Red Cross Holocaust Tracing

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Uploaded by on Nov 18, 2009

The Greater Palm Beach Area Chapter of the American Red Cross is redoubling its efforts to find answers for survivors who lost loved ones during the World War II era more than 60 years ago. In November 2009, the local Red Cross hosted distinguished guest Linda Klein, Director of the Red Cross Holocaust & War Victims Tracing and Information Center, which is located in Baltimore. Klein traveled throughout Palm Beach County, spreading word of the Red Cross free tracing service with a sense of urgency to community groups including Alpert Jewish Family & Childrens Service, Child Survivors/Hidden Children of the Holocaust, the American Red Cross, Ruth Rales Jewish Family Service, the Volen Center, and several area temples. Her stay in Palm Beach was concluded with a community forum, held at the South County Service Center of the American Red Cross in Boca Raton. In three days' time, the Red Cross met personally with 918 people to talk about Holocaust Tracing. Less than a week following Klein's outreach, the local Red Cross had already opened 13 tracing cases.

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  • for 40 years after WW2 the Intl Red Cross maintained that the deaths at the the German labor camps were caused by typhus and malnutrition. Until the notorious Jewish Lobby usurped the Red Cross with their "Shoah business" which became widely entrenched in the jew-controlled mass media. The jews forced the Red Cross to alter their own historical evidence to accomodate the bogus "6 million" narrative. So then the world was expected to buy that 270,000 deaths somehow became 8 million.

  • the International Red Cross monitored all of the German labor camps and affirmed that there was no systematic extermination. There were around 250,000 people who died at the German camps from malnourishment and diseases which resulted after the Allies bombed all of the German supply warehouses. Perhaps less than 20% of the 250,000 casualties were jews. Nearly all of the european jews were deported to America and Palestine during the several years prior to WW2.

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