THIS WEBSITE knows that the following are in need of Christian sustenance, for the brave fight that they or their loved ones put up for the cause of Free Speech and scientific inquiry. If our visitors know of others who are suffering, please contact us. [For the latest victims click here.] [Now read the German Government’s 1998 Attempt to Justify its Suppression of Free Speech and their replies to Britons who have protested about this violation of free speech].
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Original Colour photograph from David Irving: Goebbels. Mastermind of the Third Reich (picture by Walter Frentz)
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Anneliese Remer
The widow of Otto-Ernst Remer, highly decorated German army general, who died in her arms aged 86 in exile on October 4, 1997:
The German government stepped in to forbid the funeral ceremony in Germany, in case the traditional soldier’s lament (Ich hatt’ einen Kameraden) was sung. On November 4, 1997 the German government cancelled pension payments to the general’s widow.
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Margarete Walendy
The wife of publisher Udo Walendy, (left), who has been imprisoned by the Germans — as the judge shamefully announced, not for what he had said, but for what he had “left unsaid.” Dipl. Pol. Margarete Walendy [A German-language dossier on the Walendy case]
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Günter Deckert
ex-schoolmaster and father of a young family, now serving his fifth year in prison in Germany for interpreting the scientific lecture by execution technology consultant Fred Leuchter in 1990, and for chairing a lecture by British writer David Irving at Weinheim in 1991. Several Britons have protested to the German embassy about this violation of free speech. His address in prison is: Günter Deckert – politischer Häftling – |
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![]() was a wartime German officer in Italy. Now eighty years old, he was acquitted on August 1, 1996 by an Italian court on charges relating to his minor role in the wartime Nazi shooting of hostages after communist partisans ambushed and killed a German army patrol in Rome. Priebke was put on trial again after a public outcry, and sentenced to five years’ imprisonment; taking his twenty months’ prisoner of war internment into account, this would have resulted in his release later this year (1998). In 1998 however he was put on trial by a military court for a third time, and given a life sentence. He has written to us: “Would you be willing to help me?” |
The reputable Italian body, Associazione Uomo e Libertà, asks that people around the world protest Priebke’s case, writing to
Amnesty International, Letters of encouragement can be sent to Erich Priebke
[German-language dossier on the case]
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