The Holocaust History Project

The Holocaust History Project

Logo of the Holocaust History Project (2007)
Type Non-profit corporation
Headquarters San Antonio, Texas
Region served
Worldwide
Membership
Inactive
Staff
THHP Team

The Holocaust History Project (THHP) is an inactive non-profit corporation based in San Antonio, Texas. Its archived website offers a comprehensive selection of documents, recordings, photographs, and essays regarding the Holocaust, Holocaust denial, and antisemitism. The project became known for its refutations of the Leuchter report and the Rudolf report. It has since assisted in the defense in the case of Irving v. Lipstadt. As of 2016 THHP website is no longer available online although its entire content is accessible via several hundred captures in the Internet Archives.[1] However starting april 2016 the french NGO and project phdn.org has put back online an almost complete copy of the original THHP website.[2]

THHP defines itself an organization of "concerned individuals working together to educate and inform about the Holocaust." Some of the members remain anonymous. The founding director was Harry W. Mazal, OBE, who died in 2011.

Among the material presented, there are essays about scientific and legal analyses, events and people, expert witness testimony, original Nazi documents, transcripts of many of the Nuremberg trials, and the complete texts of two influential works, Jean-Claude Pressac's Auschwitz: Technique and Operation of the Gas Chambers and Robert Jay Lifton's The Nazi Doctors. There are also extensive sections on the Auschwitz and Operation Reinhard extermination camps.

More than 20 "short essays" address a variety of questions of interest, including an extensive bibliography of Holocaust related topics. There is also a section devoted to Holocaust denial, including direct debunking of deniers such as David Irving, Ernst Zündel, and several others.

Members

References

  1. Contributions from THHP members (2015). "The Holocaust History Project". Archive of documents, photographs, recordings, videos and essays regarding the Holocaust. Internet Archive. Archived from the original on August 1, 2015.
  2. "The Holocaust History Project Homepage". www.phdn.org. Retrieved 2016-08-12.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/14/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.