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Since the conviction in Germany, neither Demjanjuk nor his family has asked for help from the Ukrainian community, Lozynskyj said. With Demjanjuk ensconced in the nursing home, Lozynskyj said, it's not clear how much help he really needs. Demjanjuk's stateless status is a rarity. Some detainees at the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, have been described as stateless, and modern-day pirates have operated as stateless individuals, marauding the high seas outside national borders. Immigration attorneys in the U.S. said it was doubtful that Demjanjuk would be allowed back in the country unless he regains his citizenship. An American judge has suggested that a public defender recently appointed in Cleveland to represent Demjanjuk's interests could revive his U.S. denaturalization case using the FBI report that challenged the authenticity of the ID card that was trial evidence. The file indicated the FBI believed the card, purportedly showing that Demjanjuk served as a death camp guard, was a Soviet-made fake. Dr. Efraim Zuroff, the chief Nazi hunter of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, said it was disturbing to hear about support for Demjanjuk. "I think this is a very upsetting phenomenon because the Ukrainian community has consistently supported Demjanjuk even though there was serious evidence from the very beginning that he was a participant in the Final Solution," he said. Reaction was mixed in the Ukrainian community in Munich. Some pointed out that higher-ranking Germans have been acquitted. "He was a victim himself and had to react in this way, because he needed to survive," said Rosalia Pankiewicz, a 64-year-old of Ukrainian heritage. Minutes from Demjanjuk's neat ranch-style home in Seven Hills, Ohio, his ordeal hasn't been a big topic in Parma's Ukrainian Village, a quaint neighborhood of ethnic shops, cathedrals and Ukrainian gathering spots, according to butcher George Salo. Among his Ukrainian-American friends and customers, Salo said there's a sense that the decades-long saga "is what it is," with little to be done on Demjanuk's behalf. "The guy is 91," Salo said, noting that Germany was the architect of the Holocaust and continues to allow former Nazis to live there: "They're having a double standard."
[Associated
Press;
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