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Simon Wiesenthal

A hunter hunted down

September 28, 2010 10:16
Simon Wiesenthal: difficult, possibly dubious, but definitely determined

By

Anonymous,

Anonymous

2 min read

By Tom Segev
Jonathan Cape, £25

From the moment he set out to preserve the memory of the victims of the Holocaust and to hunt down the Nazis who had murdered them, Simon Wiesenthal attracted enemies, and they have shown no sign of going away since his death in 2005 at the age of 96.

The latest of his critics is the writer Guy Walters, who has recently been afforded ample space in the Sunday Times and Daily Mail and on the BBC to detail his belief, previously set out in his 2009 biography of Wiesenthal, that the great so-called Nazi-hunter was a fraud.

It takes a special kind of chutzpah for an Old Etonian born 26 years after the war who has made a good living writing potboilers about fictional Nazis to blacken the name of a Holocaust survivor who devoted his life to tracking down real ones, but Wiesenthal was wearily familiar with such assaults, as Tom Segev's biography records in meticulous detail.

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