Phillipe de Rothschild and the ‘Gas Chambers’ of Bergen-Belsen
Phillipe de Rothschild – son of one of nineteenth century France’s richest men Henri de Rothschild – was a former prisoner of Vichy France who then escaped to Spain and then on to Great Britain to join General de Gaulle’s ‘Free French’ in 1942. I will talk more about this detestable jewish degenerate character in another article but upon reading his 1984 autobiography – typed up and published by author Joan Littlewood – his (brief) account of his visit to the concentration camp of Bergen-Belsen as part of the Allied forces in 1945 really stood out.
The reason becomes readily apparent when read:
‘I was shown the files in the admin. Section, the bills and receipts, neatly typed and rubber-stamped, ‘We beg to acknowledge delivery of your improved gas chambers. We have found them most efficient.’
I discovered that Doctor Zadoc-Kahn and his wife had died here, gentle old friends. The Nazis kept careful records. They had been stripped, shaved, and had their spectacles taken away from them. I saw collections of spectacles, false teeth and human hair in a hut labelled ‘Stores’.’ (1)
So in other words despite the quick retreat from and cover up of the idea of gas chambers existing and in use at Bergen-Belsen throughout the 1950s and 1960s. Rothschild offers us a window into the world of the ‘evidence’ of the ‘Holocaust’ with a reference to how he was presented with piles of human hair, false teeth and spectacles as prima facie evidence of the so-called ‘Holocaust’.
With the clincher for him being a document which allegedly read that: ‘We beg to acknowledge delivery of your improved gas chambers. We have found them most efficient.’
The obvious problem with that is that Bergen-Belsen did have gas chambers but not for use on humans but rather as methods to disinfect clothing and thus attempt to curtail the insect-spread diseases such as typhus that ravaged just about every concentration camp during the Second World War.
This makes a lot more sense of the quote cited by Rothschild by homicidal gas chambers: doesn’t it?
We also know Rothschild is a bit of fibber as he genuinely expects us to believe – without substantive evidence or any corroboration – that his first wife Lili was ‘beaten, degraded and thrown into an oven alive’ by the Nazis. (2)
He allegedly heard this information from a woman – with whom he had had an affair – who was imprisoned with his wife in a Gestapo-run prison in Eastern France. Yet didn’t bother to corroborate it beyond using this claim to declare her dead and take her money.
Lovely: huh?
References
(1) Joan Littlewood, 1984, ‘Milady Vine: The Autobiography of Philippe de Rothschild’, 1st Edition, Jonathan Cape: London, p. 187
(2) Ibid, p. 188