Erik Haaest
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Erik Haaest is a Danish journalist.
Haaest's father was an active member of the Danish resistance. After the war, his father refused to accept any awards from Denmark's post-war government, because many officials who had collaborated with the Germans, were still unpunished, in positions of power and were now posing as anti-Nazis. Haaest is intimately familiar with the subjects of Danish resistance, and Danish pro-Nazi collaborators.
He has interviewed many Danish Waffen SS veterans, and in typical journalist fashion, takes pains to document his claims and name his sources. Perhaps as a result, attempts to discredit Haaest have consisted mostly of innuendo and denial, rather than discussing what - if anything - is wrong with the evidence he provides.
In 2007 the Danish Arts Council was condemned for providing funding to Haest for research into Danes who served in the SS, on the grounds that Haest has stated that the concentration camp gas chambers never existed and that the Diary of Anne Frank was a forgery.[1]
[edit] References
- ^ "Danish Disgrace", Dateline World Jewry, World Jewish Congress, September, 2007