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Issue:
11.04
 
Important dates

This Month...

Editor's Comment
Michael looks at:
Farewell, Shalom and Adieu

Being Jewish Magazine


see a .pdf copy of the current issue

Features
An Open Letter from Abba to His Family

Enough With The Political Finger-Pointing!

Revisiting the Haggadah

Eddy's Recipe List
Victoria Sponge

Book Review List

The Outspeaker
Encouraging violence is never correct

Batya
Good times and bad times with Batya


Marjorie Wolfe
An Interview with Paul Reiser

BC's Backlot
The Last Shalom

This And That
My Treasure Chest

Three Symbols of Passover

Stress

Lynn Ruth Miller
How we all became part of a bigger story

Mel Yahre
A few words for my friend

Eddy's Thoughts
Don't let life flutter by

The Bear Facts
How I found Michael

 
History on Trial: My Day in Court with a Holocaust 
by: Deborah E. Lipstadt, PhD.  
April 16, 2010

Nothing underscores the message of Deborah Lipstadt’s book, Denying the Holocaust: The Growing Assault on Truth and Memory, than the libel suit that David Irving brought against her and Penguin Books in 1996.

Irving, author of more than 30 books on World War II, including The Destruction of Dresden, Hitler’s War, Churchill’s War and Goebbels: Mastermind of the Third Reich, has repeatedly alleged that because no one can produce a written order from Hitler ordering the Shoah, there was no formal, organized genocide.

By bringing suit in British courts, Irving forced Lipstadt and Penguin to prove the statements about him in Denying the Holocaust were true. In effect, this meant that Lipstadt was presumed guilty until proven otherwise.

(If the case had been brought in a U.S. court, Irving would have had the burden of proving that the statements were wrong and defamed him. Additionally, U.S. protection of freedom of speech would have allowed some latitude in what could be said about a public figure such as Irving.)

History on Trial: My Day in Court with a Holocaust Denier is Dr. Lipstadt’s own story of the five-year trial that ultimately led to a 334-page judgment detailing Irving’s systematic distortion of the historical record of World War II.

The Dorot Professor of Modern Jewish and Holocaust Studies at Emory University, Lipstadt has served as a consultant to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and on its Memorial Council. In addition to Denying the Holocaust and History on Trial, she is the author of Beyond Belief: the American Press and the Coming of the Holocaust, 1933-1945.

She initially found it difficult to believe that Irving’s suit would actually go to trial. As preparations for trial crept forward, she grew more and more concerned that the judge, spectators, media and the world at large would fail to understand the corrosive nature of the anti-Semitism underlying Holocaust denial.

Irving has claimed that the diary of Anne Frank is a forgery written by an American screenwriter. While he claims Jewish deaths at Nazi hands were greatly exaggerated, he alleges that civilian deaths from the bombing of Dresden were greatly underreported.

Because the media tended to cover Irving as a historian with an alternative perspective on World War II, Lipstadt was concerned readers would take his allegations as factual. Lipstatdt was horrified to preview a documentary about Irving and learn that the filmmaker felt no need to counter Irving’s statements. In his eyes, the statements were so fallacious they needed no further discussion. In Lipstadt’s eyes, they could easily be taken as truth by poorly informed or anti-Semitic viewers.

History on Trial is a suspenseful, engaging courtroom drama. Lipstadt’s and Penguin’s legal team meticulously documented examples of Irving’s misstatements, omission of contextual information and extensive involvement with anti-Semitic and Holocaust denying organizations. The team physically went to Auschwitz, uncovering documentation that redesigns of the former morgues at the camp were handled in a significantly different way than other routine architectural changes.

In response to a request from Lipstadt, the government of Israel released Adolf Eichmann’s memoirs, written between his conviction and execution in 1962 to the public for the first time.

Irving represented himself during the trial. While he repeatedly dismissed his own inaccuracies as minor errors typical of any scholar handling volumes of information, he viewed any statement made by Lipstadt as having purposeful and malicious intentions toward him. In one bizarre incident, he actually addressed Justice Charles Gray as “mein führer.”

One morning, Lipstadt is approached in the corridor by an older woman, who rolls up her cardigan sleeve to show the numbers tattooed on her arm and thanks Lipstadt for all that she is going through to protect the truth of what happened.

Anyone who has ever thought or said the words, “Never again,” in relationship to the Holocaust should read this book. While nothing can take away the facts of what happened, Holocaust deniers and those who give them unchallenged public attention rob us all of the lessons of that terrible time.

For additional information about the trial and David Irving’s writings, read Cambridge historian Richard J. Evans’ book, Lying about Hitler: History, Holocaust, and the David Irving Trial. Evans served as an expert witness in support of Lipstadt at the trial.

Submitted by: Jeannette M. Hartman
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