ADL Home image
HOMEREGIONAL OFFICESPRESS CENTERABOUTCONTACT US
SUPPORT ADLSUPPORT ADLsubscribe
Update email profile
 Extremism in America
Introduction
Individuals
Richard Barrett
Louis Beam
Bertollini and Story/11th Hour Remnant Messenger
Richard Butler
Arthur Butz
Willis Carto
Alex Curtis
David Duke
Edward Fields
Dan Gayman
Bo Gritz
Matt Hale
Richard Kelly Hoskins
David Irving
Mark Koernke
David Lane
Alex Linder
Kevin MacDonald
Tom Metzger
Pete Peters
William Pierce
Ted Pike/National Prayer Network
Billy Roper
Richard Scutari
Malik Zulu Shabazz
Bradley Smith/CODOH
Edgar J. Steele
Jared Taylor/American Renaissance
Hesham Tillawi
Ernst Zundel
Groups
Movements
Media
Latest Updates
Ernst Zundel
Update: Zundel convicted, sentenced to five years in prison


Now facing hate crimes charges in Germany, Ernst Zundel has been a leading Holocaust denier and white supremacist ideologue for more than two decades.

In the late 1970s he began running Samisdat Publishers, one of the largest distributors of Nazi and neo-Nazi propaganda and memorabilia in the world. He has also been the inspiration for and key content provider of the Zundelsite, since 1995 a leading online repository of Holocaust-denial propaganda.

Zundel’s activities led to numerous trials in Canada, where he lived from 1958 to 2001, and made him subject to arrest when he returned to Germany, his country of birth. Adept at attracting media attention, Zundel apparently relishes his legal battles with what he calls the "Holocaust industry."

Zundel married his Webmaster, Ingrid Rimland, and moved to Tennessee in 2001, only to be deported back to Canada by U.S. officials for visa violations in early 2003 and deported to Germany in March, 2005.

Many far-right groups and Holocaust deniers have united to support Zundel; in April 2004, for instance, an international conference of Holocaust deniers and neo-Nazis convened in his honor in Sacramento.

Ernst Zundel
Born: 1939
Residence: Germany (1939-1958); Toronto and Montreal, Canada (1958-2001); Tennessee (2001-2003); Canada (2003-2005); Currently in German custody
Organizations: German-Jewish Historical Commission (defunct), Concerned Parents of German Descent (defunct), Samisdat Publishers, Ltd.
Ideology: Holocaust denial; white supremacy
Colleagues: Ingrid Rimland (wife and Webmaster), Douglas Christie (lawyer), Paul Fromm, the Institute for Historical Review, Walter Mueller
Financial support: Sale of Nazi and neo-Nazi regalia, donations
Books: The Hitler We Loved and Why; UFOs -- Nazi Secret Weapon?, German Secret Weapons of World War II; Secret Nazi Polar Expeditions


Early Work
Holocaust Denial and White Supremacy

According to an autobiographical work, Ernst Zundel immigrated to Canada in 1958, at the age of 19, to escape the draft in West Germany. A self-described "Christian and pacifist," he settled in Montreal and supported himself as a commercial artist, photographer and photo retoucher.[1] In 1978, however, a Canadian Broadcasting Company journalist revealed that using his middle names, Christof Friedrich, Zundel had become Canada's leading pro-Nazi and Holocaust-denial propagandist. Once exposed, Zundel continued his efforts under his conventional name.

The principal outlet for Zundel's early activities was his Toronto-based company, Samisdat Publishers, Ltd., which produced Zundel originals (like The Hitler We Loved and Why) and Holocaust-denial classics (including The Hoax of the Twentieth Century, by Arthur Butz; A Straight Look at the Third Reich and The Six Million Swindle, by Austin App; and Auschwitz, Dachau, Buchenwald: The Greatest Fraud in History, by Richard Harwood).[2] In addition, Zundel created two essentially one-man operations: the German-Jewish Historical Commission, which promoted Holocaust denial, and Concerned Parents of German Descent, which disseminated anti-Zionist propaganda to ethnic Germans. Zundel also contributed articles to the now-defunct West Virginia-based neo-Nazi magazine, Liberty Bell, published by George Dietz, and was listed on the editorial staff of White Power Report, another Dietz publication.

Zundel's early writings are a mix of neo-Nazi and white supremacist rhetoric, condemnations of Jews and Zionism, charges that Western media and governments bash Germany and Germans, and Holocaust-denial and conspiracy theory. He was fixated on U.F.O.'s, believing them to be Nazi secret weapons based somewhere in Antarctica. He also promoted a new edition of Henry Ford's The International Jew in Liberty Bell.[3] An article in the January 1977 issue of White Power Report entitled "Our New Emblem: The Best of Two Worlds" (referring to a design that merged a swastika and the American flag) conveys the tone of Zundel's work during this time:

Wherever we look, we White people find ourselves besieged by peoples of other races who compete aggressively against us for jobs, food, housing, education and above all -- power! The Jews are particularly adept at seizing or insinuating themselves into strategic positions in our society where they wield power far beyond the extent of their numbers....Through us, the White majority of Europe and America, the Jewish minority have obtained their advantages, including their Israel, their Federal Reserve, their World Bank and their International Monetary Fund. In exchange for these advantages, the Jews give us -- their White hosts -- wars, depressions, inflation, unemployment, energy shortages, higher and higher taxes and air piracy. Like sheep, they expect us to go down the road with them -- all the way to the kosher slaughterhouse. We White people of America have done nothing so far which would frustrate the Jews' expectations or their ambitions of becoming the world's slavemasters.

Zundel also proselytized among minority European ethnic groups in Canada; in a 1981 flier to "Fellow Canadians of the Ethnic Press," he warned:

You may remember that I had predicted that your own ethnic group and some of your leading citizens would next be the targets of defamation, vilification and distortion and that some of you might be transported to the Soviet Union and/or Israel for torture, trial and execution because the Zionists are striving to equate anti-Communism with Fascism in the public mind. Despite the hateful depiction of Poles and Ukrainians in the Holocaust hate film,[4] you did not heed my warning. And now, the Zionist hate campaign is directed at you! ....

A wedge of lies, half-truths and anti-German propaganda has been driven between us by the Zionist-Communist commissars of disinformation. This propaganda wedge was purposely designed to keep anti-Communist peoples divided one against each other. We must smash this wedge of hate and come together.

Along these lines, Zundel also sent a flier to "Jewish leaders in North America, clergymen, politicians and media representatives" that warned (using the header "Act now -- prevent pogroms later"):

Should the present media-born hate campaign continue or be allowed to go unanswered, I see trouble ahead -- not from responsible people like myself, but from simple working people who express themselves by actions, not words, simply because they see no other recourse. Please believe me when I say that there is a growing and powerful current of German anger and frustration. I appeal to you to heed these danger signals and to prevent the situation from getting out of hand.... Act now. Avoid more pain, suffering and disunity. We do not need any pogroms on this continent -- neither against Jews nor Germans.

back to top

Neo-Nazi Publishing

In the late 1970s and early 1980s, the catalog of Samisdat Publications grew from a few texts about Holocaust denial to a vast offering of Nazi and neo-Nazi memorabilia. It included some 50 posters featuring "Nazi Secret Weapons" ("military artists' depictions of actual German Secret Weapons are taken directly from the original blueprints, enlivened by showing them in combat action situations") including one-man jet-packs, "aerial mines" and flying saucers. It also contained an audiotape section of "Historic Speeches, Marches and Battle Songs," featuring "Music of the Third Reich" ("inspiring and nourishing food for the Aryan soul"), "Wehrmacht Victory Fanfare," "Adolf Hitler Speaks," "The Reichstag Declaration of War" and two-dozen more, along with numerous pamphlets and books devoted to Holocaust denial and the enumeration of Allied and Zionist "war crimes."

Through the sale of these materials and the solicitation of donations, Zundel was able to distribute his Holocaust-denial and pro-Nazi materials throughout the world, with particular emphasis on Canada, the United States and West Germany. In the United States, he claimed, his mailing list of media outlets, politicians and educators reached 29,000; he placed full-page advertisements for Samisdat Publications in several mass-circulation magazines and was even able, for a time, to buy advertising space in Marvel Comics. He cultivated an especially sympathetic clientele for his mail order business in West Germany and sent mailings to the entire West German parliament.

The dissemination of Nazi and neo-Nazi materials was illegal in West Germany (as it is today in the unified German state), and Zundel's efforts attracted the attention of the authorities. In December 1980, a representative of the West German Federal Ministry of Finance announced in the Bundestag that between January 1978 and December 1979, some "200 hundred shipments of right-wing extremist and neo-Nazi content [including] books, periodicals, symbols, decorations, films, cassettes, [and] records" were intercepted as they entered Germany. These shipments, the official reported, "came overwhelmingly from Canada." In an April 23, 1981, letter to the Canadian Jewish Congress, Bonn confirmed that the Canadian source was Samisdat Publishers.

back to top

Litigation and Trials
Mail-ban and “False News” trials (1981-1990)

As Zundel's notoriety grew in the 1970’s, he also came to the attention of Canadian officials, who launched several criminal investigations against him. In November 1981, postal authorities suspended Samisdat's mailing privileges; the government argued that Zundel's anti-Jewish campaign violated criminal prohibitions against using the mails to incite hatred. While waiting for a review board to hear his appeal, he distributed his materials through a post office box in Niagara Falls, New York. In January 1983, Canada lifted its ban on his mailing privileges and his activities resumed there.

The First "False News" Trial
The next installment of his legal struggles began in 1985, when Zundel was charged under Section 177 of the Criminal Code of Canada for "knowingly publishing false news." The centerpieces of the trial, which began in January, were two Zundel mailings: a four-page letter entitled "The West, War, and Islam" and a thirty-page pamphlet entitled "Did Six Million Really Die?" While Zundel only added a foreword and conclusion to the latter, he composed "The West, War, and Islam" himself and mailed it to several hundred public figures in the Middle East. The letter warns Muslims that their enemies - particularly "international Zionists" -- were "goad[ing] the West into a future criminal war" against them. Zundel asked for financial support so that he could lead the fight against the Zionist misinformation campaigns and dispel the myth of the "so-called Holocaust," from which, he claimed, Zionists gain so much of their power.

Among those testifying for the prosecution at the trial were Holocaust survivors, a history professor and even a banker -- since Zundel had claimed that an international conspiracy existed among Freemasons, Communists, international financiers, and Zionists. Speaking for the defense were such leading Holocaust deniers as Sweden's Ditlieb Felderer, France's Robert Faurisson and Canada's James Keegstra, all of whom have been convicted in their own countries under hate crimes laws for their Holocaust-denial activities. In this case as in his subsequent trials, Zundel's lawyer was Douglas Christie, who has represented several leading far-right extremists in Canada.[5]

In the Canadian press, opinions were divided on the wisdom of prosecuting Zundel. Some Jewish organizations lobbied strongly for his prosecution; Sabina Citron, of the Canadian Holocaust Remembrance Association, went so far as to file charges privately against Zundel under Canada's criminal code. Others, however, both in the Jewish and non-Jewish communities, suggested that a trial would only provide Zundel with an opportunity to publicize his views.

Legal scholars also questioned the decision to prosecute Zundel under the so-called "false news" charge. To win, prosecutors had the distasteful task of "proving" that the Holocaust had occurred and the difficult task of proving that Zundel had knowingly lied when he wrote that it had not. Section 281 of the Criminal Code, which prohibits the promotion of hatred against any "identifiable group," seemed a more appropriate charge, but the statute was notoriously difficult to prosecute. Other criticisms were raised during the trial: for example, the prosecutor could have asked the judge to take "judicial notice" of the fact of the Holocaust; had the judge agreed to do so, the jurors would have been instructed simply to accept the historical fact of the Holocaust. In fact, the government did request judicial notice of the Holocaust, but only after it had called survivors and academics to the witness stand. The judge subsequently refused the request, stating that once the Holocaust had been made the subject of testimony the defense deserved the opportunity to respond.

Nonetheless, Zundel was convicted on February 26, 1985, of publishing false news about the Holocaust. He was sentenced to fifteen months in jail and three years probation, during which he was prohibited from publishing on the subject. The fear that the trial would help Zundel publicize his cause was apparently merited. Making effective use of TV cameras, he arrived at the courthouse each day in a conspicuous bulletproof vest and a blue hard hat bearing the inscription "Freedom of Speech," and was usually accompanied by a retinue of supporters wearing yellow hard hats. He appeared for sentencing in black-face (indicating that white men could not receive justice in Canada), and carrying a cross, also inscribed with a "Freedom of Speech" motto. At an impromptu press conference afterward he announced, "[The seven-week trial] cost me $40,000 in lost work -- but I got $1 million worth of publicity for my cause. It was well worth it."

The Second "False News" Trial
Zundel did not serve his sentence. In January 1987, the Ontario Court of Appeals overturned the 1985 conviction, citing procedural errors during the trial. In June 1987, a new trial was granted.

This second trial was responsible for introducing one of the most influential Holocaust-denial publications. In an attempt to support his fraudulent claims, Zundel hired Fred Leuchter -- an unlicensed, self-taught "engineer" from Massachusetts who designed capital punishment equipment -- to conduct unauthorized experiments at the Auschwitz death camp memorial. (After Leuchter's Holocaust-denial materials were published, public outcry prompted the licensing board of engineers in Massachusetts to investigate his credentials; an ensuing lawsuit for practicing without a license was settled when Leuchter agreed to cease representing himself as an engineer). Leuchter's "investigation" -- he sneaked into the gas chamber at Auschwitz and chipped samples off the walls -- unsurprisingly concluded that no gas chambers existed at Auschwitz, Birkenau or Majdanek. The Leuchter Report was published by Samisdat, and has since earned the status of gospel among Holocaust-denial activists.[6]

In addition to Leuchter's "expert" testimony (which the court dismissed, citing his lack of credentials), Zundel's defense witnesses again included Holocaust deniers such as Mark Weber, Bradley Smith, Ditlieb Felderer and Robert Faurisson. Also testifying for Zundel was David Irving, a right-wing British historian of World War II who had promulgated the controversial thesis that Hitler had not known about or ordered the destruction of European Jewry. Irving used the occasion to publicize his "conversion" to unequivocal denial of the Holocaust. Notwithstanding the sympathetic testimony of these men, on November 13, 1988, Zundel was convicted and sentenced to a nine-month jail term. On this occasion, the judge had taken judicial notice of the Holocaust at the start of the trial.

When an appeals court upheld the conviction, Zundel reported to Toronto's Don Jail on February 5, 1990, wearing a striped "concentration camp" costume labeled "Political Prisoner Ernst Zundel." After spending a week in jail, he was released on $10,000 bail pending an appeal to Canada's Supreme Court. Zundel described his captivity to the anti-Semitic magazine The Spotlight saying, "I was held in solitary confinement with no windows, a light burning around the clock and a peephole....Sort of how Rudolf Hess was treated."

Two months later, writing in the March 1990 issue of Liberty Bell, Zundel blamed his conviction on "anti-Nazi bias" and the "preconceived notions" about World War II held by prosecutors, lawyers, court officials and the media. The Ontario Court of Appeals, however, ruled that the judge who rendered the 1988 verdict had acted properly in accepting the basic facts of the Holocaust as not open to debate by reasonable people. Nonetheless, on August 27, 1992, the Supreme Court of Canada struck down as unconstitutional the law banning the spread of false news. This decision apparently put an end to the deportation proceedings launched against Zundel after his 1988 conviction.

back to top

Canadian citizenship controversy (1994)

In 1994 Zundel applied to the Canadian Citizenship and Immigration Department for citizenship. He had applied once before, in 1966, but was rejected; according to the Toronto Sun (June 27, 1994), no reason was offered. An anonymous government official was quoted in the same article as saying that although the second application was "flawless," the Canadian government was nevertheless going to "try very hard to deny" Zundel's bid for citizenship.

Under Canadian law, citizenship may be denied to individuals engaged in organized crime, or to those charged with or appealing summary convictions or indictable offences. Zundel's previous legal problems did not fall into any of these categories.[7] Citizenship could also be denied to those deemed a threat to Canadian security. The Canadian Security Intelligence Service, the government body responsible for evaluating applicants who may fall into this category, ruled that Zundel met this criterion because of his links to far-right extremist groups. Zundel tried to suppress the findings of the CSIS; he argued before a Canadian federal court in June 1996 that the Security Intelligence Review Committee, which reviews the CSIS's findings, should be disqualified from ruling on his case because it was demonstrably biased against him (having investigated him previously).

Two months later, in early August 1996, federal court judge Darrel Heald ruled in Zundel's favor, but acknowledged that his ruling undermined the intent of Canada's citizenship statutes and invited legislators to amend the law to make it easier to prevent Zundel from becoming a citizen. Such emendation proved unnecessary, however, because an appeals court reversed Judge Heald's ruling in December 1997. Zundel pursued the matter of CSIS bias to the Canadian Supreme Court, which ruled against him in May 1998. Zundel then attempted increasingly arcane legal maneuvers to prevent the government's findings from being implemented, but his efforts ended in December 2000, when the Supreme Court refused to hear any further appeals. In February 2001, Zundel left Canada for the United States. He lived in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee, until visa violations prompted the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service to deport him back to Canada in February 2003.

back to top

The Zundelsite Trial

In August 1996, the Canadian Human Rights Commission (a government body responsible for enforcing the country's 1977 Human Rights Act), opened yet another chapter in Zundel's saga with the law. At issue was an Internet site that bore Zundel's name -- the so-called "Zundelsite" -- which, since mid-1995, had served as an electronic library of Holocaust-denial texts and which, in the opinion of Zundel's critics,9 incited hatred against Jews. As part of the Human Rights Act, using "telephonic devices" to incite hatred was outlawed, and the CHRC had successfully prosecuted cases involving telephones and telephone answering machines. This was the first time that the Commission targeted an Internet site, and Christie, Zundel's long-time lawyer, argued that the Internet was not "telephonic" and did not fall under the CHRC's purview. In May 1997, a federal adjudicator disagreed. During the next four years, a CHRC tribunal held a lengthy 52 days of hearings on the Zundelsite case, and heard from about 20 witnesses. Because of the broad range of issues -- including free speech, the definition of hate speech and the regulation of the Internet -- many groups followed the trial with interest. Free-speech groups, such as Electronic Frontier Canada, voiced their opposition to the prosecution of the case, though they usually added that they disagreed with Zundel's views about the Holocaust.

Illustration on the Zundelsite
Illustration on the Zundelsite
One of the hearings' central issues was the degree of control, if any, Zundel exercised over the content of the site, which was run by a Ukrainian-born, Paraguay-bred German Mennonite named Ingrid Rimland. At the time, Rimland lived in Carlsbad, California, and used a United States-based Internet service provider. Zundel and Rimland both claimed that Zundel had no role in the site's operation. Rimland affirmed in an affidavit, "I am the creator, designer, editor and primary electronic columnist of the Zundelsite." She asserted that "I decided on the name --'Zundelsite' -- because Mr. Zundel is the world's best-known skeptic of genocidal activities alleged to have happened in German concentration camps.... I do not recall consulting Mr. Zundel if I could use the word 'Zundelsite.' I unilaterally decided that I would."

Lawyers for the prosecution, however, argued that Zundel played an active role in running the site and supplying material. In a November 1995 letter to supporters, Zundel had called Rimland "my Webmaster," and in February 1996 referred to himself as the Zundelsite's "founder." Rimland had written in March 1996 that Zundel had himself "impacted the world in massive, major ways with nothing but an ordinary computer." Pressing the point, the prosecution brought Zundel's estranged wife, Irene, to testify that he paid Rimland $3,000 per month, which included money for the maintenance of the Web site, and that he was in constant communication with her by fax. Zundel "got out of bed in the morning and went straight to the fax machine," she testified. She explained that he would write English and German versions of Holocaust-denial documents, which he would fax to Rimland, who would type and proofread them, then post them on the Web.

On January 18, 2002, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal released its ruling in the matter of Citron and Toronto Mayor's Committee on Community and Race Relations v. Zundel, otherwise known as the Zundelsite trial. At issue was the charge that Zundel's Web site, a clearinghouse for Holocaust denial materials and other anti-Semitic conspiracy theories, would expose a minority (Canadian Jews) to "hatred and contempt," which is illegal under Canadian law. As many expected, Zundel lost, and was ordered to remove the offending sections of his Web site -- which, as the Tribunal noted, would cover the vast majority of the site. The ruling was unenforceable, however, because the Zundelsite is hosted by an American company.

This was a landmark case because it was the first to apply the Canadian Human Rights Act to the Internet, in effect ruling that it is illegal to create and maintain a hate site in Canada. It would appear that other hate sites have the right to a separate hearing before the Tribunal, but Citron and Toronto Mayor's Committee v. Zundel established the fundamental legal principles that would apply in future cases.

Despite their loss before the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal, Zundel and Rimland continued to maintain and expand the "Zundelsite" from their home in Tennessee, safe from further Canadian prosecution. In 2002 the Zundelsite joined a network of Holocaust denial sites which included that of Bradley Smith, the Institute for Historical Review, Frederick Toben's Adelaide Institute in Australia, and the Belgian VHO (Vrij Historisch Onderzoek). It continued to post Rimland's signature "Zgrams," which in recent years have been less devoted to Holocaust denial and more to fulminations against "Jewish power," anti-Semitic and anti-Israel conspiracy theories, and attacks on the U.S. government and the War on Terror.

back to top

Deportation Saga (2003-2007)
Canadian 'Security Certificate'

In February 2003, officials from the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service arrested Zundel at his home in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee, for alleged immigration violations. After being held in INS custody for two weeks, Zundel was deported back to Canada, from where he had come to the U.S. two years earlier.

Facing possible deportation from Canada back to his native Germany, where he would be prosecuted for his neo-Nazi and Holocaust-denying activities, Zundel immediately applied to the Canadian government for refugee status. During hearings to determine whether he would be held in custody while his refugee application was processed, he attempted to portray himself as a human rights activist rather than a white supremacist. "I am known as the Ghandi of the right," Zundel said at the hearing. "What I defend with all my heart is my ethnic group."

Despite Zundel's claims, the Canadian Security Intelligence Service described him as a "lightning rod" for white supremacists, and on May 2, 2003, Canadian Citizenship and Immigration Minister Denis Coderre and Solicitor General Wayne Easter announced that under the provisions of the Canadian Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, they were issuing a "national security certificate" against Zundel. (Such certificates are issued against persons whom Canadian intelligence services deem a threat to Canada's national security or to the human rights of Canadian citizens.) If upheld by a Canadian federal judge, this certificate would automatically deny Zundel refugee status, and require his deportation from Canada.

Zundel responded by launching a number of legal actions designed to stall or derail the confirmation of the security certificate by federal Justice Pierre Blais. Twice Zundel filed unsuccessful motions to have Justice Blais recuse himself on the grounds that he was biased against Zundel.

Zundel also filed two constitutional challenges to the law under which his case is being adjudicated; one such challenge was rejected by an Ontario court on jurisdictional grounds while the other made its way through Canada's federal courts.

While these legal challenges were being heard, Zundel attempted to secure his release from prison. After nearly three months of hearings to determine whether Zundel should be freed on his own recognizance while awaiting a ruling on the security certificate, Justice Blais ruled, based on both public and secret evidence, that Zundel may reasonably be described as a threat to the security of Canada, and that he therefore should remain in custody. Zundel's supporters characterize this ruling as capricious, and claim that Zundel's civil rights are being violated.

In February 2005, capping two years of legal proceedings, Canadian Federal Court Justice Pierre Blais ruled that Holocaust denier Ernst Zundel may reasonably be described as a threat to the security of Canada; under the country's immigration laws he is therefore subject to deportation to his native Germany. Zundel is not a citizen of Canada.

In a scathing 63-page decision, Justice Blais described Zundel as a hypocrite who cultivates a pacifist public image while guiding, aiding and supporting neo-Nazi groups around the world, including some that "propagate violent messages of hate" and work to accomplish "the destruction of governments and multicultural societies."

Justice Blais' ruling was not subject to appeal. Canada deported Zundel to his native Germany in March 2005.

Incitement trial in Germany

Zundel’s long-expected trial in Germany began on November 8, 2005, but was almost immediately delayed after Judge Ulrich Meinerzhagen learned that the defense team included Horst Mahler, a disbarred right-wing German lawyer who had himself been convicted of inciting hatred against Jews in January 2005. Mahler had joined the defense team as the assistant of attorney Sylvia Stolz; Mahler and Stolz were both dismissed by Judge Meinerzhagen, who then adjourned the trial to give a new lawyer time to prepare a case in Zundel’s defense.

The trial resumed, and after four months of proceedings, Zundel was convicted on February 15, 2007 on 14 counts of inciting racial hatred and defaming the memory of the dead. The presiding judge sentenced him to five years in prison, the maximum allowed under German law for those offenses. Zundel’s lawyer vowed to appeal the ruling.

back to top

Ingrid Rimland

According to an autobiography posted on her Internet site, Ingrid Rimland became a "marginal celebrity" before she met Ernst Zundel. She had several novels to her credit and a burgeoning speaking career about such subjects as special education -- she holds an Ed.D. and raised a developmentally disabled child -- and her experiences as a young woman of German descent who grew up in Paraguay and then came to America.

Nevertheless, Rimland did not achieve notoriety in earnest until late 1995, when she became the Webmaster of www.zundelsite.org, one of the earliest Internet Web sites devoted to the rehabilitation of the reputation of Adolf Hitler and the denial of the genocide of European Jewry during World War II. Although Rimland and Zundel told a Canadian Human Rights Tribunal in 1997 that Rimland was the sole proprietor of the Zundelsite, other evidence suggests she has worked quite closely with Zundel on the site, and that he paid her a monthly fee for her efforts. More recently, Rimland and Zundel married and moved to Tennessee.

During the past several years Rimland has expanded and transformed the Zundelsite. Its library of Holocaust denial materials are grouped into "courses"; a visitor who clicks on "Revisionism 101" is directed to "basic revisionist articles offered as a detoxification program to cure the politically correct of the Hollywood version of the Holocaust." "Revisionism 201" and "Revisionism 301" are also available. The site was recently integrated into a online network of Holocaust denial that includes the pages of Bradley Smith, the Institute for Historical Review, the Adelaide Institute in Australia, and the Belgian VHO (Vrij Historisch Onderzoek). Each now shares a common menu that provides easy access to the contents of all the sites.

Rimland has also become known for her "ZGrams," daily columns (distributed through a listserv) that cheerlead for Zundel and other deniers and offer conspiratorial commentary. The "ZGram" of April 26, 1999, is characteristic. Responding to (incorrect) reports that the two teenage killers in the then-recent massacre at Columbine High School were motivated in part by a preoccupation with Hitler and Nazism, she wrote:

These were not manly Aryan teenagers -- these were punks acting like extras out of one of those horrible Hollywood psycho-thrillers! ....They were and are not Hitler's children! They are the product of democracy's failure to provide decent role models to young people...Don't blame Hitler -- he had no hand in raising them! ....Had these two punkers been given correct information about a genuine contemporary moral leader...these youngsters would have known that once there lived a well-bred Aryan man who thoroughly despised all mind games with a brutal and satanic twist, decried all aberrant, unhealthy sexuality, [and] had no use whatsoever for Marilyn Manson shock rock....

The argument is seamlessly of a piece with Holocaust denial: if only these two teenagers had been Nazis, they never would have been mass murderers.

back to top

1 "Zundel-Haus" ­ Ernst Zundel: His Struggle, His Life. Posted on www.zundelsite.org. No author is listed for this 60-page document; however, its revelations suggest that it was either written by Zundel himself or by a follower (probably Rimland) in close consultation with him.

2 Richard Harwood is the pseudonym of Richard Verral, the former editor of Spearhead, the magazine of the English neo-Nazi National Front.

3 Liberty Bell, June 1976 and January 1977.

4 Probably a reference to the 1978 NBC mini-series "Holocaust."

5 Christie has attended Holocaust denial conferences and founded the Western Canada Concept Party, which advocates the secession of western Canada for the purposes of creating an ethnically homogenous state founded on Christian culture and European heritage. He has made bigoted remarks about recent immigrants but is more discreet than his extremist clients; he has not publicly endorsed denial of the Holocaust.

7 In Errol Morris's documentary about Leuchter, Mr. Death, the chemist who tested the samples (not knowing at the time what they were) said, "I don't think the results of The Leuchter Report have any validity."



CONTENTS
Latest News
Quick Profile
Early Work
Holocaust denial/ white supremacy
Neo-Nazi Publishing
Litigation & Trials
Mail-ban/false news trials
Canadian citizenship
Zundelsite trial
Deportation Saga
Canadian 'Security Certificate'
Trial in Germany
Ingrid Rimland

LEARN On-line Home  |  ADL On-line Home   |  Search  |  About ADL  |  Contact ADL  |  Privacy Policy

© 2005 Anti-Defamation League