The Windermere Boys were the subject of an exhibit in the local library that I visited in the Cumbrian resort town of Windermere back in the UK several years ago. Since then they’ve also had a novel published about them. (1) I thought it would be appropriate to point out how the existence of the Windermere Boys disprove the so-called ‘Holocaust’.
Lancashire Life describes the Windermere Boys as follows:
‘It was like going from the depths of hell to paradise. Three hundred traumatised Jewish boys, like thousands of others, had endured years of their lives detained in Nazi concentration camps.
They had survived horrors most of us could never comprehend and when the Second World War ended they were left with nothing. Their families had been murdered, they had no homes to return to and their health was very poor. But for this particular group of boys there was hope.
In 1945, the Windermere Boys, as they became known locally, were taken by RAF planes to the pretty Lakeland town to help them escape the atrocities of their previous years. It was thought the Lake District landscape would aid their recovery.
[…]
Some of these boys had been found wandering the streets in Poland; others were still at the concentration camp sites which had been turned into hospitals, they were all piled into one place and the Red Cross couldn’t cope.’ (2)
Now the problem with this is that the Windermere boys were just that. Jewish boys – with some young adolescents – who had been ‘liberated’ from concentration camps by American and British forces during the drive into Germany that occurred in 1945.
Their youth is the key here. The established ‘Holocaust’ narrative holds that jewish children – such as the Windermere Boys – would be gassed immediately on arrival, but yet we are told that the Windermere Boys arrived intact and whole despite having generally been in the German concentration camp system for a significant amount of time.
Were the ‘Holocaust’ true then they would surely have been gassed and the fact that they weren’t and arrived in Windermere starved but alive. Is testament that the so-called ‘Holocaust’ is a hoary old myth based on jewish atrocity propaganda not something that can be reasonably be argued to have actually occurred.
References
(1) http://www.nwemail.co.uk/news/lakes/Novel-tells-true-story-of-the-Holocaust-survivors-who-found-a-home-in-Windermere-7fea6b56-39e1-4e71-b69f-d24f899525d4-ds
(2) http://www.lancashirelife.co.uk/out-about/places/the-inspiring-story-of-how-windermere-helped-300-jewish-chldren-fleeing-the-nazis-1-1646490