- "The Holocaust has never happened, the conditions of life in the concentration camps were normal, etc...". This is a picture taken by a SS. It shows how "normal" was the life in Dachau: This never happened...
- One of the arguments often used by the deniers concern the crematories. In several publications, they claim that these crematories never existed or that they were used for cooking. These five pictures were taken after the liberation of the Dachau concentration camp and were taken by Slovenian internees in the beginning of May 1945. On the photos is seen the last equip of internees who worked in the crematorium. Germans changes the teams each six months. The people of the precedent team were killed so that they could not witness on Nazi atrocities. Those Slovenians on the photos were lucky because the camp was liberated before the Nazis could kill them. The photographs were taken for the reason that everybody could see what was the procedure with the death, actually killed internees in the concentration camp like..: Photo 1 - Photo 2 - Photo 3 - Photo 4 - Photo 5 (Thanks to Ivo Vranicar for the informations about these pictures)
- The following document is an article published in 1939 in the "Illustrierte Beobachter", a very popular German magazine. It shows the visit of Professor Landra, director of the Bureau of Social Affairs in the Italian ministry of Culture in the concentration camp of Sachsenhausen. This document refute the common argument used just after the war, saying that the German citizens didn't knew anything about concentration camps: "We didn't knew"
- One of the most secret side of the Holocaust: the systematic kidnapping perpetrated by SS units and German police of children who were considered by the nazis as "racially good". These children were sent to Germany in order to "Germanized". The other were killed..: This was the "Lebensborn" project.
- How many victims of the Holocaust? We have received a lot of mail with this question. This new page try to give you an answer: The victims of the Holocaust: an estimation.