Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Недочеловек" in Russian language version.
As Simon Wiesenthal, a survivor of Auschwitz, long ago observed, «The Holocaust was not only a matter of the killing of six million Jews. It involved the killing of eleven million people, six million of whom were Jews.» Wiesenthal spoke on the basis of what was then the best available evidence. Today, some 50 years later, the only correction to be made to his statement lies in the fact that we now believe his estimate of 11 million was far too low. The true human costs of Nazi genocide may come to 26 million or more, 5 to 6 million of whom were Jews, a half million to a million or more of whom were Gipsies, and the rest mostly Slavs. Only with these facts clearly in mind can we comprehend the full scope of the Holocaust and its real implications.»
the selective killings of the Polish intelligentsia and significant groups of other Slavic peoples … can be classed as genocide under the United Nations Genocide Convention and were so regarded by Lemkin (1944) prior to the Convention.
In the following three chapters I … treat more fully the less heard of genocide of the Slavs
As Simon Wiesenthal, a survivor of Auschwitz, long ago observed, «The Holocaust was not only a matter of the killing of six million Jews. It involved the killing of eleven million people, six million of whom were Jews.» Wiesenthal spoke on the basis of what was then the best available evidence. Today, some 50 years later, the only correction to be made to his statement lies in the fact that we now believe his estimate of 11 million was far too low. The true human costs of Nazi genocide may come to 26 million or more, 5 to 6 million of whom were Jews, a half million to a million or more of whom were Gipsies, and the rest mostly Slavs. Only with these facts clearly in mind can we comprehend the full scope of the Holocaust and its real implications.»
the selective killings of the Polish intelligentsia and significant groups of other Slavic peoples … can be classed as genocide under the United Nations Genocide Convention and were so regarded by Lemkin (1944) prior to the Convention.
In the following three chapters I … treat more fully the less heard of genocide of the Slavs
the selective killings of the Polish intelligentsia and significant groups of other Slavic peoples … can be classed as genocide under the United Nations Genocide Convention and were so regarded by Lemkin (1944) prior to the Convention.