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Getting desperate...

The below article appeared in the Bradford Telegraph and Argus newspaper last week (even though Guiseley is part of Leeds) with the headline 'Holocaust tales are kept alive'. When the T&A decided to put the same article on their website (article reproduced at the bottom of the page) they decided to change the headline to 'Website launched at Guiseley with survivors'. We wonder if the web editor has heard of 'Tales of the Holohoax' (the book Simon Sheppard was gaoled for) and realised that the definition of the word 'Tale' is as below:

  • Cautionary tale, a traditional story told in folklore, to warn its hearer of a danger
  • Fairy tale, a fictional story that usually features folkloric characters (such as fairies, goblins, elves, trolls, witches, giants, and talking animals) and enchantments
  • Folk tale, a story passed-down within a particular population, which comprises the traditions of that culture or group.
  • Frame tale, whereby the main story is composed, at least in part, for the purpose of organizing a set of shorter stories.
  • Urban legend, a modern folk tale consisting of stories often thought to be factual by those circulating them
  • Old wives' tale, a wisdom much like an urban legend, supposedly passed down by old wives to a younger generation
  • Tall tale, a story that claims to explain the reason for some natural phenomenon

What is really annoying is the fact that these tale-tellers actually received £50,000 of Lottery cash to pay for this rather ordinary website that can't have cost more than a couple of hundred quid to set up.

More and more people are coming to realise that the Holocaust was the Hoax of the Twentieth Century and the people who promote the lie are getting really desperate, that's why every day we see films or documentaries on the TV with the Holohoax tale written in somewhere. The cracks are now showing and they're there for everyone to see and we doubt whether this website and its tear-jerking fables will cover much of those rather large cracks.


Website launched at Guiseley with survivors

An educational website telling the story of holocaust survivors now living in Yorkshire is being launched today.

The website is the brainchild of West Yorkshire charity Holocaust Survivors Friendship Association (HSFA) and is being created with the help of £50,000 from the Heritage Lottery Fund to record memories of the desperate events before and during the Second World War.

The association, which promotes the message of celebrating diversity and difference, says the website will be used for a range of educational initiatives and will be aimed at schools, colleges, universities, community groups and the Government.

Lillian Black, chair of HSFA, said: “The survivors provide us with details of their lives before and during the war, and what happened to them after liberation.

“We hope that their visual testimony now available online will be well used so that together we can work towards a more civil society. We hope their testimony gives others courage to speak out and act when injustice occurs.

“We hope too that it inspires new refugees to see that it is possible to make a new life.

“Never have the lessons of the Holocaust been more important than for the world today. The visual testimony and the remarkable reflections of the survivors who settled in Yorkshire after their terrible experiences illustrate very clearly how the stages of persecution led to the genocide of a whole people.

“The hope that they inspire through their indomitable spirit is the legacy for the future.”

The website – holocaustlearning.org – will be launched at Guiseley School, with survivor Iby Knill, now in her eighties, explaining why Holocaust education is so important in 2010.

The school’s head of history, Paul Clayton, said: “This will be an excellent addition to the resources available to teachers.

“It is incredibly important for young people to see that the holocaust affected people who live in their own community and it not some distant, far away event.”

© 2010 British People's Party, BM Box 5581, London WC1N 3XX