Are Jewish deaths somehow far more precious and sacred than gentile deaths? My family lost someone during WW2 and I can assure you if anyone is interested I can tell you about it. It's something that affected my parent's generation and my grandparent's, but TBH is really of little meaning to me.
For my part, I am quite willing to believe that a lot of Jews died during WW2, but I notice repeatedly that Jews can become very vague when confronted with a knowledgeable denier. I have yet to find online any Jew who claims to have lost relatives even the most cursory description - just as Skeptic has appears to run away here. And on the few occasions that they have, they provided details that were manifestly incorrect by the orthodox narrative.
One example went like this:
My family lived in Poland (not specified where), they were transported to Treblinka and gassed.
My response: Many thousands were transported to Treblinka as part of what was called a resettlement program, however how can you be sure that they were gassed and not transported onwards.
His response: That is where you are wrong. The Germans kept excellent records and I have been to Yad Vashem and seen the document where it says they were gassed.
My response: Can you be more specific, there are no lists of people who were gassed in Treblinka. Hypothetically there might be some lists of people who were deported there, but even those are very rare. Can you describe this document in more detail.
His response: You are just a lying hate-filled anti-semite.
You see my confusion: I didn't ask this person to lie about seeing a German document that stated his family was gassed, but he went and did so anyway. It seems to me that relocating relatives after WW2, especially considering all the emigration that took place, would be a massive and on-going process. Yet there doesn't seem to be much evidence of such activity. Hence I was hoping Skeptic, since he claimed that his family had been searching, would tell us what organisations there were that actually deal with this.
It doesn't really seem such an unreasonable request to me, and probably of general interest to many people.