Hitler's Jewish Soldiers: The Untold Story of Nazi Racial Laws and Men of Jewish Descent in the Germ
WatchmanForTruth
Published on May 3, 2022
So the claims that Jews murdered Jews is factually and historically correct. Hitler's Jewish Soldiers: The Untold Story of Nazi Racial Laws and Men of Jewish Descent in the German Military (Modern War Studies) Paperback – May 6, 2002
by Bryan Mark Rigg (Author)
https://www.amazon.com/Hitlers-Jewish-Soldiers-Descent-Military/dp/0700613587/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=hitlers+jewish+soldiers&qid=1629876124&sr=8-1
There's even a new movie that shows this as fact called REMEMBER on Netflix. Remember 2015 14A 1h 34min
With the aid of a fellow Auschwitz survivor and a hand-written letter, an elderly man with dementia goes in search of the person he believes to be responsible for the death of his family in the death camp to kill him himself.
Summaries: With the aid of a fellow Auschwitz survivor and a hand-written letter, an elderly man with dementia goes in search of the person he believes to be responsible for the death of his family in the death camp to kill him himself. But the real big surprise is at the end of the film when Zev discovers he and his fellow German Auschwitz SS officer survivors are both German Jew Nazi officers who got tattooed by each other and they were responsible for the killing of Jews! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remember_(2015_film)
Zev's son, who traced him through his credit card and then the taxi service, arrives to witness Zev threatening to shoot Rudy's granddaughter unless he confesses "the truth" to everyone. Rudy admits to his daughter and granddaughter that he was in the SS and killed "many" people. However, he says his real name is Kunibert Sturm — and Zev himself is Otto Wallisch. They were both Blockführers, and after the war, tattooed each other to pose as Jewish survivors. Shocked, Zev shoots Sturm and then, declaring "I remember," fatally shoots himself. "Remember" is the contemporary story of Zev, who discovers that the Nazi guard who murdered his family some 70 years ago is living in America under an assumed identity. Despite the obvious challenges, Zev sets out on a mission to deliver long-delayed justice with his own trembling hand. What follows is a remarkable cross-continent road-trip with surprising consequences. —72nd Venice International Film Festival Coached at a distance by his rest home friend Max Rosenbaum (Martin Landau), Zev Gutman (Christopher Plummer) is led step-by-step on a search for an ex-Nazi prison camp guard living under the assumed name of Rudy Kurlander. The Wiesenthal Center has found four possible suspects and Gutman must find - and execute - the right one in retaliation for his own family's death at Auschwitz. Benjamin August's script skillfully builds the tension of Gutman's somewhat haphazard search toward an ending that is so surprising that you'll just have to see it for yourself. —Jack Kintner