Germar Rudolf

Germar Rudolf
Born Germar Rudolf
(1964-10-29) 29 October 1964
Limburg an der Lahn, Hesse
Nationality German
Occupation author, chemist, Holocaust denier

Germar Rudolf, also known as Germar Scheerer,[1] born 29 October 1964, is a German chemist and a convicted Holocaust denier.[2]

Background

Rudolf was born in Limburg an der Lahn, Hesse. In 1983 he took his Abitur in Remscheid, then studied chemistry in Bonn, graduating in 1989 with a Master's degree. As a student, he joined the A.V. Tuisconia Königsberg zu Bonn and the K.D.St.V. Nordgau Prag zu Stuttgart, Catholic fraternities belonging to the Cartellverband. After supporting the CSU/CDU, he became a member of the Republicans.[3]

After his military service with the Luftwaffe, in October 1990 he joined the Max Planck Institute for Solid State Research at Stuttgart, where he prepared a PhD thesis.[3]

Rudolf originally maintained conventional attitudes towards gas chambers at Auschwitz, but then began to challenge accepted history.[4] In 1991, he began work on a paper entitled Report on the formation and verifiability of cyanide compounds in the Auschwitz "gas chambers" on behalf of the Düsseldorf attorney Hajo Herrmann, a former Luftwaffe pilot. In 1993, this work was reported in the media, and Rudolf was told not to enter the Max Planck Institute again without permission. When he did so, his employment was terminated without notice. In 1994, this dismissal was converted into a termination by mutual agreement. In 1996, the University of Stuttgart asked Rudolf to withdraw his application for a final PhD examination, or it would be denied, rendering his PhD thesis worthless. The legal basis for this is a German law which allows universities to deny or withdraw academic degrees where the candidate has used his academic credentials or knowledge to commit a crime. Rudolf subsequently withdrew his application.[3]

Between 1991 and 1994, Herrmann and other lawyers used Rudolf's Auschwitz report to defend several clients, among them Otto Ernst Remer, a former Wehrmacht officer charged with Volksverhetzung (inciting hatred). Rudolf knew his work would be associated with a Holocaust denier, but insisted that even Remer had a right to a legal defense. Rudolf stated that his findings at Auschwitz and Birkenau "completely shattered his world view". Among other things, Rudolf's report claims that only insignificant traces of cyanide compounds can be found in the samples taken from Auschwitz. However, Richard Green and Jamie McCarthy from The Holocaust History Project have criticized the report, saying that like Fred Leuchter in the Leuchter report, Rudolf did not discriminate against the formation of iron-based cyanide compounds, which are not a reliable indicator of the presence of cyanide, so that his experiment was seriously flawed.[5]

Legal consequences: escape, deportation, and imprisonment

In 1995, Rudolf was sentenced to 14 months in prison for inciting racial hatred by the district court of Stuttgart because of the "Rudolf Report", as Holocaust denial is a crime in Germany. Rudolf avoided prison by fleeing to Spain, England, and finally to the United States.[1] His first marriage was to a German national with whom he had two children, and they settled at Hastings in England, until his wife divorced him and returned to Germany with their children.[3]

Meanwhile, criminal investigations continued in Germany. In August 2004, the district court of Mannheim distrained a bank account in an attempt to confiscate 55% of Rudolf's business turnover from the years 2001-2004, some €214,000, but at that time the account contained only some €5,000. Rudolf and his associates had earned this money by selling publications which are banned in Germany, but Rudolf's business was in the UK and the US.

On September 11, 2004, Rudolf married a US citizen and settled in Chicago, and they later had a child.[6] He applied for political asylum, or at least for the right not to be expelled, but this was turned down in November 2004 on the basis that the application had no merits and was a case of Frivolous litigation. Rudolf appealed against this ruling, and in early 2006 the US Federal Court in Atlanta found that his application was not "frivolous", but upheld the decision that it had no merit.[1] The Immigration Services said that Rudolf did not have a right to file an application to remain with his family. On November 14, 2005, Rudolf was deported to Germany where he was wanted for inciting racial hatred.[7] and "disparaging the dead".[4] On arrival there, he was arrested by the police and transferred to a prison in Rottenburg, then to another in Stuttgart in Baden-Württemberg. On March 15, 2007, the Mannheim District Court sentenced him to two years and six months in prison for inciting hatred, disparaging the dead, and libel. Rudolf accepted the verdict, and copies of his "Lectures on the Holocaust" were confiscated and destroyed. The prosecution's initial request to confiscate €214,000 was reduced to €21,000, the total turnover from the sales of the book.[8] He was released from prison on July 5, 2009 and now lives in the US with his wife and daughter.[9]

Publications

After Rudolf was dismissed from the Max Planck Institute, he began to publish several books promoting Holocaust denial. He founded Castle Hill Publishers in Hastings, England with Theses & Dissertations Press as its American outlet. In 2000, Rudolf initiated an English language Holocaust Handbooks Series, a series of Holocaust denial titles which, as of 2013, encompassed 25 titles. Furthermore, Rudolf is closely associated with the Belgian Holocaust denial organization Vrij Historisch Onderzoek (VHO). Until his arrest in late 2005, he published the now defunct "Vierteljahreshefte für freie Geschichtsforschung" (Quarterly journal for free historical research), described by the German Office for the Protection of the Constitution as "a right-wing extremist organ."[10]

Selected publications

References

  1. 1 2 3 US Court of Appeals, Eleventh District (January 15, 2008). "Scheerer v. Chertoff DHS".
  2. "A German court sentenced Holocaust denier Germar Rudolf to two and a half years in prison for inciting racial hatred in publications and Web sites which "systematically" called into question the Nazi genocide." "German Holocaust Denier Imprisoned for Inciting Racial Hatred", Deutsche Welle, February 16, 2007.
  3. 1 2 3 4 A Rebel at germarrudolf.com, accessed 27 October 2015
  4. 1 2 Jonas E. Alexis, Christianity and Rabbinic Judaism, Volume 2 (2013), p. 303
  5. Green, Richard J. "Chemistry is Not the Science: Rudolf, Rhetoric, and Reduction". Retrieved 2008-05-26.
  6. David Cole, Republican Party Animal: The "Bad Boy of Holocaust History" Blows the Lid (2014), p. 120
  7. "2006 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices: Germany," US Department of State (March 6, 2007)
  8. N24 (March 15, 2007). "Haft für Holocaust-Leugner". N24. Archived from the original on 2007-05-05. Retrieved 2007-03-20.
  9. http://germarrudolf.com/a-rebel/
  10. Annual Report of the Office for the Protection of the Constitution 2002, Right-Wing Extremist Activities, VII. Revisionism, “German revisionist uses foreign press for agitation,” Page 84.

External links

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