Claude Lanzmann
Claude Lanzmann was a jewish political puppet and propaganda agent, used in the media industry to use the Holocaust to push a political agenda. Like Simon Wiesenthal and Sartre's student Eli Wiesel, he was a member of the Legion of Honour. He was editor of Les Temps Modernes of jesuit Jean-Paul Sartre, Simone de Beauvoir, jesuit Maurice Merleau-Ponty, published by Gallimard of André Gide. It published contributions of Richard Wright (National Negro Congress, The New Masses of Max Eastman), Boris Vian (mescaline experiments, friend of Serge Gainsbourg), Samuel Beckett (associated with Tavistock) and Jean Genet (worked with Angela Davis and Black Panthers). |
In 1985 he released Holocaust propaganda film Shoah (9 hours, 11 years in the making=Revelation 911) with Auschwitz survivor Rudolf Vrba (Rosenberg), Mordechai Podchlebnik (Eichmann trial), Jan Karski (professor at Georgetown University of the jesuits) describing the Warsaw Ghetto, Richard Glazar (Theresienstadt, Treblinka trial with Franz Stangl) and Raoul Hilberg, distributed by New Yorker Films (Agnieszka Holland, Errol Morris) and promoted by president of France François Mitterand (Catholic Action), Roger Ebert, Simone de Beauvoir and Mikhail Gorbachev.
Maurice Rossel of the Red Cross was interviewed by Lanzmann for A Visitor for the Living. Benjamin Murmelstein (Theresienstadt) was used in Lanzmann's The Last of the Unjust.
He helped branding Renaud Camus as 'antisemitic' 'conspiracy theorist'.