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Winfrey Web site adds Holocaust story disclaimer

Oprah has yet to comment on the debunked story of a WWII romance

J. Pat Carter / AP
Herman and Roma Rosenblat pose in their North Miami Beach, Fla. home, as they talk about "Angel Girl," the book written by Laurie Friedman, about the beginning of their relationship during the Holocaust. Oprah Winfrey has yet to comment on Rosenblat and his debunked story of meeting his future wife in a concentration camp.
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updated 2:44 p.m. ET Jan. 6, 2009

Talk show host Oprah Winfrey has yet to comment on the debunked story of a Holocaust survivor who claimed to have met his future wife in a Nazi concentration camp. But a brief disclaimer on the story she featured prominently on her show has been added to her Web site, www.oprah.com.

"On December 27, 2008, Herman Rosenblat admitted to fictionalizing portions of his life story, including how he met his wife," reads the update, which was posted Monday. "Based on this admission, the publisher of his forthcoming memoir — `Angel at the Fence' — canceled plans to print his book."

Rosenblat, 79, a resident of North Miami Beach, Florida, was a Holocaust survivor who for years had endeared himself to Winfrey and others by recalling how he and his wife met on opposite sides of a barbed-wire fence at a sub-camp of Buchenwald in the 1940s and were reunited more than a decade later on a blind date in New York. Berkley Books, an imprint of Penguin Group (USA), had planned to release his memoir in February.

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But after scholars, friends and family members challenged him, Rosenblat acknowledged the story was untrue and Berkley pulled the book.

The update on Winfrey's site appears at the bottom of the first of three pages about Rosenblat, his wife Roma and their two appearances on Winfrey's television show. Winfrey spokeswoman Angela DePaul, when asked Tuesday why Rosenblat's story — listed on the site as the first example of "Love Lessons From Amazing Couples" — wasn't removed, referred to the update posted by "the oprah.com editorial team" and declined further comment.

A planned feature film on the story is still scheduled to begin production this year, with producer Harris Salomon saying that the script may note the "fabricated elements of their wartime love story."

Winfrey's site also refers to another discredited guest, James Frey. In 2005, Winfrey chose Frey's "A Million Little Pieces" for her book club, but later brought him back on the show and scolded him on her show after he acknowledged fabricating substantial parts of the drug addiction memoir.

"A Million Little Pieces" remains on the list of Winfrey picks, but the Web site emphasizes the memoir's fall, including a transcript of Frey's unhappy return. The text for an earlier, more favorable link to Frey's book, labeled "A Powerful Story," has been removed.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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