Gregory Davis, a researcher at the United Kingdom-based anti-racism groupHope not Hate, said the film "denies the proven reality of the Holocaust whilst providing justifications for the violent antisemitism that fuelled it. Its mix of blatant falsehoods and slanted portrayal of real events gives it no historical legitimacy whatsoever, and it serves only to demonise the Jewish people and whitewash the crimes of the Nazi regime."[8]
^abPiper, Ernie; Wildon, Jordan (22 October 2021)."Telegram COVID-19 Conspiracy Group Rife With Antisemitism".Logically.Archived from the original on 13 July 2023. Retrieved13 July 2023.The link to the antisemitic documentaryEuropa: The Last Battle, a 12-hour film that among other claims asserts that Jews created communism with a goal of 'total world domination', has been shared multiple times in the chat, sometimes multiple times per day.
^abcdGilbert, David (26 May 2021)."QAnon's Antisemitism Is Finally Being Displayed in Full".Vice.Archived from the original on 26 March 2023. Retrieved26 March 2023.But last week, the underlying antisemitic content that GhostEzra had always been pushing came to the fore in a series of posts on their Telegram channel that left no doubt about just how extreme the account was. It began by promoting the neo-Nazi film "Europa – the Last Battle" a 10-part film that claims Jews created Communism, and deliberately started both world wars as part of a plot to found Israel by provoking the innocent Nazis, who were only defending themselves.
^abGill, Gerard (8 December 2021)."Fascist cross-pollination of Australian conspiracist Telegram channels".First Monday.doi:10.5210/fm.v26i12.11830.ISSN1396-0466.Archived from the original on 27 April 2023. Retrieved8 February 2024.In the QAnon channel, a poster opines that "The power of the mainstream media is waning ... People are instead finding alternative media sources ... Real people, not algorithms, are sharing documentaries like Europa: The Last Battle ...". These information sources are respectively an anti-Semitic revisionist history of WWII...
^abThomas, W. F. (11 February 2022)."Telegram: The Social Network Where Conspiracies Meet".Logically.Archived from the original on 26 March 2023. Retrieved26 March 2023.Similarly, in the group for Disclose.tv, a sketchy news aggregator site that began as a paranormal and conspiracy theory forum, users shared links to other channels filled with neo-Nazi propaganda.
^Schumacher, Elizabeth (8 February 2022)."Disclose.TV: English disinformation made in Germany".Deutsche Welle.Archived from the original on 26 October 2022. Retrieved26 October 2022.Piper and Thomas found what they described as "hate speech and Holocaust denial" flourishing in Disclose.TV's groups on the Discord app and Russia-based messaging service Telegram.