50 million worth of "Genocide Museum" in Washington DC! This museum is not only an insult to hundreds of thousands of Jews in Holland, captured and shipped to concentration camps by the Armenian-Nazi police, 20,000 strong at its peak, but also a disservice to unsuspecting American Christian taxpayers whose money is being squandered by unscrupulous politicians currying favor with Armenian lobby.

  2. #2
    L@mplighterM
    Guest

    Re: A book on the collobration between Armenians and Nazis during holocaust

    Originally posted by Night_Flight

    If any Holocaust survivor who lived in Holland during World War II and was arrested and tortured before being sent to the concentration camps by individuals who didn’t look like the blond and blue eyed Germans, but who were dark skinned and brown eyed, were probably Armenians.
    If a book describes blue-eyed blond Germans I think the author made an error. I certainly haven’t seen may Germans like that. You want blue eyes and blond hair head to Sweden, Finland, Russia, Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia.

    Don’t consider the countries above to be overrun by blue-eyed blondes but I believe they have the highest per capita individuals of that type.

    Germany is not renowned for blue-eyed blondes actually many Germans have a dark complexion.

    I should note that I'm not talking about the current Germany.

  3. #3
    Vic
    Guest

    Exclamation

    The Armenian-Turkish conflict has a long and tragic history. I don't know whether this forum is the right palce to discuss it, but I do believe that this is not the right place for anti-Armenian hate speech. It may be true that a coalition with Turkey is in Israel's interest, given the lack of other allies in the region, yet this fact shouldn't be hijacked to promote certain positions in conflicts that Israel has nothing to do with!

    The main contribution I can make to this discussion is my own experience in the fmr. Soviet Union. Armenia used to be the only virtually antisemitism-free zone there.


    As for the book metioned above, yes, there were Armenian bataillons in the German army in WWII, numbering some 45000. An unpleasant fact on its own, but, according to a Russian source, the only neutral one I couls find so far on the internet (of no use to anyone her but Elke and Takeo, I suppose, still here it is: http://arm-military.narod.ru/armenische.html) there were similar military formations from other ethnic groups of the region: 40000 Azeri Turks, 25000 Georgians, 30000 "Northern Caucasians" and over 70000 Cental Asians of different ethnic backgrounds. This is still much less than "cooperative" French or Ukrainians, afaik. (According to the Wiesenthal center there were over 1 Millon Soviet Nationals in the German army at in WWII http://motlc.wiesenthal.com/text/x23/xr2350.html).
    Last edited by Vic; 06-08-2002 at 03:52 AM.

  4. #4
    elke
    Guest
    We also can't forget the Baltic people: Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania - who came out squarely on the German side. These countries chose what they perceived the "lesser of two evils" - Naziism vs. Communism.

  5. #5
    Vic
    Guest
    Originally posted by elke
    We also can't forget the Baltic people: Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania - who came out squarely on the German side. These countries chose what they perceived the "lesser of two evils" - Naziism vs. Communism.
    Not quite squarely, Elke, there were local resistance movements during WWII as well, many of whose members were later persecuted by the KGB for their efforts, btw. (I knew several such cases myself) However, "everyday" antisemitism was always very strong there during the whole postwar period, as opposed to the Caucasus.

  6. #6
    elke
    Guest
    Originally posted by Vic

    Not quite squarely, Elke, there were local resistance movements during WWII as well, many of whose members were later persecuted by the KGB for their efforts, btw. (I knew a couple of such cases myself)
    OK, they were "roundly"

    I had a professor of German language in college, who was Lithuanian, and belonged to the Nazi party during WWII. He was not anti-semitic, actually, at least not overtly. I am assuming that he was legally in the US, else I can't imagine him being as open about his past as he was in class.

  7. #7
    Vic
    Guest
    Originally posted by elke


    OK, they were "roundly"

    I had a professor of German language in college, who was Lithuanian, and belonged to the Nazi party during WWII. He was not anti-semitic, actually, at least not overtly. I am assuming that he was legally in the US, else I can't imagine him being as open about his past as he was in class.
    I know that many Balts with dubious affiliations during the Nazi years have settled comfortably in North America. Don't ask me why their backgrounds were never checked properly. I have even seen an autobiography by a Latvian, a university professor from Canada, I think - I cannot remember the name - who explained in detail how badly the cruel Jews treated the poor little Latvians in pre-WWII Latvia. Sounded rather familiar

    On the other hand, I know someone who works for the Claims Conference and has been evaluating for some time the validity of the applications from Eastern Europe. Apparently quite a significant number of Baltic Jews owe their survival during the German occupation to non-Jewish locals. It is never simple to assign a whole people to one category, although in this case one can surely claim that there was more pro-Nazi and antisemitic sentiment than the other way round.
    Last edited by Vic; 06-08-2002 at 08:46 AM.

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