August 3, 2010

Dariusz+Ratajczak+.jpgSuppression of Polish History

by Bob Lamming


Thanks for posting the  Darius Ratajczak (left) material. Regrettably, the views of honest Polish historians on WW II and the Jewish Holocaust are virtually unknown in the Western truth movement.

I haven't read Ratajczak's books, so I can only comment on the basis of what you've posted and linked to.

I find it significant that this persecuted revisionist historian supported the thesis that gas chambers were used by the Germans. Very many truthers have been hoaxed in this regard, also into believing that Jews were not mass murdered - though the six million figure is certainly too high.

The real issues of honest revisionism lie elsewhere, and they may be nowhere more fiercely contested than in the facts of Poland's WW II history, which the Jewish Holocaust establishment has worked hard - and so far, effectively - to suppress.

Here is the link to a very scholarly and substantial body of material on this theme, written under a pseudonym by someone affiliated with the Canadian Polish Congress.

http://www.electronicmuseum.ca/Poland-WW2/ethnic_minorities_occupation/jews.html

As the first word in the title - „Neighbors" - suggests, this was a response to the lavishly-promoted book of that same title by professional Poland-basher Jan T. Gross of Princeton University (see note 38 in Part II of the Ratajczak interview at <http://www.papurec.org/>).

It appears that Ratajczak's persecution had nothing to do with Holocaust denial, strictly speaking, but rather with disputing Received Jewish Opinion about what went on in occupied Poland, and more generally in Polish history during the WW II period.

Make no mistake. This form of political correctness is every bit as absolute in North America as Ratajczak's experience demonstrated that it is in Poland.

I taught full-time for ten years at a Catholic liberal arts college in California but was terminated subsequent to publicly challenging my department chair on her use of Art Spiegelman's Maus in our curriculum. This Pulitzer Prize winning comic book graphically depicts Polish people as swine.

That was in 1998. A year later I was pulling weeds and painting houses. Eventually I made it back into teaching - at a tough, inner-city public school.

It's hardly surprising that so few will take stand, on either side of the Atlantic, against the Jewish establishment's abuse of truth and simple decency.

Poland's tortured history in the Second World War includes a lot of valuable material - not only information that the Holocaust Industry would like to keep obscure, but also facts that have been completely ignored, or distorted, in the truth movement ... of all places ... for reasons that are less than clear to me.

Thank you, Henry, for providing your discerning readership with a window on this important but neglected field.

 
 

Henry Makow is the author of A Long Way to go for a Date. He received his Ph.D. in English Literature from the University of Toronto. He welcomes your feedback and ideas at