Jul 15, 2012
Auschwitz Monster Found Alive
The Nazi sadist who tortured and sent 15,700 Jews to their deaths at Auschwitz was discovered by a British newspaper.
Ynetnews
British newspaper The Sun said it has tracked down the world's most wanted Nazi war criminal — who helped send 15,700 Jews to their deaths at Auschwitz — in Budapest, Hungary.
The paper said Ladislaus Csizsik-Csatary, 97, who served as a police commander in charge of a Jewish ghetto in Kassa, Hungary during World War Two, fled Kassa after the was and was sentenced to death for war crimes in his absence in Czechoslovakia in 1948.
He created a new identity and worked as an art dealer in Canada, but disappeared again 15 years ago when his cover was blown and the government began to build a case against him.
According to documents uncovered the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Jerusalem, Csizsik-Csatary took pleasure in beating women with a whip he carried on his belt, and also forced them to dig ditches in frozen ground with their bare hands.
The documents also revealed that he made dissenting Jews take up stress positions for hours, hit them with a dog lead and oversaw a shoot-on-sight policy if they tried to escape.
Nazi hunters from the Wiesenthal Center, which recently placed Csizsik-Csatary at the top of its most wanted list, provided The Sun with information regarding his possible whereabouts.
The Sun said its reporters tracked him down to a two-bedroom apartment in Budapest.
"Once our team found Csizsik-Csatary they were able to establish he was the Nazi collaborator. We confronted him at the flat where he had been living quietly among families unaware of his chilling past," The Sun reported.
According to the report, Csizsik-Csatary, who speaks English with a Canadian accent after decades living in Montreal and Toronto, answered the door in just socks and underpants.
"When we asked if he could justify his past, he looked shocked and stammered 'No, no. Go away.' Questioned about his deportation case in Canada he answered angrily in English: 'No, no. I don’t want to discuss it.' Our reporter asked: 'Do you deny doing it? A lot of people died as a result of your actions.' He replied: 'No I didn’t do it, go away from here,' before slamming the door," The Sun reported.
During the legal proceedings against him in Canada, Csizsik-Csatary admitted to taking part in the transportation of Jews to Auschwitz, but claimed that his role was "limited."
After studying dossiers of evidence disclosed by The Sun, Hungary's Deputy Chief Prosecutor Dr Jeno Varga said: "There is an ongoing investigation. Prosecutors are studying the information submitted."
and let Hashem avenge the blood of all those kedoshim murdered in cold blood by these awful creul hideous beasts.
and may Hashem also bless all these dedicated poeople who are involved in this holy work of "rectifying" (if that word can even be used-because such a wrong can never be rectified) our not-so-distant past
Like eichman
Now!!
I do not take resposibility for the authentication of the story, since I never saw it written, but it's point definitely true!
Wake up and smell the coffee. all of a sudden everyone says "OMG, there are still nazis around..." you cant trust a single Goy. yes, there are Chasidei Umos ha'Olam, but do you know how many Goyim are ready to kill us at any given moment with no mercy.
Don't kid yourself... do Motzvos, bring Moshiach, and ONLY then will the problem be solved.
Don't put your hopes on a Goy! but on Hashem!
let's face it. the world doesn't care. a nazi- a murderer!- was found and it's in the sun news and on collive.com
you'd think the world would want to know...
I am quite scared now... Moshiach please come
"ain lonu li'hi'sho'ain ELOH al Avinu She'ba'sho'moim" - our existence is ONLY assured through our connection with Hashem.What is stated about a holocaust never happening again means HASHEM wouldn't allow it.
he deserved it
moshiach now!!!!
Laszlo Csizsik-Csatary is accused of sending more than 15,000 Jews to the Auschwitz concentration camp in the spring of 1944, the Simon Wiesenthal Center said.
The center considers him its most-wanted Nazi war criminal.
The Simon Wiesenthal Center found Csizsik-Csatary as part of its Last Chance project, said Efraim Zuroff, director of the center's Israel office.
Csizsik-Csatary served as a senior Hungarian police officer in the city of Kosice, which is now in Slovakia but was under Hungarian rule in the 1940s, the center said.