Ilse Koch and the Alleged Lampshade
Several of the letters of Austin J. App are to be presented
as part of the CODOH Revisionist Library. These are important
to the historiography of Holocaust revisionism as they are some
of the earliest works to question the formative Holocaust
story. These works are being presented for researchers as they
are rare documents. They should be understood for the time that
they were written. They do not necessarily represent the
current state of Holocaust revisionist scholarship and research.
-Editor

Ilse Koch, often accused of horrible atrocities
444 E. Tulpehocken, Phila. 44, Pa.
October 9, 1948
Inquirer
Philadelphia, Pa.
To the Editor of the Inquirer:
According to articles and letters in The Inquirer
many people are whining for the skin of Ilse Koch and working
themselves into ulcers because her sentence is only four years.
Some justify their lust for her skin because of the unproven
allegation that lampshades of human skin were found in Buchenwald.
It is well to remind those who think so that, among similar things,
one American soldier sent Roosevelt a letter opener which he had
fashioned out of a Japanese skull. Though Roosevelt declined
the "gift," the question for those who want to execute Ilse Koch for
alleged and unproven association with human lampshades is whether
this American who, not allegedly but certainly proudly, fashioned
letter openers from human bones has been given more than the four
years given to Ilse Koch. It is America's business to sweep
the dirt from its own doors first. God will not blame America
for being easy on Ilse Koch, but He will blame America for hanging
and calumniating the members of other nations for deeds which it
passes off as exuberance or souvenir hunting in its own Americans.
Only after the American who made letter openers of Japanese bones
has been punished have we any business worrying about Ilse Koch's
crimes at all. If we don't want to hang him for his proven
bone work then we have no business trying to hang Ilse Koch for her
alleged lampshades.
For those who think Ilse Koch should be hanged because she was
brutal to inmates, let them again first see whether all Americans
have been hanged who were brutal in similar fashion. Your
October 8 issue carries the charge by
President Judge E. Leroy van Roden, after he reviewed the Dachau
war trials, that "Defendants... were badly beaten... Often the hoods
placed over the prisoners' heads would be bloody from the beatings
given other prisoners... Some investigators tried to get confessions
by dressing themselves as priests." Are those who cry for Ilse
Koch's skin working to see that these fellows get more than the four
years given her? If not, then that is their first job.
Among decent people, the dirt before one's own door gets priority.
Sincerely Yours,
Austin J. App, PhD
Originally Published in Morgenthau Era Letters: 119 Letters
to Newspapers and Newsmakers- Mostly in the Decade from 1941 to 1950,
Boniface Press 1966.
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