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  1. Ingrid A. Rimland, also known as Ingrid Zündel (May 22, 1936 – October 12, 2017), was an American writer. She wrote several novels based upon her own experiences growing up in a Mennonite community in Ukraine and as a refugee child during World War II. Her novel The Wanderers (1977), which won her the California Literature Medal ...

  2. 2 de may. de 2019 · Ben Goossen. In 1998 white supremacists assembled in Toronto to hear Ingrid Rimland, a doyenne of neo-Nazism. By then in her early sixties, Rimland was highly regarded for having embraced the nascent World Wide Web as an organizing tool for white supremacy.

  3. The novelist Ingrid Rimland became a prominent Holocaust denier in North America during the 1990s. Before embracing neo-Nazism, Rimland won acclaim within the Mennonite church—the Christian denomination in which she was raised—for her writings about women's hardships in the Soviet Union.

  4. How did Ingrid Rimland, a German-speaking Mennonite refugee from Ukraine, become a prominent Holocaust denier in North America? This article traces her journey from acclaimed novelist to neo-Nazi leader, and explores the role of gender, antisemitism, and white supremacy in her radicalization.

  5. 17 de jun. de 2019 · Ingrid A. Rimland, also known as Ingrid Zündel, (May 22, 1936 in Halbstadt (Molotschna), Ukraine – October 12, 2017) was a writer. She wrote several novels based upon her own experiences...

  6. 24 de oct. de 2018 · Dr Ingrid Rimland Interview - German Invasion of Ukraine, 1941. RiZiYFoShiZZiY. 5 subscribers. Subscribed. 115. 3.9K views 5 years ago. Ernst Zundel Interviews Ingrid Rimland ...more.

  7. The novelist Ingrid Rimland became a prominent Holocaust denier in North America during the 1990s. Before embracing neo-Nazism, Rimland won acclaim within the Mennonite church—the Christian denomination in which she was raised—for her writings about women's hardships in the Soviet Union.