My
post on Pat Buchanan's vile defense of
Nazi war criminal John Demjanjuk has generated a number of
responses from those who agree with Buchanan that there isn't
much evidence against Demjanjuk. (One commenter even decried
"hysteria about the Holocaust.")
For those who remain unconvinced, I suggest you take a look at
the 2002
ruling by U.S. District Court Judge Paul R. Matia, which
stood up on appeal. It contains 294 findings of fact detailing
the documentary evidence that placed Demjanjuk as a guard at
several Nazi concentration camps, including the Sobibor death
camp.
Among the evidence presented was an identity pass issued to a
person who, like Demjanjuk, was former soldier in the Soviet Army
who was captured and trained by the Nazis to serve as a guard.
The person in the identity pass bears a striking resemblance to
Demjanjuk, shares his name, exact birth date and birthplace,
father's name, hair and eye color. Below, I've posted an image of
the pass, as well as a close up of the Nazi ID photo placed next
to a 2006 photo of Demjanjuk, from the
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
(For a larger version of this image, click
here.)

Additional documents (such as a disciplinary report, rosters, and
logs) placed the person appearing in the identity pass as a guard
at the Majdanek, Flossenburg and Sobibor camps.
Judge Matia noted that the "guards assigned to Sobibor met
arriving transports of Jews, forcibly unloaded the Jews from the
trains, compelled them to disrobe, and drove them into gas
chambers where they were murdered by asphyxiation with carbon
monoxide… In serving at Sobibor, Defendant contributed to the
process by which thousands of Jews were murdered…"
Furthermore, evidence presented by prosecutors, along with
Demjanjuk's inconsistent explanations, led the judge to determine
that Demjanjuk "misrepresented and concealed his wartime
residences for the purpose of gaining admission into the United
States…"
Judge Matia concluded:
The government had the burden of proving its contention to the
Court by clear, convincing, and unequivocal evidence. It did
so. Although the Court carefully considered the evidence
submitted by defendant to attempt to keep the government from
satisfying its burden, the defendant's evidence was not
sufficiently credible to cast doubt on the documentary
evidence.
The decision was
upheld by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit in
2004, and the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear the case
last year.
It's bad enough that Buchanan is rising to defend Demjanjuk, but
his column is an example of classic Jew-baiting. He attempts to
paint contemporary Jews as hypocrites by referring to Demjanjuk
as an "American Dreyfus," a reference to the to the high-profile
case of anti-Semitism and injustice. This is the typical,
"see, Jews aren't victims, they're persecutors," tactic routinely
employed by anti-Semites.
Then Buchanan concluded his column by comparing Demjanjuk to
Jesus Christ, and invoking the old anti-Semitic smear of Jews as
"Christ killers."
Buchanan wrote:
The spirit behind this un-American persecution has never been
that of justice tempered by mercy. It is the same satanic brew
of hate and revenge that drove another innocent Man up Calvary
that first Good Friday 2,000 years ago.
I can't exactly say this surprises me, but Buchanan really
reached a new low with this effort.