[Monika Schaefer - The Flipside with Monika - Ep 15 with Jürgen Neumann on Ernst Zündel - Oct 12, 2024 - Transcript]
[In this weekly podcast episode The Flipside with Monika on Republic Broadcasting Network, Canadian nationalist and author, Monika Schaefer talks with Jürgen Neumann and his time working with Ernst Zündel, the famous Canadian-German revisionist.
Key points include:
Jurgen Neumann worked as a videographer for Ernst Zundel for decades.
Ernst Zundel was a German immigrant to Canada who challenged the mainstream Holocaust narrative.
Zundel had a "moment of awakening" when he met Adrian Arcand, a French Canadian who had been in a Canadian concentration camp for six years during WWII.
Arcand showed Zundel historical information that contradicted the mainstream narrative: "he started showing him his library of thousands of books and started giving him all the other information that he had been denied all these years."
Zundel described this experience as being "born again" with the truth.
In the late 1970s, Zundel ran for leadership of the Liberal Party of Canada, giving him a platform to speak about issues facing German immigrants.
In 1980, there was a major raid on Zundel's supporters in Germany, leading to protests against him in Toronto.
Zundel began using video to document events and spread his message in the early 1980s.
Zundel met Robert Faurisson, described as "the world's foremost revisionist", who focused on questioning the existence of gas chambers.
Zundel faced legal troubles, including having his mail service cut off and being charged with "spreading false news."
Zundel's 1985 trial lasted six weeks and received extensive media coverage.
The trial featured testimony from Holocaust survivors that was heavily scrutinized: "it was the first time that former camp inmates were properly cross examined by a lawyer."
A second trial in 1988 lasted almost four months and included even more information challenging the Holocaust narrative.
Jurgen Neumann accompanied Zundel on several trips to Auschwitz.
Neumann now maintains a BitChute channel called "John Robinson 101" where he uploads videos related to Zundel's work. It contains "over a thousand videos" related to Holocaust revisionism and Zundel's activities.
The discussion portrays Zundel as a truth-seeker facing persecution for his views, and Holocaust revisionism as a legitimate historical inquiry, rather than as hate speech or anti-semitism.
- KATANA]
[TRANSCRIPT - Words: 7778 - Duration: 1:00:00 mins]
Intro music]
[01]
Monika Schaefer: Good evening. Greetings. You are listening to the Republic Broadcasting Network at Republicbroadcasting.org. It is October 12, 2024. And this is The Flipside with Monika. And I am your host, Monika Schaefer.
Okay, good news. We have a very special guest, and we had a small technical glitch, but I understand he is on the line.
And so I'm going to bring him on without too much further ado. But I'll just set the stage a little bit and then invite my guest to give a little bit more background. His name is Jurgen Neumann, or Jurgen Neumann, I'm not sure how he likes to pronounce it. And he worked for many years, in fact, for decades, as a videographer for Ernst Zundel, or Ernst Zundel, pronounced German. And he was pretty much Ernst Zundel's right hand man and did very many interesting things, went over to Auschwitz, not just once, but several times.
And probably most of you are familiar with the name Ernst Zundel. He was taken through the court system for reaching the wrong conclusions about World War Two, that untouchable topic that we are all supposed to believe in. Only one narrative, the Holocaust narrative! So that's a big story.
And I always say this is still very relevant. Obviously, it is still very relevant. They put people in jail still to this day for doubting that story. And there are ever more countries that are criminalizing people who question that narrative. And Ernst Zundel was one of the greats in exposing the lies and revealing the truth about World War Two history and what exactly happened or did not happen in Germany. And Jurgen Neumann is continuing his work to this day with re-uploading videos from that are old interviews, old radio broadcasts that Ernst Zundel did decades ago. And he is busy every day doing this work.
And so I would like to welcome Jurgen Neumann to the show. Are you there?
Jürgen Neumann: I am, Monika. Thank you for having me on.
Monika Schaefer: Oh, you're so welcome! I'm very, very happy to have you on.
And I think that people are going to learn a thing or two because I learned something new just today, earlier today when we were talking for 20 minutes or half an hour on the phone in anticipation of tonight's show. And that was really, really great. I learned something new.
So anyway, why don't you just set the stage a little bit more with your own background and involvement. Because then we will be talking mostly about Ernst Zundel and the greater story about that. But I do want people to know a little bit about you. So go ahead, please.
Jürgen Neumann: All right. Basically, for me, it started back in the early 1970s, anyway.
Now, my father was a German army veteran from World War Two, and so I have a little bit of a connection to that time, etcetera.
And so what happened was that he discovered through another veteran he was talking to, that there was going to be some sort of a meeting going on in Buffalo, New York. And he asked me if I would like to go along, that has something to do with at some German group there. So I agreed to go with them. We went, and I'll cut this short, of course.
And so we went there, and they showed some films and did some speechifying and things of that nature. And afterwards, there were some book tables around. So I wandered around, figured I should buy a book. So I did. I walked over to a book table, looked at what they had, picked one up, went to, give the money to the gentleman sitting behind the table.
And I always remember that he just looked up at me. It seemed like a long time, but I'm sure it was only a few seconds, but he just did look at me.
And then he opened the book cover and wrote something in it, gave it back to me.
Came home. I got interested in topics, ordered a few books from the United States, and I decided:
"Well, someplace in Canada, maybe I could find some books rather than send my money there."
And so eventually I thought to myself:
"Oh, somebody wrote something in one of my book covers."
He did ...
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Cont'd here (includes 1 comments):
#BanThe ADL; Stop immigration. Eject the invaders. Hang the traitors.