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Holocaust and the myth of Sisyphus

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  • Holocaust and the myth of Sisyphus

    HardNews Magazine, India
    Jan 6 2006

    Holocaust and the myth of Sisyphus

    Led by hardliner Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the
    Holocaust-deniers are pushing a new culture of barbarism

    Prasenjit Chowdhury Kolkata


    Did the Holocaust happen? Is the killing of six million Jews during
    the World War II and the systematic pogrom and gassing that led to
    the biggest hecatomb of what we know as the `Final Solution' in
    history a mere figment of imagination? Unbelievable it may sound, but
    there seems to exist a motley crowd of Holocaust-deniers who believe
    that the most graphically documented blot of `man's inhumanity to
    man' (via the concentration camps and mass deportations) is a
    diabolic hoax. A `myth'.

    If that sounds like an atrociously preposterous piece of historical
    negation and revisionism perpetrated by a motivated bunch of
    history-sheeters, witness the deliberations of an international
    `educational' conference on December 11-12, 2006. Titled `Review of
    the Holocaust: Global Vision', held in Tehran, it was hosted by a
    crank, dispeller of this `myth', hardliner Iranian president Mahmoud
    Ahmadinejad, who went on record some time back as seeking to wipe
    Israel off the map. The extraordinary conference was held by the
    Iranian Foreign Ministry's Foreign Policy Centre, attended by 67
    scholars from 30 countries, including Europe and the US.
    Interestingly, a number of Jewish rabbis and orthodox Jews came
    around to reject the existence of Israel, wearing badges, `A Jew, not
    a Zionist'. Some came with the Israeli flag crossed out. The
    conference has been widely discredited by the European Union, United
    Nations Vatican, and condemned by many countries, including the US,
    the UK, France, Germany, Russia and Austria.

    Although there was a veneer of scholastic objectivity about the
    conference, the international cast of established Holocaust-deniers
    and implacable foes of Israel included David Duke, a former imperial
    wizard of the Ku Klux Klan; Robert Faurisson, a French lecturer
    stripped of his academic tenure for his anti-Holocaust opinions; and
    Michele Renouf, a London-based associate of the British author David
    Irving (Irving is currently serving a jail sentence in Austria for
    Holocaust-denial.). Also, there was a group of radical anti-Zionist
    rabbis like Rabbi Ahron Cohen representing `Jews United Against
    Israel', who oppose a Jewish state on religious grounds.

    The basic contention was simple - that the Holocaust perpetrated by the
    Third Reich was a colossal `propaganda myth' employed by the Zionists
    to dislodge the Palestinians from their homeland. That it was
    contrived to gain moral advantage by Germany's politico-military
    adversaries, in combination with an amorphous `International Jewish
    Conspiracy', during and after World War II. And that across the
    Middle East, contempt for Jews and Zionism is mainstream, as many
    believe that the Holocaust has been wildly exaggerated to justify the
    creation of the Jewish state in 1948 at the expense of the
    Palestinians, a move viewed as yet another example of Western
    imperialism.

    This is dangerous propaganda, akin to claiming that the `Rape of
    Nanking' never happened or defending Creationism. But when the
    historicity of the Holocaust is questioned, the problem is compounded
    because the Nazis were meticulous record-keepers. They listed the
    names of people sent to Auschwitz, Dachau and other death camps. The
    name of Anne Frank, whose diary described living in hiding from the
    Gestapo, appears on the list of a concentration camp, where she later
    died.

    As for more evidence, Germany, in April 2006, decided to open up its
    hitherto-closed Holocaust archives, which contain 30 million to 50
    million documents. Those records alone provide evidence of how the
    Nazis tortured and killed 17 million people, including six million of
    Europe's 8.8 million Jews. Documents like these and the memories of
    the few who survived will ensure that history's darkest hour is never
    forgotten.

    The rub is that the rationale behind such a `historic' conference,
    many suspect, is not in the sprit of academic probity, but is a
    sinister attempt to heighten frenzied anti-Semitism that runs deep in
    the collective psyche of the Arab people. Other historians, such as
    Arthur Butz, Ernst Zündel and Robert Faurisson, have worked hard to
    discredit the prevailing theory that the German regime under Hitler
    systematically killed millions of innocent civilians.

    The first purveyor of this tripe of Holocaust-denial was Paul
    Rassinier, an ex-French Communist Party member turned virulent
    anti-communist cum Nazi apologist, who published his seminal work, Le
    Passage de la Ligne (Crossing the Line), in 1948, the contention of
    which was this: much of that the Nazis are accused of accrues from
    `the natural tendency of its victims to exaggerate'.

    In the US, the anonymous release of The Myth of the Six Million (a
    book actually written by a Harvard-trained history professor named
    David Leslie Hoggan, published by Willis Carto), in 1969, and a
    booklet Did Six Million Really Die? by Richard Verrall (aka Richard
    Harwood, 1974), leader of the British National Front, tried to
    question the veracity of the number of Jewish people killed during
    the Holocaust.

    In late 2005, Ahmadinejad said that if the Europeans insisted the
    Holocaust did happen, then it was they who were responsible and hence
    they should pay the price. `If you committed this big crime, then why
    should the oppressed Palestinian nation pay the price?... This is our
    proposal: if

    you committed the crime, then give a part of your own land in Europe,
    the United States, Canada or Alaska to them (Jews)

    so that the Jews can establish their country,' he said.

    That tickles the raw bone of Zionism. Modern Zionism emerged in the
    late 19th century in response to the violent persecution of Jews in
    Eastern Europe and anti-Semitism in Western Europe. Its founder, the
    Viennese Jewish journalist, Theodor Herzl, argued in his 1896 book
    Der Judenstaat (The Jewish State) that the best way of avoiding
    anti-Semitism in Europe was to create an independent Jewish state in
    Palestine. Zionism was named after Mount Zion in Jerusalem, a symbol
    of the Jewish homeland in Palestine since the Babylonian captivity in
    the sixth century BC. The yearning to return to Zion, the biblical
    term for the Land of Israel and Jerusalem, has been the cornerstone
    of Jewish religious life since the Jewish exile from the land 2,000
    years ago, and is embedded in Jewish prayer, rituals, literature and
    culture.

    Zionism, the religio-political movement advocating the creation of a
    Jewish state in Palestine (Zion meaning the city of Jerusalem), had
    been around for half century before the Holocaust, but it had always
    been a minority movement among the Jews of Europe. The Holocaust
    changed that radically, creating a new sense of dire expediency in
    which a Jewish state had to fight its way into being. In the war that
    accompanied Israel's emergence, the Palestinian Arabs, who had been
    two-thirds of the population of Palestine, found themselves confined
    to 22 per cent of their territory (West Bank and Gaza), prevented by
    new Israeli laws from reclaiming the homes and land from which
    hundreds of thousands had fled.

    As for moral high ground, Nachem Goldman, one of the founders of the
    Jewish state and the Zionist movement, has said that it is
    `sacrilege' (he used the Hebrew word) to use the Holocaust as a
    justification for oppressing others. He was surely speaking of
    Israeli atrocities on the Palestinians and the violent spiral of
    reprisal and counter-reprisals.

    That is, to question the intent of manipulating the Holocaust is one
    thing, but to deny altogether that the Holocaust happened or that it
    is `a myth' is a dangerous travesty of history. To deny that Jewish
    deaths during the war were not caused by genocide is actually an
    attempt to turn our back on history. History is replete with
    instances of mass-killings on a genocidal scale: Soviet
    `collectivisation' of the 1930s, the Armenian massacres of 1915, the
    extermination of indigenous people in the US, the Khmer Rouge carnage
    in Cambodia and many more (including in India: 1984, Bombay pogrom
    1992-93, the Gujarat genocide).

    Unfortunately, many of these acts of barbarism do not enjoy the pious
    degree of bad faith compared to the uniqueness of the Holocaust.
    History is not a subject of dogma. When that happens, history
    degenerates into propaganda or counter-propaganda of a very venal
    kind.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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