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{{Infobox military person {{Infobox military person
| name = Denis Avey | name = Denis Avey
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| birth_date = {{birth year and age|1919}} | birth_date = {{birth date|df=yes|1919|1|11}}
| death_date = <!-- {{Death date and age|YYYY|MM|DD|YYYY|MM|DD}} --> | death_date ={{Death date and age|df=yes|2015|07|16|1919|1|11}}
| birth_place = ] | birth_place = ], England
| death_place = | death_place = ], England
| placeofburial = | placeofburial = St. Barnabas Church, ], England
| placeofburial_label = | placeofburial_label =
| placeofburial_coordinates = <!-- {{Coord|LAT|LONG|display=inline,title}} --> | placeofburial_coordinates = <!-- {{Coord|LAT|LONG|display=inline,title}} -->
| nickname = | nickname =
| birth_name = | birth_name =
| allegiance = {{UK}} | allegiance = {{flag|United Kingdom}}
| branch = ] ] | branch = {{army|United Kingdom}}
| serviceyears = | serviceyears = 1939−
| rank = | rank =
| servicenumber = | servicenumber =
| unit = ] | unit = ]
| commands = | commands =
| battles = ] | battles = ]
* ] * ]
* ] at ]
| battles_label = | battles_label =
| awards = ] | awards = ]
| relations = | relations =
| laterwork = ]<br />] | laterwork = Engineer<br />author
| signature = | signature =
}} }}
'''Denis Avey''' (11 January 1919 – 16 July 2015) was a British veteran of the ] who was held as a ] at ], a subcamp of ]. While there he saved the life of a ] prisoner, Ernst Lobethal, by smuggling cigarettes to him.<ref name="Ariel">{{cite news |url=http://www.ex-bbc.net/Ariel/Arielwk11.2010.pdf |title=How a BBC investigation found genuine 'Hero of the Holocaust'|first=Rob |last=Broomby |work=] |page=5 |date=16 March 2010 |accessdate=20 September 2014 }}</ref> For that he was made a ] in 2010.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/130682/response/323026/attach/html/3/121019%20FoI%20F0006216%20Peter%20Nockolds.doc.html |title=Qualification of Award of British Hero of the Holocaust Award 2010 |first=Keith |last=Harrison |work=whatdotheyknow.com |date=19 October 2012 |accessdate=20 September 2014}}</ref>


Avey claimed that he exchanged uniforms with a Jewish prisoner and smuggled himself into Auschwitz to witness the treatment of Jewish inmates, whose camp was separate from but adjoined that of British POWs. His claim has been challenged.<ref name="newstatesman">{{cite journal |url= http://www.newstatesman.com/blogs/guy-walters/2011/11/avey-book-holocaust-auschwitz |title=The curious case of the 'break into Auschwitz' |first=Guy |last=Walters |journal=] |date=17 November 2011 |accessdate=20 September 2014}}</ref><ref name="Witness to Auschwitz">{{cite web |url= http://www.radiotimes.com/episode/qb5jd/witness-to-auschwitz |title=Witness to Auschwitz |first=Alison |last=Graham |work=] |year=2014 |accessdate=20 September 2014}}</ref> His memoir '']'', written with Rob Broomby, was published in 2011.
'''Denis Avey''' (born 1919) fought in the desert during the Second World War and was captured and held as a prisoner of war for two years near Auschwitz III, a concentration camp. He says that during his imprisonment he exchanged uniforms with a Jewish prisoner and smuggled himself into Auschwitz to witness conditions first hand.


==Life (until retirement)==
In 2010 he received a ] award for having saved the life of a Jewish prisoner by smuggling cigarettes to him. <ref> www.ex-bbc.net/Ariel/Arielwk11.2010.pdf </ref> He has written of his accounts, with Rob Broomby, in his book, '']'', published in 2011. A decade earlier, he described his personal life and war experiences in an interview with the ] in London.<ref>, Imperial War Museum, London, UK, July 16, 2001</ref> That interview, Avey states, was the "catalyst" that brought him, after 60 years of silent "anguish," to talk of that experience: "I began to weep - for the first time since the war. From then on, I could remain silent no longer, because I want my story to make a difference."<ref name=Welt2/>
Avey was born in ], England, in 1919. As a boy he learned boxing, was head boy at school and studied at Leyton technical college. He joined the army in 1939 at the age of 20, and fought in the desert campaigns of North Africa in the ], (the "Desert Rats"). He was captured by the Germans while attacking ]'s forces near ], Libya, and saw his best friend killed next to him.<ref name=Broomby2/> After his prisoner transport ship was torpedoed he claimed to have escaped to Greece by floating ashore on top of a packing crate, but was recaptured after landing.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.publishersweekly.com/978-0-306-81965-0 |title=Nonfiction Book Review: The Man Who Broke into Auschwitz: A True Story of World War II by Denis Avey with Rob Broomby |work=] |date=1 June 2014 |accessdate=20 September 2014}}</ref>


After being retaken prisoner, Avey was placed in the E715 prison camp for British soldiers, next to the ] ] where Jews were imprisoned. He was there from 1943 until January 1945. While there he befriended a Jewish inmate of Auschwitz, Ernst Lobethal, from the adjoining Jewish section. He obtained cigarettes from Ernst's sister, who had escaped from Germany to Britain on a ] before the war. He secretly passed the cigarettes to Ernst who used them as currency to help him survive.
But problems with the details of his story and differences in his account in the book to those of his interviews and talks have been raised. The whole account has been doubted by among others Piotr Setkiewicz, the head of research at the Auschwitz-Birkenau memorial and museum, who has said: "Theoretically it is possible to do such a thing, but for practical reasons it would be extremely difficult. It is a question of confirmation, and I can't see any way to confirm Mr. Avey's story. Nevertheless, privately, I don't think this (the swap) happened.<ref name=Collett-White>{{cite news|title=Veteran defends disputed story of Auschwitz heroics|first=Mike|last=Collett-White|date=26 April 2011|accessdate=17 September 2012|publisher=]|url=http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/04/26/arts-auschwitz-book-idUSLDE73P12520110426}}</ref>"


{{quote box|align=right|width=25em|quote=With that simple exchange between the two of us I had given away the protection of the Geneva Convention: I'd given my uniform, my lifeline, my best chance of surviving that dreadful place, to another man&nbsp;... If I was caught, the guards would have shot me out of hand as an imposter. No question at all.|source=Denis Avey<ref>Avey, Denis. ''The Man Who Broke into Auschwitz'', Hodder & Stoughton, U.K. (2011) pp. 3-4</ref>}}
==Early years and military service==
Avey was born in ], outside of London, in 1919. As a boy he learned boxing, was head boy at school and studied at Leyton technical college. He joined the army in 1939 at the age of 20, and fought in the desert campaigns of North Africa in the 7th Armoured Division, known as the ]. He was captured by the Germans while attacking ]'s forces near ], ], and saw his best friend killed next to him.<ref name=Smith>Smith, David. , ''Herald Scotland''March 27, 2011</ref> He escaped to Greece by crossing the Mediterranean Sea floating on top of a packing crate, but was recaptured after landing.<ref>, ''Publishers Weekly'' review</ref>


Avey said that he twice exchanged uniforms with a Jewish inmate to smuggle himself into the inmate's camp in order to witness for himself the treatment of Jews, which he could see was completely different from the treatment of British POWs. While British POWs were forced to work six days a week, they could use their free time to play football and basketball.<ref name=JC/> While their conditions were dreadful, according to one British inmate, "they were as nothing compared to what the Jews next door went through".<ref name=JC/> Avey agreed, and describes the plight of the Jews:
After being retaken prisoner, he was moved to a ] labor camp for British soldiers near ], a German concentration camp, where he was kept imprisoned from 1943 until April, 1945. During his time in the camp he managed to befriend a Jewish inmate of Auschwitz III, Ernst Lobethal. He obtained cigarettes from Ernst's sister in Britain, which he secretly passed to Ernst. Avey says that on two separate occasions while at Auschwitz, he exchanged uniforms with another Jewish prisoner and smuggled himself into Auschwitz III in order to witness first hand, conditions inside the prison, with a view to testifying after the war.<ref name=Broomby>{{cite news|title=The man who smuggled himself into Auschwitz|first=Rob|last=Broomby|date=29 November 2009|accessdate=1 December 2009|publisher=]|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/8382457.stm}}, includes video interview with Avey</ref> Avey explains:


{{quote|I am telling you I know without exaggeration, nearly 200,000 prisoners in Auschwitz were worked to death. Not killed. Were worked to death and they claimed total innocence. They lived for no more than 4 months. They were clubbed and beaten every day without any justification whatsoever.<ref>, Oxford Chabad Society</ref>}}
{{quote|I knew I had to bear witness. As ] said: the world can be an evil place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing. I’ve never been one to do nothing."<ref name=Times>, ''The Sunday Times'', U.K., Feb. 25, 2010</ref>}}


Avey explained to '']'' that he was the type that needed to see things for himself:
When POWs were evacuated from the camp near the end of the war Avey escaped and made his way back to England. He says that he encountered indifference from his commanding officer when he tried to report his experience in Auschwitz III and that when prosecutors sought his testimony for post war trials they were unable to trace him.


<blockquote>My mates didn't want me to do it but they agreed because they realised I was going to do it, and that was that. I had watched people being murdered literally every day and I knew someone would have to answer for it. I wanted to get in and identify the people responsible.<ref name="bbc"/><ref name=telegraph>, ''The Daily Telegraph'', 27 August 2015</ref></blockquote>
After the war he married twice and pursued a career in engineering, which culminated in him building a factory near Newcastle. After retirement he became active amongst ex-POWs seeking compensation for wartime experiences<ref>All information from Denis Avey's autobiography 'The Man who Broke into Auschwitz.'</ref>


He was aware that he was taking "a hell of a chance", and states: "When you think about it in today's environment it is ludicrous, absolutely ludicrous. You wouldn't think anyone would think or do that, but that is how I was. I had red hair and a temperament to match. Nothing would stop me."<ref name=Broomby>{{cite news |title=The man who smuggled himself into Auschwitz |first=Rob |last=Broomby |date=29 November 2009 |accessdate=1 December 2009 |publisher=] |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/8382457.stm}}, includes video interview with Avey</ref>
==Autobiographical book==
<!-- Deleted image removed: ] -->
Avey describes the events in detail in the book, ''The Man Who Broke into Auschwitz'' (2011)which he co-authored with Rob Broomby and which carried a foreword by Sir ].<ref>http://www.hodder.co.uk/books/work.aspx?WorkID=172580</ref> <ref name=Telegraph></ref> The book was promoted by the ] <ref> http://www.hodder.co.uk/books/work.aspx?WorkID=172580 </ref> whose support Avey acknowledged, and had been published in 14 countries as of May, 2011.<ref> ''Derbyshire Times'', May 6, 2011</ref>


Avey escaped during the "]" in April 1945 which followed the Nazis' evacuation of Auschwitz. Although suffering from ] he caught in the camp, he broke away undetected, then made his way through ], Czechoslovakia and Germany.<ref name=Broomby2>Avey, Denis and Broomby, Rob., 30 June 2014</ref><ref name="IWM"/><ref name="bbc"/> During the march Avey saw an estimated 15,000 dead prisoners, recalling that "the road was littered with corpses."<ref name=LATimes/> He eventually ran into Americans who helped get him back to England, and to his family who assumed he had died.<ref name=MGI/>
He first began disclosing these events seven years ago when invited to appear on the ] to talk about war pensions. "The memories suddenly started tumbling out, and the TV hosts could scarcely believe the extraordinary tale they were hearing. Avey states that "Auschwitz III was like nothing else on earth; it was hell on earth. This is what I had come to witness, but it was a ghastly, terrifying experience."<ref name=Smith/> According to Avey's account, "my life depended on 50 cigarettes - 25 in, 25 out. He (the guard) could have shot me easily." His motivation for getting inside the camp was to "put one over on the enemy," and witness the slaughter so that he could tell the world afterwards.<ref name=Mail3>, ''Daily Mail'' April 1, 2011</ref> As a result, the BBC began production of a documentary about his heroic story, and also discovered the name of the young Jewish prisoner Avey had befriended in Auschwitz, Ernst Lobethal."<ref name=LATimes/>


After he returned to England, Avey spent the next year and a half hospitalised with tuberculosis.<ref name=telegraph/> Afterwards, when he tried to report what he saw in Auschwitz, he encountered resistance and indifference.<ref name=LATimes/> From then on, he chose to not to speak of it again to anyone:
===Detailing his "break in"===
He explains that by exchanging his uniform for the clothing of a Jewish prisoner at Auschwitz, he managed to smuggle himself into the concentration camp in order to document the events there:<ref name=Broomby/>


<blockquote>In 1947, I went to the military authorities to submit my information about Auschwitz. Their eyes glazed over. I wasn't taken seriously. I was shocked, especially after the risks I'd taken. I felt completely disillusioned, and traumatised as well. So from then on I bottled it up, and tried to piece my life back together.<ref name=MGI/></blockquote>
:". . . the then-25-year-old pondered and plotted, soon hatching a plan so audacious that, more than 65 years later, he shakes his head at its absurdity. While so many Jews and others held at the infamous extermination camp were desperate to get out, Avey was actually devising a way to sneak in. . . . 'I shaved my hair completely off,' he recalled. 'And before that, I dirtied my face and my eyes. He also carefully studied and copied "the slouch," the defeated bearing of many of the Jewish prisoners, who were starved of both food and hope.'"<ref name=LATimes> ''Los Angeles Times'', April 3, 2010</ref>


The author ] explains that by 1947, after the ] were finished, "people just wanted to get on with their lives". Average citizens were not interested in discussing the war anymore, nor were they interested in hearing war stories from veterans or former POWs like Avey. "It must have been very painful", says Gilbert.<ref name=MGI/>
Avey realized at the time that he was risking his life with this audacious scheme:
:"With that simple exchange between the two of us I had given away the protection of the ]: I'd given my uniform, my lifeline, my best chance of surviving that dreadful place, to another man. . . If I was caught, the guards would have shot me out of hand as an imposter. No question at all."<ref>Avey, Denis. ''The Man Who Broke into Auschwitz'', Hodder & Stoughton, U.K. (2011) pp. 3-4</ref> "We worked alongside the striped Jews and we weren’t allowed to speak to them. If you spoke to them, the bullet."<ref name=Chabad> Oxford Chabad Society</ref>


{{quote box|align=left|width=25em|quote=Despite the danger, I knew I had to bear witness. As Albert Einstein said: the world can be an evil place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing. I've never been one to do nothing.|source= — Denis Avey<ref name=bookinfo>, ''The Man Who Broke into Auschwitz'' information page</ref>}}
Avey traded places twice and slept overnight in Auschwitz. He tried a third time but he was almost caught and the plan was aborted.<ref name=Broomby/> He also made his own estimates of the deaths during his period in prison, which he described at a lecture:
:"I am telling you I know without exaggeration, nearly 200,000 prisoners in Auschwitz were worked to death. Not killed. Were worked to death and they claimed total innocence. They lived for no more than 4 months. They were clubbed and beaten every day without any justification whatsoever."<ref name=Chabad/>


Besides tuberculosis, Avey suffered from ] (PTSD) before it was recognised as a medical illness, a condition few people were aware of.<ref name=Broomby2/> For the following years he battled with nightmares, jumpiness, and an inability to speak about his POW experiences. He suffered from a violent temper, stomach pains and loss of memory.<ref name=Broomby2/> From a beating during his incarceration, he also lost vision in one eye which became cancerous and required being replaced with a glass eye.<ref name=Broomby2/> The cause of the beating, Avey said, came when he cursed an ] who was beating a Jew in the camp. The officer took his pistol butt and gave Avey a blow directly on his eye.<ref name=MGI>Simons, Jacob Wallace. |{{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160917103744/http://mginews.com/content/view/623/2/ |date=17 September 2016 }}, ''The Times'', 25 February 2010</ref>
Avey escaped during the "]" in April, 1945, which followed the Nazis' evacuation of Auschwitz. Although suffering from tuberculosis, he "saw a chance to escape and seized it, he states." Avey also estimates that around 15,000 prisoners died on the way. “The road was littered with corpses.”<ref name=Times/> He eventually ran into Americans who helped get him back to England and his family, who thought he was dead.


When war crime prosecutors later sought Avey's testimony for the ], they were unable to locate him.<ref name=LATimes/> He kept the traumatic events about his wartime past a complete secret from everyone, including his first and second wives, along with his daughter. "I knew there was something," said his wife, Audrey. "Naturally, you ask questions. But I never got an answer."<ref name=LATimes/> Avey explains "The sad irony was that I went in there to find out the truth, so I could tell everybody about the horrors of the Nazi regime. But I was so traumatised at my whole experience of the Auschwitz camps it took me 60 years to be able to recount the horrors I saw."<ref name="bbc">{{cite news| first=Rob |last=Broomby |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/8382457.stm |work=BBC News |title=The man who smuggled himself into Auschwitz |date=29 November 2009 |accessdate=20 September 2014}}</ref>
After being hospitalised for two years after the war, in 1947 he went to his military authorities to give them his first hand account of what he saw taking place at Auschwitz. "Their eyes glazed over," he states "I wasn’t taken seriously. I was shocked, especially after the risks I’d taken. I felt completely disillusioned, and traumatized as well. So from then on I bottled it up, and tried to piece my life back together."<ref name=Times/><ref name=LATimes/>


He first began disclosing these events when invited to appear on the ] to talk about war pensions. His memories began tumbling out, shocking the television hosts who were unable to believe what they were hearing. As a result, the BBC began production of a documentary, discovering the name of the young Jewish prisoner Avey had befriended in Auschwitz, Ernst Lobethal."<ref name=LATimes> ''Los Angeles Times'', 3 April 2010</ref> When asked why he risked his life to infiltrate the Jewish sections of the concentration camp, he states that he needed to see for himself "the unspeakable things being done to the Jews at Auschwitz."". At the age of 91, he reflected back on this episode:
===Subsequent years===
As a result of the indifference to his breaking into Auschwitz, Avey kept the traumatic events about his wartime past a complete secret from everyone, including his mother, his present wife, and also his step-daughter. In an interview with German newspaper ''Welt'', (translated) he partly explains his decision to keep his experience private: "I did not talk about my captivity, as no one was concerned or asked questions, including my mother. I could tell from just the body language of people in my village that their learning that a British soldier had worked alongside Jewish concentration camp prisoners was too unpleasant to imagine.<ref name=Welt2/>


{{quote|You know the word "conjecture"? It's never been in my vocabulary. I wanted to know exactly what was happening inside there.&nbsp;... I knew there had to be eventually a reckoning to all this.&nbsp;... I don't feel like a hero. I'm embarrassed,&nbsp;... I had certain ideals that I grew up with.<ref name=LATimes/>}}
Avey explains:
:"The sad irony was that I went in there to find out the truth, so I could tell everybody about the horrors of the Nazi regime. But I was so traumatised at my whole experience of the Auschwitz camps it took me 60 years to be able to recount the horrors I saw."<ref name=DailyMail> ''Daily Mail'', Dec. 13, 2009</ref>


He had assumed that Ernst had died during the death march, but tracked down and met Ernst's sister, Susanne, who also thought he died.<ref name="bbc"/> She had escaped to England before war broke out in 1939.
"I knew there was something," said his wife, Audrey. "Naturally, you ask questions. But I never got an answer."<ref name=LATimes/> Avey also suffered from symptoms after the war: "I had nightmares for years. I still think of Auschwitz every day. I can't exorcise this. My bed was soaked from sweat for years. I went to doctors, they couldn't help."<ref name=Chabad/> He suffered from ] when he came back from the war and has only recently been able to speak about what he did and what he saw. He admits some may find it hard to believe and acknowledges it was "foolhardy".<ref name=Broomby/>


Years later, Susanne learned that her brother had survived, in part thanks to Avey, and had lived in America with his new family until his death.<ref name="bbc"/> While he never got to meet Ernst, he said that his surviving was "bloody marvellous."<ref name="bbc"/> Ernst, like Avey, refused to burden anyone with his own suffering and never talked about Auschwitz until very late in life. But, says Avey, "I, too, have left it late. I will always regret not tracking Ernst down while he was alive. If I'd known he was living in America, I would have gone and found him, without doubt. But I am proud to have played a small part in helping one man through the obscenity of Auschwitz."<ref>, ''Sunday Telegraph'', 20 March 2011</ref>
Before he died, Ernst Lobethall recorded his survival story on video for the ], which video the testimonies of Holocaust survivors and witnesses. In it he spoke of his friendship with a British soldier in Auschwitz who he simply called "Ginger". "It was Denis," notes ''BBC'' writer Rob Broomby.<ref name=Broomby/> Avey also notes that the prisoner he helped to survive by providing him with cigarettes, the 'currency' of the camps, Ernst likewise refused to burden anyone with his own suffering and never talked about Auschwitz until very late in life. But Avey adds:


Avey married twice and pursued a career in engineering, which culminated in him building a factory near Newcastle. He retired to ].
:"I, too, have left it late. I will always regret not tracking Ernst down while he was alive. If I’d known he was living in America, I would have gone and found him, without doubt. But I am proud to have played a small part in helping one man through the obscenity of Auschwitz."<ref name=Telegraph/>


==Recognition== ==Recognition==
After retirement he became active amongst ex-POWs seeking compensation for wartime imprisonment<ref>All information from Denis Avey's autobiography ''The Man who Broke into Auschwitz.''</ref> and began to talk about these experiences. In 2001 he described these in an interview with the ], London, where he stated that he had obtained cigarettes for Ernst and also gave the name of Ernst's sister Susanne. He also stated that he had exchanged uniforms with a bunkmate of Ernst and entered ] in the company of Ernst.<ref name="IWM">{{cite web |url= http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/80020527 |title=Denis George Avey interview (22065) |first=Smith |last=Lyn E. |work=Imperial War Museum |date=16 July 2001 |accessdate=20 September 2014}}</ref>
From 2000 onwards he began to share details of his experiences in Auschwitz, with Colin Rushton,<ref>Rushton, Colin, 'Spectator in Hell', Summersdale, 2007, pp.205-8.</ref> BBC local radio,<ref>Avey, p.203.</ref> the Imperial War Museum<ref>Avey/Broomby p.210</ref><ref
name=Mail2>, April 9, 2011</ref> and Diarmuid Jeffries.<ref>Diarmuid Jeffries, 'Hell's Cartel' 2008, p.371</ref> In 2009 author Rob Broomby and Patrick Howse of the ''BBC'' demonstrated that by supplying cigarettes to Ernst Lobethal Avey had saved his life - Lobethal has used the cigarettes as currency to have his boots re-soled, which enabled him to survive the death march when Auschwitz III was evacuated.<ref name=BBC2>, 2010.pdf p.5</ref>


Avey got details about events inside Birkenau which he sent home to his mother and sister in code. His mother sent two letters regarding this to the War Office but never received a reply.<ref name="IWM"/> He was interviewed on BBC ] in 2003. In 2005 the '']'' reported that Avey claimed to have swapped uniforms with Ernst and entered Birkenau where he witnessed prisoners being sent to the gas chambers.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Brit+who+broke+IN+to+Auschwitz.-a0127524827 |title=Brit who broke IN to Auschwitz |first=Jane |last=Kerr |work=Free Online Library |date=24 January 2005 |accessdate=20 September 2014}}</ref>
Regarding his helping of Ernst Lobethal, a spokesman for the ] states, "We feel that his story is genuine," noting that a fellow survivor corroborated his account to the foundation's satisfaction.<ref name=Mail3/> Lobethal himself was interviewed as part of the ] and spoke about the efforts of a British prisoner of war he called "Ginger" to help him; Avey identifies himself as "Ginger".<ref name="timesonline">{{cite news|url=http://women.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/women/the_way_we_live/article7039572.ece|title=The British PoW who broke into Auschwitz — and survived|last=Simons|first=Jake Wallis|date=February 25, 2010|publisher=Times Online|accessdate=26 February 2010}}</ref> The BBC filmed an emotional reunion between Avey and Ernst's sister, Susanne. The two had met soon after the war at a time when they both thought Ernst was dead. In 2010, Avey was named a ] by the British Governnment.<ref name=Telegraph9Mar2010>{{cite news |url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/britainatwar/7402443/Britons-honoured-for-holocaust-heroism.html |title=Britons honoured for holocaust heroism |publisher=The Telegraph |date=9 March 2010 |accessdate=9 March 2010| archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/5o6rljVNN |archivedate=9 March 2010 }}</ref>


{{quote box|align=left|width=25em|quote=I knew in my gut that these swine would eventually be held to account. Evidence would be vital. Of course, sneaking into the Jewish camp was a ludicrous idea. It was like breaking into Hell. But that's the sort of chap I was. Reckless.|source= — Denis Avey<ref name=MGI/>}}
==Reactions and questions==
Reaction from the mainstream media to his story 2009 and 2010 was positive. However after publication of the book questions were raised over his account of having entered Auschwitz III and his reasons for keeping silent for so long<ref name=Mail2/><ref>http://www.faz.net/artikel/C30870/umstrittenes-buch-schoa-zum-anfassen-30337614.html</ref><ref>http://www.standaard.be/artikel/detail.aspx?artikelid=6M3ANGGI&sectionid=ab8d3fd8-bf2f-487a-818b-9ea546e9a859</ref> One historian states that Avey's story was problematic partly because it was impossible to prove or disprove. "Theoretically it is possible to do such a thing, but for practical reasons it would be extremely difficult," he said. The Holocaust remembrance authority ] refrained from honouring Avey with the "Righteous Among the Nations" award stating that it was not able to substantiate his account. <ref name=Collett-White/> The World Jewish Congress has asked his publishers to verify the historical accuracy of the book.<ref name=Welt></ref> Avey has since suggested that those who consider his story too fantastic to be true may have "a bad (or evil) heart."
<ref name=Welt2> (German-language interview) ''Welt'', May 8, 2011</ref>


In May 2009 the ] announced the establishment of the ] award. That autumn Rob Broomby, a reporter from the ], who had known of Avey's story for some years, was able to trace Ernst's sister in ]. He learned that Ernst had survived the death march and emigrated to the United States where he lived to the age of 77.<ref name="bbc"/> Broomby also discovered that before his death, Ernst had recorded a video testimony of his experiences in Auschwitz, in which he mentions the British soldier whom he knew as "Ginger" who obtained cigarettes. This "Ginger" was Avey. ] subsequently broadcast a documentary which included an emotional reunion between Avey and Susanne, where Avey sees Ernst's video testimony for the first time and realises that his cigarettes saved his life.<ref name="Ariel"/>
In the in November 2011, the journalist and historian ], in his blog, demanded that Avey's book should be withdrawn from publication and its claims presented to an independent body of historians for assessment. However, Lyn Smith, who interviewed Avey for the Imperial War Museum, states that "he is an utterly reliable witness," and would not be surprised if he made some mistakes in recalling names. She has included Avey in her forthcoming book, ''Heroes of the Holocaust.''<ref>, ''The Jewish Chronicle'', Nov. 17, 2011</ref>


Although Lobethal – now Lobet – made no mention on the video of having swapped uniforms with Avey, the documentary did include Avey's account of an exchange with an unnamed prisoner. An article by Broomby published at the time of the first broadcast suggested that he and the BBC had accepted the "break-in" story as also confirmed.<ref name="bbc"/> Denis Avey was then received by British Prime Minister ] to mark ],<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.thejc.com/news/uk-news/26395/brown-signs-holocaust-memorial-book |title=Brown signs Holocaust memorial book |first=Robyn |last=Rosen |work=] |date=22 January 2010 |accessdate=20 September 2014}}</ref> and in 2010 he was named a British Hero of the Holocaust by the British Government<ref name=Telegraph9Mar2010>{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/britainatwar/7402443/Britons-honoured-for-holocaust-heroism.html |title=Britons honoured for holocaust heroism |publisher=The Telegraph |date=9 March 2010 |accessdate=9 March 2010 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100312103651/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/britainatwar/7402443/Britons-honoured-for-holocaust-heroism.html |archivedate=12 March 2010 |location=London |url-status=dead |df=dmy }}</ref> for having saved Ernst's life.
In March 2012, Hodder, the book's publishers, added extended and detailed notes to reprints addressing, clarifying, and expanding details related to specific sections.<ref></ref>


The following week Avey signed a book contract with ] to write his story.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.janeturnbull.co.uk/news/news.php?title=denis-avey%26%23039%3Bs-story-pre-empted-by-hodder&entry_id=1268819845 |title=Denis Avey's story pre-empted by Hodder |first=Jane |last=Turnbull |work=janeturnbull.co.uk |date=17 March 2010 |accessdate=20 September 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140924040954/http://www.janeturnbull.co.uk/news/news.php?title=denis-avey%26%23039%3Bs-story-pre-empted-by-hodder&entry_id=1268819845 |archive-date=24 September 2014 |url-status=dead }}</ref> The book appeared in April 2011 with a foreword by Sir ]. The book, '']'', went on to be a best-seller and has been translated into a number of languages.
The BBC, who first broadcast Avey's story, have subsequently produced a programme detailing the controversy. <ref> ''BBC'', radio broadcast</ref><ref> ''BBC'' video documentary, April 2012</ref>


==Reactions by others==
==Problems identified in Mr. Avey's different accounts==
Brian Bishop, a British POW interviewed by Walters, while he did not claim to know Avey, stated "I can't understand how he did it. To do something like that you need to have several people helping on both sides — our side and the Jewish side."<ref>{{cite web |url= http://en.auschwitz.org/m/index.php?option=com_contact&task=view&contact_id=11&Itemid=4 |title=Auschwitz-Birkenau - Contact |work=Państwowe Muzeum Auschwitz-Birkenau w Oświęcimiu |year=2014 |accessdate=20 September 2014}}</ref> Similar doubt about the feat was expressed by Ron Jones, another British POW, who also found it hard to believe that Avey, a tall, fit, strong Englishman, could have passed himself off alongside "starving six-stone Jews."<ref name=JC>{{cite web |url=http://www.thejc.com/arts/books/114937/kicking-out-falsehoods |title=Kicking out falsehoods |first=Robert |last=Low |newspaper=Jewish Chronicle |date=20 January 2014 |accessdate=20 November 2016}}</ref>
Eight differing versions given by Mr. Avery were noted by Guy Walters, Jeremy Duns and Adrian Weale. <ref name=Walters>{{cite news|title=The curious case of the "break into Aushcwitz "|first=Guy|last=Walters|date=17 November 2011|accessdate=17 September 2012|publisher=]|url=http://www.newstatesman.com/blogs/guy-walters/2011/11/avey-book-holocaust-auschwitz}}</ref>Nicholas Hellen writing in the Sunday Times also detailed problems of significant differences between versions of Avey's accounts, notably between the five hours of taped Imperial War Museum interviews of July 2001 and the book account first published in March 2011.<ref name=Times/> These include

* key elements of his story were changed before the book was published.<ref name=Walters/>
Nevertheless, British historian Lyn Smith, who interviewed Avey for the Imperial War Museum in 2001,<ref name="IWM"/> insisted that he was an "utterly reliable witness", and defended Avey in the face of these doubts, saying "It's pitiful what happened to him." She included Avey in her book ''Heroes of the Holocaust''.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.thejc.com/news/uk-news/58419/holocaust-historian-defends-man-who-broke-auschwitz |title=Holocaust historian defends man who broke into Auschwitz |first=Simon |last=Round |work=The Jewish Chronicle |date=17 November 2011 |accessdate=20 September 2014}}</ref> Avey's publisher accepted that in his interview with Smith, Avey's recollections could be confused, but this was understandable given the stress suffered and that he was only then beginning to unburden himself after so many decades of silence.
* Mr. Avey's earlier accounts included details of an Australian POW who worked stoking the crematoria in Birkenau yet there is no record of the imprisonment of a British or Australian POW who worked with the Jewish Sonderkommando. An Australian, Donald Watt, had published a book in 1995 claiming to be a stoker at Auschwitz but there is no evidence that Watt had even been in Auschwitz-Birkenau and his account was later exposed as fraudulent and discredited.

* Mr. Avey’s swap story is very similar to another published account in a book titled "The Password Is Courage" which is accepted as faudulent. That book was written by another former PoW at camp E715, Charles Coward.<ref name=Mail3/>
] considered Avey for the honour ], but said it was unable to grant the award because it was unable to substantiate his account of the prisoner swap.<ref>{{cite news| url=https://www.reuters.com/article/arts-auschwitz-book-idUSLDE73P12520110426 | work=Reuters | title=Veteran defends disputed story of Auschwitz heroics | date=26 April 2011}}</ref><ref name="hodder.co.uk">{{cite web|url=http://www.hodder.co.uk/Assets/WorkAssets/ReadingGuides/NOTES%20ON%20SOURCES%20final%20PDF%20for%20thirteenth%20reprint%20of%20Auschwitz.pdf |title=Full text of updated Notes section to Avey's book |work=Hodder & Stoughton |year=2014 |accessdate=20 September 2014 }}{{dead link|date=December 2016 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> In November 2014 Avey was reported as too ill to respond to further enquiries. He died on 16 July 2015 at Newholme Hospital in Bakewell, Derbyshire.<ref></ref>
* Mr. Avey said when he entered the Monowitz camp he marched under the "Arbeit Macht Frei" sign, yet that sign was not at Auschwitz III but at Auschwitz I, six miles away.<ref name=Collett-White/><ref name=Mail3/>
* in the taped account, Avey said he swapped with a prisoner in Auschwitz-Birkenau. In the book account he wrote that he swapped with an inmate of the Auschwitz III labour camp (also known as Monowitz).<ref name=Walters/><ref name=Times/>
* the name of the prisoner with whom he exchanged places differed in the accounts. In the book, he wrote that he swapped with a Dutch Jewish inmate called ‘Hans’ and smuggled himself into Auschwitz III. In a 2009 Daily Mail interview and in a talk to Oxford students he said he swapped with prisoner Ernst Lobethal into Auschwitz II, also known as Birkenau.<ref name=Mail3/><ref name=Times/>
* criticism has been made and dobts expressed concerning the length of time after the event allowed to pass before Avey first narrated the swap incident.
* Mr Avey partly explained the delay by claiming that military authorities after the war were not interested in his account. Yet in 1947 he had declined the invitation to make an affidavit of his time as a POW, when contacted by American prosecutors who were documenting camp conditions for war crimes trials.<ref name=Mail3/>


==See also== ==See also==
*] *] and ]: Inmates of E715A.
*]: British inmate of Monowitz.
*]
*]: Nazi Guard "The Hyena of Auschwitz".
*]
*]: Polish resistance fighter who voluntarily entered Auschwitz, and ].
*]: Boxer and inmate of Monowitz.

==Access to sources==
Avey's 2001 interview with Lyn Smith is available online and may also be heard in the "Explore History" section of the Imperial War Museum<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.timeout.com/london/things-to-do/explore-history |title=Explore History - Imperial War Museum |work=] |date=13 April 2010 |accessdate=20 September 2014}}</ref> during museum opening hours, without pre-booking. His account of entering Auschwitz is on reels 7 and 8, but is not mentioned in the index. The full text of Nicholas Hellen's article may be read through ].<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.newsbank.com/ |title=Home |work=NewsBank |year=2014 |accessdate=20 September 2014}}</ref>


==References== ==References==
Line 115: Line 110:


==External links== ==External links==
*Audio
*Video: 30 minutes, ''BBC'' TV documentary, April 2012
*Video: , ''BBC'', April 26, 2011, 4.5 minutes *Video: , ''BBC'', 26 April 2011, 4.5 minutes
*Video: , with Rob Broomby, 4 minutes *Video: {{YouTube|IHRURFAJ1Ek|Interview with Denis Avey}}, with Rob Broomby, 4 minutes
*Video: , 1 hr. 12 mins.
* *
* *
* *
* The Heretics' Hour 6-27-2011 Denis Avey and other Revisionist News


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| NAME =Avey, Denis
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION =British Army soldier
| DATE OF BIRTH =1919
| PLACE OF BIRTH =], England
| DATE OF DEATH =
| PLACE OF DEATH =
}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Avey, Denis}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Avey, Denis}}
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Latest revision as of 15:04, 6 December 2024

Denis Avey
Born(1919-01-11)11 January 1919
Essex, England
Died16 July 2015(2015-07-16) (aged 96)
Bakewell, Derbyshire, England
BuriedSt. Barnabas Church, Bradwell, Derbyshire, England
Allegiance United Kingdom
Service / branch British Army
Years of service1939−
UnitRifle Brigade (The Prince Consort's Own)
Battles / warsSecond World War
AwardsBritish Hero of the Holocaust
Other workEngineer
author

Denis Avey (11 January 1919 – 16 July 2015) was a British veteran of the Second World War who was held as a prisoner of war at E715, a subcamp of Auschwitz. While there he saved the life of a Jewish prisoner, Ernst Lobethal, by smuggling cigarettes to him. For that he was made a British Hero of the Holocaust in 2010.

Avey claimed that he exchanged uniforms with a Jewish prisoner and smuggled himself into Auschwitz to witness the treatment of Jewish inmates, whose camp was separate from but adjoined that of British POWs. His claim has been challenged. His memoir The Man who Broke into Auschwitz, written with Rob Broomby, was published in 2011.

Life (until retirement)

Avey was born in Essex, England, in 1919. As a boy he learned boxing, was head boy at school and studied at Leyton technical college. He joined the army in 1939 at the age of 20, and fought in the desert campaigns of North Africa in the 7th Armoured Division, (the "Desert Rats"). He was captured by the Germans while attacking Erwin Rommel's forces near Tobruk, Libya, and saw his best friend killed next to him. After his prisoner transport ship was torpedoed he claimed to have escaped to Greece by floating ashore on top of a packing crate, but was recaptured after landing.

After being retaken prisoner, Avey was placed in the E715 prison camp for British soldiers, next to the Auschwitz concentration camp where Jews were imprisoned. He was there from 1943 until January 1945. While there he befriended a Jewish inmate of Auschwitz, Ernst Lobethal, from the adjoining Jewish section. He obtained cigarettes from Ernst's sister, who had escaped from Germany to Britain on a Kindertransport before the war. He secretly passed the cigarettes to Ernst who used them as currency to help him survive.

With that simple exchange between the two of us I had given away the protection of the Geneva Convention: I'd given my uniform, my lifeline, my best chance of surviving that dreadful place, to another man ... If I was caught, the guards would have shot me out of hand as an imposter. No question at all.

Denis Avey

Avey said that he twice exchanged uniforms with a Jewish inmate to smuggle himself into the inmate's camp in order to witness for himself the treatment of Jews, which he could see was completely different from the treatment of British POWs. While British POWs were forced to work six days a week, they could use their free time to play football and basketball. While their conditions were dreadful, according to one British inmate, "they were as nothing compared to what the Jews next door went through". Avey agreed, and describes the plight of the Jews:

I am telling you I know without exaggeration, nearly 200,000 prisoners in Auschwitz were worked to death. Not killed. Were worked to death and they claimed total innocence. They lived for no more than 4 months. They were clubbed and beaten every day without any justification whatsoever.

Avey explained to The Daily Telegraph that he was the type that needed to see things for himself:

My mates didn't want me to do it but they agreed because they realised I was going to do it, and that was that. I had watched people being murdered literally every day and I knew someone would have to answer for it. I wanted to get in and identify the people responsible.

He was aware that he was taking "a hell of a chance", and states: "When you think about it in today's environment it is ludicrous, absolutely ludicrous. You wouldn't think anyone would think or do that, but that is how I was. I had red hair and a temperament to match. Nothing would stop me."

Avey escaped during the "death marches" in April 1945 which followed the Nazis' evacuation of Auschwitz. Although suffering from tuberculosis he caught in the camp, he broke away undetected, then made his way through Silesia, Czechoslovakia and Germany. During the march Avey saw an estimated 15,000 dead prisoners, recalling that "the road was littered with corpses." He eventually ran into Americans who helped get him back to England, and to his family who assumed he had died.

After he returned to England, Avey spent the next year and a half hospitalised with tuberculosis. Afterwards, when he tried to report what he saw in Auschwitz, he encountered resistance and indifference. From then on, he chose to not to speak of it again to anyone:

In 1947, I went to the military authorities to submit my information about Auschwitz. Their eyes glazed over. I wasn't taken seriously. I was shocked, especially after the risks I'd taken. I felt completely disillusioned, and traumatised as well. So from then on I bottled it up, and tried to piece my life back together.

The author Sir Martin Gilbert explains that by 1947, after the Nuremberg Trials were finished, "people just wanted to get on with their lives". Average citizens were not interested in discussing the war anymore, nor were they interested in hearing war stories from veterans or former POWs like Avey. "It must have been very painful", says Gilbert.

Despite the danger, I knew I had to bear witness. As Albert Einstein said: the world can be an evil place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing. I've never been one to do nothing.

— Denis Avey

Besides tuberculosis, Avey suffered from posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) before it was recognised as a medical illness, a condition few people were aware of. For the following years he battled with nightmares, jumpiness, and an inability to speak about his POW experiences. He suffered from a violent temper, stomach pains and loss of memory. From a beating during his incarceration, he also lost vision in one eye which became cancerous and required being replaced with a glass eye. The cause of the beating, Avey said, came when he cursed an SS officer who was beating a Jew in the camp. The officer took his pistol butt and gave Avey a blow directly on his eye.

When war crime prosecutors later sought Avey's testimony for the Nuremberg Trials, they were unable to locate him. He kept the traumatic events about his wartime past a complete secret from everyone, including his first and second wives, along with his daughter. "I knew there was something," said his wife, Audrey. "Naturally, you ask questions. But I never got an answer." Avey explains "The sad irony was that I went in there to find out the truth, so I could tell everybody about the horrors of the Nazi regime. But I was so traumatised at my whole experience of the Auschwitz camps it took me 60 years to be able to recount the horrors I saw."

He first began disclosing these events when invited to appear on the BBC to talk about war pensions. His memories began tumbling out, shocking the television hosts who were unable to believe what they were hearing. As a result, the BBC began production of a documentary, discovering the name of the young Jewish prisoner Avey had befriended in Auschwitz, Ernst Lobethal." When asked why he risked his life to infiltrate the Jewish sections of the concentration camp, he states that he needed to see for himself "the unspeakable things being done to the Jews at Auschwitz."". At the age of 91, he reflected back on this episode:

You know the word "conjecture"? It's never been in my vocabulary. I wanted to know exactly what was happening inside there. ... I knew there had to be eventually a reckoning to all this. ... I don't feel like a hero. I'm embarrassed, ... I had certain ideals that I grew up with.

He had assumed that Ernst had died during the death march, but tracked down and met Ernst's sister, Susanne, who also thought he died. She had escaped to England before war broke out in 1939.

Years later, Susanne learned that her brother had survived, in part thanks to Avey, and had lived in America with his new family until his death. While he never got to meet Ernst, he said that his surviving was "bloody marvellous." Ernst, like Avey, refused to burden anyone with his own suffering and never talked about Auschwitz until very late in life. But, says Avey, "I, too, have left it late. I will always regret not tracking Ernst down while he was alive. If I'd known he was living in America, I would have gone and found him, without doubt. But I am proud to have played a small part in helping one man through the obscenity of Auschwitz."

Avey married twice and pursued a career in engineering, which culminated in him building a factory near Newcastle. He retired to Bradwell, Derbyshire.

Recognition

After retirement he became active amongst ex-POWs seeking compensation for wartime imprisonment and began to talk about these experiences. In 2001 he described these in an interview with the Imperial War Museum, London, where he stated that he had obtained cigarettes for Ernst and also gave the name of Ernst's sister Susanne. He also stated that he had exchanged uniforms with a bunkmate of Ernst and entered Birkenau in the company of Ernst.

Avey got details about events inside Birkenau which he sent home to his mother and sister in code. His mother sent two letters regarding this to the War Office but never received a reply. He was interviewed on BBC Radio Derby in 2003. In 2005 the Daily Mirror reported that Avey claimed to have swapped uniforms with Ernst and entered Birkenau where he witnessed prisoners being sent to the gas chambers.

I knew in my gut that these swine would eventually be held to account. Evidence would be vital. Of course, sneaking into the Jewish camp was a ludicrous idea. It was like breaking into Hell. But that's the sort of chap I was. Reckless.

— Denis Avey

In May 2009 the British Government announced the establishment of the British Hero of the Holocaust award. That autumn Rob Broomby, a reporter from the BBC, who had known of Avey's story for some years, was able to trace Ernst's sister in Birmingham. He learned that Ernst had survived the death march and emigrated to the United States where he lived to the age of 77. Broomby also discovered that before his death, Ernst had recorded a video testimony of his experiences in Auschwitz, in which he mentions the British soldier whom he knew as "Ginger" who obtained cigarettes. This "Ginger" was Avey. BBC Television subsequently broadcast a documentary which included an emotional reunion between Avey and Susanne, where Avey sees Ernst's video testimony for the first time and realises that his cigarettes saved his life.

Although Lobethal – now Lobet – made no mention on the video of having swapped uniforms with Avey, the documentary did include Avey's account of an exchange with an unnamed prisoner. An article by Broomby published at the time of the first broadcast suggested that he and the BBC had accepted the "break-in" story as also confirmed. Denis Avey was then received by British Prime Minister Gordon Brown to mark International Holocaust Remembrance Day, and in 2010 he was named a British Hero of the Holocaust by the British Government for having saved Ernst's life.

The following week Avey signed a book contract with Hodder and Stoughton to write his story. The book appeared in April 2011 with a foreword by Sir Martin Gilbert. The book, The Man who Broke into Auschwitz, went on to be a best-seller and has been translated into a number of languages.

Reactions by others

Brian Bishop, a British POW interviewed by Walters, while he did not claim to know Avey, stated "I can't understand how he did it. To do something like that you need to have several people helping on both sides — our side and the Jewish side." Similar doubt about the feat was expressed by Ron Jones, another British POW, who also found it hard to believe that Avey, a tall, fit, strong Englishman, could have passed himself off alongside "starving six-stone Jews."

Nevertheless, British historian Lyn Smith, who interviewed Avey for the Imperial War Museum in 2001, insisted that he was an "utterly reliable witness", and defended Avey in the face of these doubts, saying "It's pitiful what happened to him." She included Avey in her book Heroes of the Holocaust. Avey's publisher accepted that in his interview with Smith, Avey's recollections could be confused, but this was understandable given the stress suffered and that he was only then beginning to unburden himself after so many decades of silence.

Yad Vashem considered Avey for the honour Righteous among the Nations, but said it was unable to grant the award because it was unable to substantiate his account of the prisoner swap. In November 2014 Avey was reported as too ill to respond to further enquiries. He died on 16 July 2015 at Newholme Hospital in Bakewell, Derbyshire.

See also

Access to sources

Avey's 2001 interview with Lyn Smith is available online and may also be heard in the "Explore History" section of the Imperial War Museum during museum opening hours, without pre-booking. His account of entering Auschwitz is on reels 7 and 8, but is not mentioned in the index. The full text of Nicholas Hellen's article may be read through NewsBank.

References

  1. ^ Broomby, Rob (16 March 2010). "How a BBC investigation found genuine 'Hero of the Holocaust'" (PDF). Ariel. p. 5. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
  2. Harrison, Keith (19 October 2012). "Qualification of Award of British Hero of the Holocaust Award 2010". whatdotheyknow.com. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
  3. Walters, Guy (17 November 2011). "The curious case of the 'break into Auschwitz'". New Statesman. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
  4. Graham, Alison (2014). "Witness to Auschwitz". Radio Times. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
  5. ^ Avey, Denis and Broomby, Rob."THE MAN WHO BROKE INTO AUSCHWITZ by Denis Avey with Rob Broomby", 30 June 2014
  6. "Nonfiction Book Review: The Man Who Broke into Auschwitz: A True Story of World War II by Denis Avey with Rob Broomby". Publishers Weekly. 1 June 2014. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
  7. Avey, Denis. The Man Who Broke into Auschwitz, Hodder & Stoughton, U.K. (2011) pp. 3-4
  8. ^ Low, Robert (20 January 2014). "Kicking out falsehoods". Jewish Chronicle. Retrieved 20 November 2016.
  9. Lecture by Denis Avey, Oxford Chabad Society
  10. ^ Broomby, Rob (29 November 2009). "The man who smuggled himself into Auschwitz". BBC News. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
  11. ^ "Denis Avey, Auschwitz witness - obituary", The Daily Telegraph, 27 August 2015
  12. Broomby, Rob (29 November 2009). "The man who smuggled himself into Auschwitz". BBC News. Retrieved 1 December 2009., includes video interview with Avey
  13. ^ Lyn E., Smith (16 July 2001). "Denis George Avey interview (22065)". Imperial War Museum. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
  14. ^ "Bearing Witness to Nazi Horror" Los Angeles Times, 3 April 2010
  15. ^ Simons, Jacob Wallace. "British PoW Who Broke Into Auschwitz — and Survived"|Archived 17 September 2016 at the Wayback Machine, The Times, 25 February 2010
  16. Denis Avey story, The Man Who Broke into Auschwitz information page
  17. "Auschwitz Wasn't Inhuman, It Was Bestial", Sunday Telegraph, 20 March 2011
  18. All information from Denis Avey's autobiography The Man who Broke into Auschwitz.
  19. Kerr, Jane (24 January 2005). "Brit who broke IN to Auschwitz". Free Online Library. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
  20. Rosen, Robyn (22 January 2010). "Brown signs Holocaust memorial book". The Jewish Chronicle. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
  21. "Britons honoured for holocaust heroism". London: The Telegraph. 9 March 2010. Archived from the original on 12 March 2010. Retrieved 9 March 2010.
  22. Turnbull, Jane (17 March 2010). "Denis Avey's story pre-empted by Hodder". janeturnbull.co.uk. Archived from the original on 24 September 2014. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
  23. "Auschwitz-Birkenau - Contact". Państwowe Muzeum Auschwitz-Birkenau w Oświęcimiu. 2014. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
  24. Round, Simon (17 November 2011). "Holocaust historian defends man who broke into Auschwitz". The Jewish Chronicle. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
  25. "Veteran defends disputed story of Auschwitz heroics". Reuters. 26 April 2011.
  26. "Full text of updated Notes section to Avey's book" (PDF). Hodder & Stoughton. 2014. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
  27. Denis Avey
  28. "Explore History - Imperial War Museum". Time Out London. 13 April 2010. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
  29. "Home". NewsBank. 2014. Retrieved 20 September 2014.

External links

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