PA Man Admits Holocaust Lies
June 27, 2016
FROM The Jewish Telegraphic Agency:
A Pennsylvania man who for years traveled the country giving speeches and media interviews about his experiences as a Holocaust survivor acknowledged that he had been lying and apologized.
In a letter published Thursday on the LancasterOnline news site, Joseph Hirt, of Lancaster County said he lied not for personal gain but in hopes of raising awareness about the problems faced by Holocaust survivors.
Earlier this month, Andrew Reid, a history teacher in Turin, New York, publicly questioned Hirt’s claims about being a prisoner in Auschwitz, the Nazi death camp in Poland, Pennlive.com reported. Reid, who is Christian, said he had become suspicious after hearing Hirt speak in Lowville, New York, on April 15, three weeks before Yom Hashoah, Holocaust memorial day.
According to Pennlive.com, the Poland-born Hirt, who says he is 91, wrote Thursday that he apologizes “for harm caused to anyone because of my inserting myself into the descriptions of life in Auschwitz. I was not a prisoner there. I did not intend to lessen or overshadow the events which truly happened there by falsely claiming to have been personally involved.”
Hirt had claimed he was kidnapped by the Nazis, personally saw Dr. Josef Mengele and that he managed to escape Auschwitz.
Suspicious of Hirt’s claims , Reid did extensive research and discovered that his chronology did not make sense and that his tattoo number belonged to another prisoner. Reid also notes evidence that Hirt is Jewish, although he “goes out of his way in his presentation” to suggest he is not Jewish, writes Reid.
In an interview published on June 9, Hirt’s nephew, Michael Hirt, told PennLive that Joseph Hirt’s story was fraudulent and that his immediate family had ostracized him for making such claims.
Michael Hirt also told the publication that his uncle has added “several years to his real age,” and is closer to 85 or 86.
The true story, according to Michael Hirt, is that Hirt and his immediate family members fled Poland before the 1939 German invasion and ultimately immigrated to the United States via Italy.