Zundel's Bunker [PRO]

The Shadow of Carlton Street: Unpacking "Zundel’s Bunker" In the heart of Toronto’s historic Cabbage Town neighborhood, a Victorian house once stood as a jarring contrast to its peaceful surroundings. Known infamously as the residence at 290 Carlton Street was not just a home, but the fortified operational center for Ernst Zündel, one of the world's most prolific neo-Nazi publishers and Holocaust deniers. From Victorian Home to Fortified Fortress

: His publishing house sent materials like the pamphlet Did Six Million Really Die? to dozens of countries, including mass mailings to members of the German parliament. Zundel's Bunker

: Following a devastating arson attack in May 1995 that destroyed the front porch, Zündel reconstructed the home with a high forbidding fence, window bars, and multiple surveillance cameras. The Shadow of Carlton Street: Unpacking "Zundel’s Bunker"

Zündel’s reign at Carlton Street ended in the early 2000s when he moved to Tennessee before being deported back to Canada and eventually extradited to Germany in 2005. to dozens of countries, including mass mailings to

: The interior was described as being lined floor-to-ceiling with books glorifying the Third Reich, with staff reportedly working beneath a portrait of Adolf Hitler.

: Today, the "bunker" is no longer a site of hate; it has been converted into a rooming house, largely stripped of its forbidding fortifications.