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added by this website]  London,
Thursday, April 17, 2008 Survivor's
horrific tale will be used to 'rubbish
deniers' By Rachel Fletcher THE STORY a Birkenau survivor
who also lived through the 1945 sinking of the
Cap Arcona ship is being meticulously
researched in order to refute the claims of
Holocaust-deniers.  David
Irving comments: | Mr PIVNIK really does
have rotten luck. First Auschwitz,
and having to lick the boots of Josef
Mengele (below), no less; then
cruising in the Cap Arcona; and
finally having Andrew Lownie as his
literary agent. If we did not know better,
we would say that Pivnik is one of those
characters one comes across, like
Albert Speer, who want to be the
bride at every wedding and the corpse at
every funeral.  Lownie was for a time
my own London literary agent; he proved to
be even more useless than the insipid,
pink-shirted pansy Michael Sissons,
whose flabby hand I today still remember
pressing, forty-five years after I walked
into his office at A D Peters in the
Strand. Eeeugh. As for the incomparable
Lownie: he signed the deal I struck with
editor Andrew Neil at The Sunday
Times, under which that worthy would
pay me £75,000 for the excerpts of
the Goebbels
Diaries which I brought back from the
KGB archives in Moscow in 1992. After publishing the
excerpts, The Sunday Times welched
on the final two payments, over fifty
thousand; they never paid me. Not the
first time they had acted so, it turned
out. But this time it was because they had
come under severe pressure from those nice
folks next door, who told them not to part
with one more penny to that dreadful Mr
Irving (or there'd be no more advertising
revenue, see?). Wringing his hands,
Andrew Lownie minced around his office,
and decided there was nothing he could, or
would, do about this Breach of Contract.
He left it to me to take Neil's newspaper
to the High Court. Which I did. (But
Lownie still pocketed his fifteen
percent). As for this unfortunate
Anselmus-character Mr Pivnik, he reminds
me of a reader's letter I read decades ago
in The Daily Telegraph - which had
obviously verified the writer's
credentials: he had survived the sinking
of Titanic in 1912, then the
evacuation from Dunkirk in 1940 -- the
only recorded occasion in history when the
British got to the beaches before the
Germans -- and he had been one of the
first British soldiers to hit the sands of
Normandy on D-day in 1944. We await Mr Pivnik's new
book with interest, and hope he does not
turn out to have Slept with the Wolves, or
to be a close relative of Mr B.
Wilkomirski and other
ASSHOLS - fellows
of the Association of Spurious Survivors
of the Holocaust and Other Liars. | Polish-born Sam Pivnik, 81, spent four
months in Birkenau before being sent to a
coal-mining camp in Poland. He was one of just 350
survivors of the Cap Arcona ship, which sank
in 1945 after being
mistakenly fired upon
by the RAF. Thousands of concentration-camp
prisoners who were aboard died.
[Website
comment: They will be saying that Dresden was
mistakenly bombed next].Both his parents and all but one of his six
siblings were killed in the Holocaust. Mr Pivnik's story has been researched by writer
and former army officer Adrian Weale, and is
supported by literary agent Andrew Lownie and
Aish. Mr Weale, who has spent the last five years
working on books about the SS and Holocaust
survivors, said: "In the process of doing
background research, I read a lot of Holocaust
memoirs. Many are quite
contrived and often not true.
[Website
comment: In Germany and Austria they imprison
writers for saying that.] We are
trying to set down an unimpeachable record that
can't be rubbished by deniers. "People like David Irving will pick apart
inaccurate books to say it never happened. It is
damaging to history and sows confusion in the minds
of the younger generation. "I have been going back to the original sources
to confirm parts of the story, for example for the
names of some of the SS personnel involved. I have
been to the National Archives in Washington and the
Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington." Mr Weale's research even uncovered a photograph
of Mr Pivnik's grandmother, taken as part of an
initial Nazi plan to evacuate
Jews to Madagascar. Research assistant Philip Appleby said:
"There are three or four Holocaust memoirs where
you can say people survived by a sheer miracle. Sam
is one." Mr Weale expects to finish writing the book in
around three months. A publisher is still being
sought. Mr Pivnik, now a retired tailor and art dealer
living in London, told the JC: "I cleaned the
trains at Birkenau -- I was there at the beginning.
I had typhus. " At one time, I kissed Dr [Josef]
Mengele's boots, pleading not to be sent to the gas
chambers. I have seen hangings; as a teenager, I
had to pull the stools out from under people. 
"I don't know how I avoided being shot on the
Cap Arcona. I jumped into the sea and held
on to a lump of wood. The wind blew me to the
coast. There was plenty of shooting." He later fought in Israel's War of Independence
as a Machalnik (volunteer from abroad). He will
attend the final Machal reunion in Israel next
month.
[Website
comment for non-British readers: Israel's "Great
War of Independence" was the dirty guerrilla war
waged by Jewish settlers in Palestine against the
British mandate troops, using every foul atrocity
in the book. Under the circumstances, it seems
strange that Pivnik still lives in
London.]. "We did go back to Poland, but I couldn't take
it. It was very traumatic, like seeing nothing but
black in front of me." The Friends of Sam Fund has been established to
fund research and publicity for the project. Rabbi Naftali Schiff, Aish executive
director, said: "At a time when the Holocaust is
under fire from revisionists, we value survivors so
much because their courage to tell their stories
turns a history lesson into a tangible, moving and
personal reality." -
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