The Holocaust Historiography Project

One-Third of the Holocaust

A four-hour movie offered below in 30 episodes, dealing with the alleged extermination camps at Treblinka, Sobibor, and Belzec. In the traditional version of the Holocaust extermination myth, these three camps make up one-third of the Holocaust. YouTube removed these videos from its site. Our thanks go out to the producer of these videos, Denier Bud, of Holocaust Denier Videos, for allowing us to make these videos available here.

Part 1: Treblinka, Sobibor, and Belzec (16 min. 28 sec.)
The death camps Treblinka, Sobibor, and Belzec make up nearly one-third of the Holocaust. Part 1 explains more about these key camps.
Part 2: Water well (3 min 5 sec.)
On the map we see a water well surrounded by burial pits. The water well would have been contaminated. The storytellers didn’t think of that.
Part 3: Haircut (2 min. 26 sec.)
If you're going to get off a train, and get gassed within the hour, and then thrown into a pit; what is the point of a haircut? Yet that’s part of the story.
Part 4: Engine exhaust (5 min. 23 sec.)
Engine exhaust seems like the best way to make carbon monoxide gas, if you're not a chemist, that is.
Part 5: Nuremberg Trials (26 min. 37 sec.)
Wasn’t the Holocaust completely documented at Nuremberg? Yes it was. If you consider 20 minutes of courtroom time a thorough documentation of 1.5 million deaths.
Part 6: Gassing building (4 min. 24 sec.)
We look at a model of the gassing building that supposedly killed nearly the population equivalent to San Francisco, and find it odd that the building entrance didn’t even have a set of double doors.
Part 7: Abraham Bomba (14 min. 25 sec.)
The featured witness for Treblinka at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum says something very odd: that the Germans disguised the gas chambers as a kind of hair salon, complete with professional barbers. As he says: “… make to believe that they're getting a nice haircut."
Part 8: Eliyahu Rosenberg (4 min. 4 sec.)
A Treblinka witness at the Eichmann trial in 1961 makes some mistakes on the witness stand.
Part 9: Reader’s Digest (10 min. 49 sec.)
An article in February 1943 first brought the Holocaust story to mainstream America. The article also mentioned six million — an uncanny number to throw out considering the supposed fact hadn’t happened yet.
Part 10: Ridiculous German experiments (6 min. 5 sec.)
Experiments the Germans wouldn’t have done. One of the most prestigious Holocaust scholars writes: “Incendiary bombs were tried, but these caused large fires in the surrounding woods.” Uh, OK.
Part 11: Treblinka burial space (7 min. 56 sec.)
We use 3-D modeling to show that the burial space at Treblinka is too small … way too small. The storytellers figured a few large pits would suffice for 700,000 bodies.
Part 12: Belzec burial space (3 min. 45 sec.)
It’s too small also, and we use the Rose Bowl Stadium during the Rose Bowl Game to show that. Watch Part 11 first or this chapter won’t make sense.
Part 13: Sobibor burial space (3 min. 52 sec.)
Let’s put it this way, you can’t bury the equivalent to the stadium spectators of the Rose Bowl Game in two pits not much bigger than the chicken coop, and then sentence someone to life imprisonment based on “the evidence.” Something just isn’t right.
Part 14: Steven Spielberg and witness Alexander Pechersky (12 min. 29 sec.)
Excerpt: “This young black man might be thinking that the slavery that happened to his ancestors is nothing compared to the Holocaust. Except what happened to his ancestors really happened."
Part 15: Rain, wind, fire, and ice (10 min. 25 sec.)
There are some elements the storytellers forgot about. Outdoor cremation fires in the middle of winter, for instance, might work better if they had a roof over them. You know, for when it rained and stuff.
Part 16: Escape tunnel (4 min. 15 sec.)
At Sobibor they tried to dig an escape tunnel. They could only dig down five feet because they said there was a danger of striking water past that. One problem the storytellers forgot about: The burial pits are described as 23 feet deep.
Part 17: Belzec chronicles (11 min. 5 sec.)
A few Belzec-related stories weaved together. Most people would probably agree that barbed wire with tree branches propped into it is not a great example of good design for a security fence in a death camp. We comment on Josef Oberhauser and Rudolf Reder.
Part 18: Physical evidence, part 1 (10 min. 51 sec.)
Why we know more about a tsunami that hit in the year 1700 than what’s underground at Treblinka. We also look at some excerpts from the movie “Mr. Death."
Part 19: Physical evidence, part 2 (6 min. 59 sec.)
Admittedly, mixing Holocaust denial with an episode of the 70s TV show “Charlie’s Angels” seems odd — at first glance that is.
Part 20: Soviets arrive at Treblinka (5 min. 30 sec.)
Holocaust historians copiously write about what the Soviets found when they took over Auschwitz, but strangely omit what the Soviets found when they took over Treblinka. Why is that? Also, when Professor Boder went to Europe after the war to document the Holocaust, he was likely surprised at what people had to say.
Part 21: Destroying evidence (7 min. 9 sec.)
At Treblinka they supposedly destroyed all traces that the camp ever existed. They even tore up the railroad tracks leading to the camp. But at Auschwitz they left seven tons of human hair and 7,000 Jewish inmate eyewitnesses waiting to speak to the Soviets. Why is that?
Part 22: A doctor testifies (4 min. 53 sec.)
No one informed Dr. Berman that the Germans purportedly left Treblinka without leaving a trace. Thus his story of the “tens of thousands of little shoes of little children” is problematic.
Part 23: Lamb (6 min. 9 sec.)
Excerpt: “We're going to cremate a leg of lamb at the beach as a way to better understand the outdoor cremation process."
Part 24: Bone crushing (7 min. 45 sec.)
It looks like three flowers on a football field, but what it’s showing is that it takes space to crush that many bones. And no space is given on the maps for bone crushing.
Part 25: Treblinka’s flammable inner fence (6 min. 53 sec.)
They burned one “B as in Bruce” quarter billion pounds of wood in an area enclosed by a tree branch fence. Hmmm.
Part 26: Treblinka’s outer fence (5 min. 28 sec.)
No tanks are going to get into this camp, what with the anti-tank obstacles surrounding it! But does that make sense? Wouldn’t the large gun mounted on the front of a tank make it unneccessary for the tank to enter the camp?
Part 27: Confessing Germans, part 1 (14 min. 38 sec.)
SS Officer Kurt Gerstein presented himself to his French captors as a very important eyewitness — one of a handful of people who had seen Belzec. Presenting himself as valuable was a strategy for staying alive.
Part 28: Confessing Germans, part 2 (13 min. 51 sec.)
Adolf Eichmann and Franz Suchomel. Adolf Eichmann purposely said the most ridiculous things in his 1961 trial, and the reporters at The New York Times believed him. It’s amazing what people will believe when evil is in the equation.
Part 29: Alexander Donat’s book (10 min. 46 sec.)
It’s a book respected by Holocaust historians. Nevermind that the author has a story to top his peers: He and his wife survived nine death camps. We also look at the following question: “What happened to the Jews of Europe? Did they just disappear into thin air?” We provide an answer.
Part 30: Conclusion (7 min. 27 sec.)
Teaching “tolerance” is great. Suggestion: Use real examples. You don’t need to use a lie, when there are real examples. We conclude by looking at how the belief in the Holocaust leads to unfair United States foreign policy in the Middle East, and from that, what Americans then spend their time reading about in the newspapers.