Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
October 6, 2015
Many Holocaust survivors survived through the use of magic powers.
That is why there are so many millions of them.
BBC:
“We arrived at 12 o’clock at night. It was dead quiet, and frightening to look at,” Chaim Ferster says, remembering his first impressions of the notorious death camp.
“We could see from a distance that there were flames coming out from four chimneys. I didn’t realise that this was the crematorium.”
He had arrived in the middle of two-year ordeal, during which he endured horrific labour conditions, malnutrition and typhus, before finally being freed at the very moment he and his fellow prisoners had been rounded up to be shot, when Allied forces broke into the camp.
At the very moment.
Incredible.
Now aged 93 and living in Cheetham Hill, Manchester, where he settled in 1946, he said: “You could see planes flying over. [The Nazis] came over to Sosnowiec very fast.
…
In 1943, at the age of 20, Mr Ferster was forced from his home. Amid the chaos he had avoided being taken away a year earlier, when his mother and sister disappeared, and his father, Wolf, had died of pneumonia in 1942.
It was widely accepted that people picked up by the Gestapo never returned, Mr Ferster said.
With this in mind, a relative urged him to learn a skill that would make him useful to the Germans, prompting him to learn to fix sewing machines, becoming classed as a “mechanic” as a result.
Between 1943 and 1945 he was moved between eight different camps across Germany and Poland, enduring terrible conditions, in which many died.
At one stage Mr Ferster remembers being forced to shift blocks of cement from a wagon, in freezing weather.
“It was very, very cold, about minus 25 or minus 26,” he said.
“The soldiers started beating us and shouting and saying you’re not going fast enough. A lot of them couldn’t stand it. They got pneumonia. Some of them died.”
Towards the end of 1943, Mr Ferster fell seriously ill during an outbreak of typhus in one particular camp. Large numbers died.
Once again though he managed to survive, but describes a horrific scene that remains vivid in his memory.
“There were bodies lying on pallets, six one way, six the other way,” he recalls. “There were many many pallets with bodies, very, very high.”
Bodies… of people who died of typhus.
Just like all those pictures you see of the bodies were of people who died of typhus. Or starvation. After the allies bombed the supply lines.
I cannot believe there are still a dozen stories a day published about this stupid hoax.