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Robert Fisk:How The Anti-Semites Of Hezbollah Have Sent Anne Frank B

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  • Robert Fisk:How The Anti-Semites Of Hezbollah Have Sent Anne Frank B

    HOW THE ANTI-SEMITES OF HEZBOLLAH HAVE SENT ANNE FRANK BACK INTO HIDING
    By Robert Fisk

    The Independent/uk
    Dec 4, 2009

    A facsimile of Anne Frank's diary is displayed during a press
    conference at Anne Frank House in Amsterdam last June 11.

    "This young woman who upsets people ..." was the headline in Lebanon's
    L'Orient Littaraire yesterday [Thursday]. The teenager was Anne Frank,
    who died of typhoid at Bergen-Belsen in 1945 after being betrayed to
    the Nazi authorities, along with her family, in her Amsterdam "safe
    house". The upset people were the Lebanese Hizbollah, who successfully
    persuaded teachers at a Beirut school to withdraw an English language
    primer from the library after it discovered extracts from Anne Frank's
    world-famous diary in the book. Yesterday, in a brave and literary
    defence of freedom of speech, Michel Hajji Georgiou told his readers
    why this act of censorship was against the Arabs.

    Anne Frank, he said, was "a child in revolt against fear, against
    intolerance, against a mad world, who escapes her Lebanese critics ...

    Anne, under injustice, in a suffering transcended by art and writing,
    is nothing less than the sister of the Palestinian or Lebanese children
    in the novels of Elias Khoury or Ghassan Kanafani ... of the British
    children in J G Ballard's Empire of the Sun and John Boorman's Hope
    and Glory."

    Jews and Israelis may object to the parallel - indeed, will object
    to the parallel - between Jewish suffering under the Nazis and
    Palestinian suffering under the Israelis, but they should at least
    admire Georgiou's front-page article. It is accompanied by a large
    and well-known photograph of Anne, smiling in all innocence into
    the camera, unaware how short her life will be. The Jewish Holocaust
    is not a subject which Arabs have learned to live with. While Arab
    censorship is not as outrageous as Turkish laws against all mention of
    the 1915 Christian Armenian Holocaust by the Muslim Ottoman Turks -
    which can send writers to prison - Hitler's Mein Kampf is freely on
    sale in Beirut and reference to the Jewish Holocaust has been censored
    on television.

    When I made a two-and-a-half-hour documentary on the Arab-Israeli
    conflict, Lebanon's New TV channel initially cut out a 16-minute
    sequence on the murder of Polish Jews whose surviving families
    eventually arrived in Israel. Only after angry remonstrations did I
    persuade the station's owner to show the uncut film - which he did
    the following night. But being the first Westerner to put the Jewish
    Holocaust on a Lebanese television channel did not win any favours.

    Respectable, well educated families in Beirut argued with me for
    years afterwards that the Nazi massacres were either exaggerated
    or non-existent.

    There is no doubt that Israel's use of the Holocaust to suppress
    any legitimate criticism of Israel's current brutality towards
    the Palestinians has much to do with this. Holocaust denial is
    anti-Semitic, but the facile slander of anti-Semitism against anyone
    who condemns Israel's outrageous behaviour towards its neighbours long
    ago provoked a deep sense of cynicism among Arabs towards the facts of
    20th century Jewish history in Europe. The insistence of Palestinian
    academics such as Edward Said that the Jewish Holocaust should not
    be denied - on the basis that a denial of one people's suffering
    automatically negated another people's suffering (the Palestinians,
    albeit on a far smaller scale) - has received little understanding
    in the Muslim world. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's ravings
    about the Holocaust have only encouraged the habit of "denialism".

    A pity. For while serious study of the subject might have been denied
    to pupils at a school at Mseitbeh - a Shia suburb of Beirut - who
    were using The Interactive Reader Plus for English Learners, Lebanese
    students are also deprived of Victor Klemperer's diaries. Klemperer,
    a German Jewish academic, condemned the Jewish colonisation of
    pre-Second World War Palestine even as he and his wife were threatened
    by the Nazis in his native Dresden. Ironically, I bought my copy of
    Klemperer's books in highly Islamic Pakistan.

    In other words, not all Jewish Holocaust survivors - or victims -
    would automatically have supported the creation of the State of
    Israel. Israel's constant demonisation of Palestinians as Nazis -
    the late prime minister Menachem Begin specifically compared Yasser
    Arafat to Hitler - finds its apotheosis in the Holocaust museum at Yad
    Vashem outside Jerusalem where the equally late Grand Mufti Haj Amin
    al-Husseini is pictured with Hitler. Al-Husseini's picture is real;
    Israel's racist foreign minister used it a few weeks ago to further
    demean the Palestinians, although it is immensely to Israel's credit
    that the fairest biography of this anti-Jewish figure was written by
    a former Israeli military governor of Gaza.

    Hizbollah, of course, has well and truly managed to put its foot
    in it in Beirut. Its Al Manar television station criticised Anne
    Frank's diaries because they are "devoted to the persecution of the
    Jews... Even more dangerous still is the dramatic and theatrical way
    in which the diary is written - it is full of emotion." Poor 15-year
    old Anne Frank's record of her suffering was not unemotional enough
    for the warriors of the Hizbollah, her book mere proof of "the Zionist
    invasion of [Lebanese] education." In fairness, Beirut's bookshops
    show no fear of selling books on the Jewish Holocaust and the evils
    of the Second World War. The Jews of Lebanon were once counted in
    their thousands; many came from Nazi Germany en route to Palestine
    but stayed because they loved the country and the Arab people. The
    government is repairing the old Jewish synagogue whose roof was shot
    off in 1982 - by an Israeli gunboat.
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