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Most Wanted Nazi Fugitive Lived As Muslim in Egypt Until His 1992 Death
Most wanted Nazi fugitive Aribert Heim (Dr. Death) was living as a “pios Muslim” in Egypt under the name Doctor Tarek until his death in 1992.
One of the most wanted Nazi war criminals, Aribert Heim or “Doctor Death,” lived for years as a quiet, pious Muslim in a small hotel on the edge of Islamic Cairo, where he was known as Doctor Tarek.
Concealed in the labyrinthine streets of the largest city in Africa and the Middle East, the man wanted for killing hundreds of concentration camp victims with horrific medical experiments found refuge until his death in 1992.
A man who knew “Doctor Tarek” had this to say about him:
“His life was very ordered, exercise in the morning, then prayers at the main Al-Azhar mosque, and long sessions spent reading and writing while sat on a rocking chair…”
“He was very solitary and very pious. He didn’t have a full beard, but he was never clean shaven, and always fasted during the holy month of Ramadan.”
It’s so infuriating that a monster like Heim got to live out his days sitting in a f*cking rocking chair reading. Far too many Nazi’s were able to escape justice and they should be pursued to the ends of the earth no matter how long ago the holocaust happened.
Heim has frequently been compared to Dr. Josef Mengele (The Angel of Death), because of the horrific surgical experiments he performed on Jews in the Mauthausen camp in Austria and elsewhere. He was known for being particularly sadistic and cruel. Survivors say Heim would often cut prisoners open and remove their liver without anesthetic.
He was an early supporter of the Nazi party joining when it was still illegal to do so. Heim became an SS officer in 1940 and was stationed at several concentration camps including Buchenwald, Sachsenhausen, and Mauthausen.
The cold-blooded Jew killer found refuge in a religion that hates Jews — how convenient.
-Chris Jones
Cindy Sheehan In Egypt To Protest Muslim Brotherhood Trial
In an effort to show just how low she can go, Cindy Sheehan has now surfaced in Egypt to protest the trial of 40 members of the Muslim Brotherhood.
Cindy Sheehan, an American activist who was nicknamed the “Peace Mom” by the media for her criticism of the Iraq War, retreated from her public campaigns in 2007.
The death of her son Casey, a US soldier, in a Baghdad battle in 2005 had transformed Sheehan into a public figure in the US.
But she resurfaced in Cairo last week as a member of a delegation from the Muslim American Society which is in Egypt to protest against the military trial of 40 members of the banned Muslim Brotherhood.
It’s going to be an incredibly disturbing irony if Cindy Sheehan ends up getting her head cut-off by the very terrorists she foolishly defends. Moreover, if she thinks the Egyptian security services are going to allow her agitate the public the way she does here she’s in for an unpleasant surprise.
She even showed up on Al-Jazeera television in Egypt talking about “American Imperialism” and impeaching Bush/Cheney.
Here’s the interview she did on Al-Jazeera:
Al Jazeera: You first became famous for your protests against the Iraq war in August 2005, but you have not been an active anti-war figure for a while now. What happened?
Sheehan: In May 2007, I decided to quit actually being the face of the anti-war movement in America. I quit and I have not gone back to that. When I left the movement I was broke, I was tired, I was sick – literally sick and in pain.
I wanted to just totally be out of the political realm and not have anything to do with it. The establishment that runs our country just disgusted me and I was tired of it. It is very corrupt and I definitely saw that when I was focusing on anti-war activism.
The leaders of both parties work together to keep normal people out of the process. In many ways the Democratic leadership, especially in Congress, has been complicit with George Bush, the US president, in his crimes against humanity.
How can [Democratic Speaker of the House] Nancy Pelosi say unequivocally that water-boarding is torture and that Bush and [Richard] Cheney, the US vice-president, should not only be impeached but they should be charged with war crimes when in 2002 she herself was briefed on water-boarding and shown video of the rendition places where water-boarding happened?
Impeaching George Bush was a popular demand among liberal Americans at one time, but very few people talk about it anymore. Is that what turned you into an activist again?
When George Bush commuted [vice-presidential aide] Scooter Libby’s sentence, the Democrats in Congress didn’t do anything about it. When the Administration said they would not cooperate with subpoenas against [presidential aide] Harriet Myers, the democrats didn’t do anything about it.
That’s what pulled me back into activism. I thought how can they do that? How can they say ‘I’m just not going to come to your stupid trial,’ and no one will say anything about it?
When the Democrats took impeachment off the table, I decided enough was enough. On July 23, 2007, I officially announced that I was running for Congress against Nancy Pelosi.
Why the focus on Nancy Pelosi?
I decided if Nancy Pelosi wasn’t going to put impeachment on the table then I would run against her.
You can’t take any part of the Constitution off the table, even though they have rendered it almost meaningless between George Bush and Karl Rove. Since they came to power they have institutionalised torture and spying against Americans.
They have passed the Military Commissions Act and just done away with habeas corpus. They have practically rendered it meaningless. That is why I decided to challenge Pelosi for her seat. I always say if you want change you have to vote out the enablers, and Pelosi is the biggest enabler there is.
If your new focus is on unseating Nancy Pelosi, what are you doing in Egypt?
My anti-war work evolved into work for global human rights because I saw the problem was much deeper than just George Bush.
It’s about militarism and violence, globalisation and free trade.
I decided I wanted to do human rights work on behalf of people around the world who have been harmed by US imperialism.
Part of why I am here, also, is to draw attention to the parallels between the military courts here and the same kinds of courts that are being used to try detainees at Guantanamo Bay by the US.
If this becomes the standard for the world, and there is no international outcry, then everyone is in big trouble.
But what does the US have to do with a military trial in Egypt?
Egypt is a major recipient of US foreign aid, and there is no relationship between American aid and human rights.
If we [America] really want to promote democracy in this region then we cannot silence the voices of the Muslim Brotherhood because they’re the moderate voice here and they are the ones who are actually working for democracy.
Do you think your presence in Egypt will have an effect on the trial?
Well, we have been doing a lot of media work since we came to Egypt and we hope this will put pressure on the Egyptian government to treat the prisoners better and to also maybe alleviate their punishment.
Hopefully we will draw some international attention to what is happening here, too, and that will help the situation.
You also went to the National Council of Women in downtown Cairo to request a meeting with Suzanne Mubarak, Egypt’s First Lady. How did that go?
I didn’t really understand a lot of what was going on. There was a lot of yelling in Arabic. They weren’t the right people to get us a meeting with Suzanne Mubarak … I left a letter for Madame Mubarak and they promised that she would see it.
We thought it was important to go there because there are women and children who are being harmed by having their fathers and husbands detained, so I wanted to talk to Suzanne, mother to mother.
We brought along mothers and wives of the detainees and they were actually able to file complaints, and it was really great.
Have you spoken to many of the families of the defendants in the military trial? Have you spoken to many female members of the Brotherhood mother-to-mother?
My conversations with the mothers and children of the detainees have been really emotional. They told me about the hardships [the arrests and trials] have placed on their families, from financial hardships to emotional and physical hardships.
It is very emotional for me because my family has gone through the same things since my son died. It has been really hard for us.
People always say to me, ‘Cindy, why do you always make everything personal?’.
But in the end, everything affects people, whether it’s war or economics or human rights violations. I don’t think politicians who make political decisions necessarily think about how they are going to affect people and their families.
That is why when I meet people who have been harmed by the policies of their own countries, or the policies of my country, it just makes me resolved to work harder to make the world a better place.
Cindy Sheehan is truly a despicable person for which I have zero sympathy. I would imagine that if her son were alive he would be appalled that his mom is in Egypt insulting America and defending a terrorist organization.
Maybe Egypt can do us a great favor and just hang on to her for a few years.
-Chris Jones
Egyptian FM Threatens To “Break Legs” If Palestinians Breach Border Again
Egypt’s foreign minister said that no further violations of its borders would be tolerated in the wake of a 12-day breach of its frontier with Gaza and said anyone daring to cross would have their legs broken, the state news agency reported.
The earlier, uncharacteristically assertive, remarks by Aboul Gheit came during a late night Wednesday interview on state television, in which he criticized both Israel and the militant Hamas movement for creating the unstable situation on Egypt’s border.
“Anyone who violates Egypt’s borders will get his leg broken,” Aboul Gheit was quoted as saying. He added that Egypt only allowed the Palestinians to cross the border after Hamas blew up the wall because of fears over the humanitarian situation resulting from Israel’s blockade of the Gaza Strip.
It’s a beautiful thing to finally see a Muslim country treating those Palestinian thugs like the terrorists they are. About Gheit went on to say that he blames Israel for the humanitarian crisis on the border, but he blames Hamas even more for continuing to fire rockets into Israel.
Hamas and the Palestinians in general enjoy playing the role of the “perpetual victims” in the Middle East. The truth is that whatever victimization they suffer is of their own making.
Rather than reject terror and work towards a Palestinian state, the people instead elected Hamas to positions of power.
Rather than teach children moderation and tolerance in the hopes of a brighter future, they instead teach them that committing mass murder by blowing themselves up is the greatest achievement they can have.
The cartoons and TV shows for kids use familiar western style characters like Mickey Mouse, except their version teaches toddlers how great it is to kill Jews.
Their entire culture is a sick twisted cesspool of evil that is in no way compatible with democracy or anything even resembling a modern civilized society.
-Chris Jones











