Disable ads!
Ernst Zundel
Part of a series on Antisemitism Part of Jewish history History Timeline Reference Manifestations Academic Anti-globalization Arab Boycotts Christian Economic Gaza War Islamic Holocaust denial Nation of Islam New Racial Religious Secondary Worldwide Antisemitic canards Blood libel Deicide Dreyfus affair Host desecration Jewish Bolshevism Jewish lobby Judeo-Masonism Kosher tax Stab-in-the-back myth Well poisoning Zionist Occupation Government Antisemitic publications On the Jews and Their Lies La France juive Protocols of the Elders of Zion The International Jew Mein Kampf Zweites Buch The Secret Relationship Between Blacks and Jews The Turner Diaries Hunter (William Luther Pierce) Antisemitism on the Web Jew Watch Stormfront Persecution Expulsions Ghettos in Europe Pogroms Jewish hat Judensau Yellow badge Spanish Inquisition Segregation Jewish quota The Holocaust Nazism Opposition UN Watch Anti-Defamation League Community Security Trust Fundamental Rights Agency (FRA) Philo-Semitism Stephen Roth Institute Wiener Library Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) Simon Wiesenthal Center (SWC) Union of Councils for Soviet Jews (UCSJ) Swedish Committee Against Antisemitism (SCAA) Yad Vashem Zionism Category v t e Ernst Christof Friedrich Zündel (born April 24, 1939) is a German publisher infamously known for his Holocaust denial. He has been jailed several times: in Canada for publishing literature "likely to incite hatred against an identifiable group", and on charges of being a threat to national security; in the United States, of overstaying his visa; and in Germany for charges of "inciting racial hatred". He lived in Canada from 1958 to 2000. In 1977, Zündel founded a small press publishing house called Samisdat Publishers which issued such neo-Nazi pamphlets as "The Hitler We Loved and Why" and "Did Six Million Really Die?", both prominent documents of the Holocaust denial movement. On February 5, 2003, Ernst Zündel was detained by local police in the US and deported to Canada, where he was detained for two years on a Security Certificate for being a foreign national considered a threat to national security pending a court decision on the validity of the certificate. Once the certificate was upheld, he was deported to Germany and tried in the state court of Mannheim on outstanding charges of incitement for Holocaust denial dating from the early 1990s. On February 15, 2007, he was convicted and sentenced to the maximum term of five years in prison. All these imprisonments and prosecutions were for inciting hatred against an identifiable group. He was released on March 1, 2010.

Read more on wikipedia.org

All quotes by Ernst Zundel

Edit

photo Ernst Zundel
Background photo by Giuliana