Mr.
Kershaw said he dismissed the
idea of interviewing surviving
members of the Nazi regime,
including one of Hitler's
secretaries, Traudl Junge, who
was still alive. 'I didn't
want to be involved with those
people with their trite
memories,' he said.
|
New York, Monday, March 19,
2001 [all
illustrations added by this
website] After
10 Years With Hitler, a Biographer
Declares His Liberation by Ralph Blumenthal Excerpts
from Blumenthal's review of Ian Kershaw,
"Hitler, 1936-1945: Nemesis (W.W.
Norton) Picture
below: The original unopened boxes of
Goebbels diaries microfiches on the desk in the
Moscow archives, photographed by David Irving,
1992 para.12:
"Excerpts of Goebbels's wartime
diaries ... Mr. Kershaw ... said
his biography was the first to fully
exploit them." para. 13 in toto: "They showed
as never before, he said, how
Hitler pulled the strings on the
genocide of the Jews while obscuring his
own hand, to the point of leaving even
some in his inner circle to wonder how
much the Führer knew." para. 14 in toto: "But a
revealing passage by Goebbels states, for
example, that Hitler gave the order to
pull back the police on Kristallnacht, the
night of Nov. 9-10, 1938, when rampaging
mobs attacked Jews and destroyed their
synagogues and shops, a fateful step on
the road to mass murder." para. 15 in toto: "With open
discussion of the murder of the Jews taboo
around Hitler, the closest to a smoking
gun that historians are likely to find,
Mr. Kershaw said, is a
1942 report to Hitler from Heinrich
Himmler, the head of the SS and the
Gestapo [sic], documenting the
execution of 363,211 Jews, listed
officially as bandits, over a period of
three months in southern Russia. The sham
was transparent; Hitler was being kept up
to date on the liquidation of
civilians." para. 16: "It has also proved
impossible, he said, to pinpoint an exact
genesis of the
Nazi decision to kill the Jews.
'There's no one point, no document,...He
said Hitler's wishes were so clear to
underlings that they knew what to do to
'work toward the Fuhrer,' as the
expression then went." para. 19 in toto: "Mr. Kershaw
said he dismissed the idea of interviewing
surviving members of the Nazi regime,
including one of Hitler's secretaries,
Traudl Junge,
(right) who
was still alive. "I didn't want to be
involved with those people with their
trite memories,' he said. " Copyright
2001 The New York Times
Company
|
UPON READING this amazing
review, David Irving has sent
this letter to the British university
professor Ian Kershaw (who
admitted in a letter to him during the
Lipstadt trial that his knowledge of
German was not good enough for him to
give expert evidence). Tuesday,
March 20, 2001 Dear
Ian Did you
really say this: "[re] Excerpts of
Goebbels's wartime diaries ... Mr. Kershaw
... said his biography was the first to
fully exploit them."" It is in
today's New York Times. I don't remember
seeing you in the Moscow KGB archives next
to me in 1992 when I was the first to
bring the diaries out and use them for my
Goebbels.
Mastermind of the Third
Reich.
But perhaps the New Yorkers pretend that
that book does
not
exist! Seriously, I
am aware that journalists screw up their
interviews, and I am sure you would not
really have made such a
claim.
Related items on this website: -
Dossier: Under
ADL pressure, St Martin's Press
violates its contract to publish David
Irving's best-selling Goebbels
biography
-
Free
download, Millenium edition of David
Irving: Hitler's War
- Other
David Irving free books
downloads
-
Reviews of Kershaw's books: -
N Y Times, Dec
10, 2000: "In Volume II of his
biography, Ian Kershaw shows that
Hitler had the perfect personality for
a cult leader"
-
The Observer,
Oct 15, 2000: "Ian Kershaw reveals a
Führer who was a clinically insane
monster but a dull amateur with bad
breath in Hitler 1936-45"
-
The Times, Sep 27,
2000: Hitler's last days: Hitler
screamed: "You have all betrayed
me"
-
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