From the article:
Once, at a convention he attended in Connecticut, Whiteway said he met Holocaust survivors, and a woman he met told him she had been in one of the gas showers expecting to die, and after a long time, instead of the showers coming on, Army Rangers opened the doors and rescued them. She had been at the Dachau 3-B camp. She rolled up her sleeve to show him the numbers on her arm.
And...
“And I stood there looking at at the eyeglasses. And I couldn’t imagine how many thousands of people those eyeglasses represented,” he told the interviewer. “To my left were hay wagons - 4-wheeled hay wagons and 2-wheel push carts, which were common in Europe. Only these wagons all contained nude bodies … there were men, women, children, and even babies. All nude, all dead, all piled as high as they basically could pile them on these wagons.”
He saw the ovens, and told his interviewer, “Some of the doors were open. There were bodies in the ovens, still burning. We were so shocked. And now we were beginning to understand that there was … this was some kind of an execution camp. Or as we now call, extermination camp.”
By the 1970s Simon Wiesenthal said there were no extermination camps in Germany proper.
I've written about Dachau:
https://www.hockey-sweater.com/2018/07/paula-simons-on-hate-monger-monika.html
https://www.hockey-sweater.com/2017/05/holocaust-denial-is-so-bad-theyre-just.html
(post is archived)