- home
- article
- Argentina's Supreme Court Discovers Nazi Materials in Basement
Argentina's Supreme Court Discovers Nazi Materials in Basement
ai generated text
The 83 boxes of Nazi material were confiscated by Argentinean authorities during World War II and were sent by the Germany embassy in Tokyo to Argentina in June 1941 on the Japanese steamship "Nan-a-Maru". The large shipment drew attention from authorities at the time due to concerns that its contents could affect Argentina's neutrality in the war. The boxes were recently rediscovered in the Supreme Court's basement, where they were unearthed from wooden crates and found to contain stacks of Nazi papers, including material intended to promote Adolf Hitler's ideology in Argentina.
We are following a trail that no one has investigated before.
Many of the documents were in areas of the state that had not previously been considered in connection with the Nazi escapes.
We are analyzing suspicious financial transactions that were disguised as diplomatic missions or accounting entries in the central bank archives.
The historical value of this material is enormous.
sources
perspectives
countries
organizations
- 1.Argentine Israelite Mutual Association
- 2.Buenos Aires Holocaust Museum
- 3.National Archives and Records Administration
- 4.Simon Wiesenthal Center
- 5.European Holocaust Research Infrastructure
- 6.German Trade Union
- 7.PCGR
- 8.ULAN
persons
- 1.Adolf Hitler
- 2.Juan Peron
- 3.Adolf Eichmann
- 4.Horacio Rosatti
- 5.Josef Mengele
- 6.Ariel Gelblung
- 7.Joan E Donoghue
- 8.Julio Mutti
- 9.Wesley Dockery
- 10.Zac Crellin
technicals
- 1.Nazism
- 2.Holocaust
- 3.World War II
- 4.Judaism
- 5.Nan-a-Maru
- 6.Axis