− | [[image:Goetz23.jpg|thumb]][[Ryke Geerd Hamer (english)|Ryke Geerd Hamer]], the inventor of the controversial [[New Germanic Medicine|GNM]], considers Iwan to be a ''Wanderrabbiner'' (wandering / hiking rabbi) and Oberrabbiner (superior rabbi) and believes in him as a sort of witness for his own antisemitic-influenced pseudomedical views. According to the wishes of Hamer, Götz signed the day december 17, 2008 in Sandefjord/Norway a very strange document in witch he claims that all rabbi of the world and all oncologists of the world would know for shure that the Hamer-doctrine is correct, and that every jewish patient in the world would be treated according his rules. At he same time, non-jewish patients would not allowed to profit from his method and this would lead to a genocide of 20 million of people. The document shows however no evidence for these absurde allegations, no witness is cited. According to a swiss blogger, Hamer tried vainly to find supporting citations for his hypotheses in the Talmud <ref>http://www.kabbala-akademie.ch/index.php?menu_id=121&main_menu_id=2&blog=1</ref> and contacted that man. The jewish Talmud (books Mischna and Gemara) were however written centuries ago and are books considered as ''completed''. | + | [[image:Goetz23.jpg|thumb]][[Ryke Geerd Hamer]], the inventor of the controversial [[New Germanic Medicine|GNM]], considers Iwan to be a ''Wanderrabbiner'' (wandering / hiking rabbi) and Oberrabbiner (superior rabbi) and believes in him as a sort of witness for his own antisemitic-influenced pseudomedical views. According to the wishes of Hamer, Götz signed the day december 17, 2008 in Sandefjord/Norway a very strange document in witch he claims that all rabbi of the world and all oncologists of the world would know for shure that the Hamer-doctrine is correct, and that every jewish patient in the world would be treated according his rules. At he same time, non-jewish patients would not allowed to profit from his method and this would lead to a genocide of 20 million of people. The document shows however no evidence for these absurde allegations, no witness is cited. According to a swiss blogger, Hamer tried vainly to find supporting citations for his hypotheses in the Talmud <ref>http://www.kabbala-akademie.ch/index.php?menu_id=121&main_menu_id=2&blog=1</ref> and contacted that man. The jewish Talmud (books Mischna and Gemara) were however written centuries ago and are books considered as ''completed''. |
| The complete Mischnajoth was even sent to Hamer, but the search by him did not produce any evidence in support for his claims. | | The complete Mischnajoth was even sent to Hamer, but the search by him did not produce any evidence in support for his claims. |