[images
added by this website] Deutsche
Welle Thursday, March 10, 2005 Prof
Deborah Lipstadt received an
ecstatic welcome when she spoke at
Brandeis University, and signed six
million copies of her latest book
(equally true). Dealing
a Blow to Holocaust Deniers DEBORAH Lipstadt never
took the stand during the landmark libel
case she won against British
Holocaust
denier David
Irving. Now, five years on, the US
historian tells the story of her six-year
legal battle in a new book. In "History on Trial: My Day in Court
with David Irving," Emory University
professor Deborah Lipstadt recounts
her legal battle with David Irving, the
widely-read World War II writer, and a man
she called "one of the most dangerous
spokespersons for Holocaust denial" in her
acclaimed
1993 book, "Denying the Holocaust: the
Growing Assault on Truth and Memory." Following the book's publication,
Irving accused Lipstadt of damaging his
reputation as a historian. But by the end
of the ensuing libel trial -- in which
Irving defended
himself [sic] -- his
reputation was thoroughly skewered.
Justice Charles Gray condemned
Irving, saying that he had "persistently
and deliberately misrepresented and
manipulated historical evidence," and
called him an "active Holocaust
denier
anti-Semitic and racist." While in Berlin to present her latest
book, Lipstadt spoke about her court
victory in a DW-WORLD
interview. David
Irving comments: 1. I have never written a book
or article on the Holocaust; not
a very profligate denier. Dr
Goebbels: "If a lie is repeated
often enough, it will be
believed." 2. NEVER
FORGET: "Deborah
Lipstadt, author of the
anti-revisionist polemic
Denying the Holocaust, has
assigned [Binjamin
Wilkormiski's book]
Fragments in her Emory
University class on Holocaust
memoirs. When confronted with
evidence that it is a fraud
[the
author spent the war in comfort
in Switzerland, not Auschwitz,
and was not even a
Jew], she commented
that the new revelations
'might complicate matters
somewhat, but [the work]
is still powerful.'" -- In other words,
who cares about fact or fiction
where the Holocaust is concerned?
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DW-WORLD: Six years of your
life, a lot of effort, expense and emotion
went into this
libel case brought against you by
David Irving. Was it worth it? Deborah
Lipstadt: I think it was. First
of all, I had no choice. British libel law
places the onus on the defendant, so that
you're essentially, from an American
perspective, guilty until proven innocent.
If I hadn't fought, he would've won by
default. He could have said that his
version of the Holocaust -- which is that
there was no central program to kill the
Jews, no Hitler involvement, no gas
chambers and in which the survivors are
all liars and psychopaths -- was telling
the truth. If you look back now, any time David
Irving is mentioned, his name is followed
by some version of the adjectives
"Holocaust
denier," "racist" or "anti-Semite."
He's no longer reviewed in the New York
Review of Books, The New York Times,
or the Times Literary Supplement,
for example, so I
think in that sense it was "worth
it." DW-WORLD: A lot of people might
be tempted to label Holocaust deniers as
extremists that don't need to be taken
seriously. Your trial showed that this
isn't the case, as Irving was
well-respected in some circles. How
prevalent is the threat posed to history
by Holocaust deniers now? Deborah
Lipstadt: It's a little hard to
judge because with the Internet,
geographical borders become amorphous or
porous. I don't think the threat is really
prevalent. I think the deniers have been
dealt a very serious blow. The main source
for Holocaust denial today is in the Arab
world, where it is very prevalent, and is
almost gross in its lack of
sophistication. But I don't think in
Europe it's a major issue, because
essentially, as a result of the trial, we
laid waste to virtually every Holocaust
denial argument as they stood through
2001/2002. DW-WORLD: In Germany though,
there is a debate going on, not about
outright denial, perhaps, but about
revisionism as we saw recently with the
60th anniversary of the
bombing of Dresden. In the run-up to
that anniversary, the far-right NPD party
tried to cast that event as a "bombing
Holocaust" against Germans. Are you at all
worried about the situation in
Germany? Deborah
Lipstadt: I am worried, not
about denial, but about relativism. I'm
worried about things like the Flick
collection being brought to Berlin, I'm
worried about Dresden. Ironically, it's
David Irving who is
responsible for the feeling that Dresden
was such a crime, because his book
[The
Destruction of Dresden] was one of
the first books on the topic early in the
1960s. In the trial, we found that he
tremendously exaggerated the number of
victims. There were even Germans who were
writing to him back then, trying to
correct him and saying that his numbers
were way out of whack. He just ignored
their comments. Dresden was a tragedy.
It's a tragedy anytime people die,
particularly civilians in a war, but
inflating the horror of it was in order to
make what I call immoral equivalencies. It
was in order for him to say, "Well yes,
maybe 80,000 people died at Auschwitz
from war-related privations" -- which is
not true, they were murdered and it was
more than 80,000 -- "but a quarter of a
million people died in one day and one
night of bombing in Dresden, now that's a
real tragedy." DW-WORLD:
David Irving
defended
himself
[sic] in
court, so you heard plenty from him.
You did not take the stand -- why was
that? Deborah
Lipstadt: First of all, I
wasn't obligated to take the stand. I
offered to. I continuously told my lawyers
that I was more than willing to take the
stand, that I could hold my own against
this guy. But the standard operating
procedure in libel trials is not to put
the author on the stand. The author is
being sued for what they wrote. So my book
was at issue. We had to prove that what I
wrote in my book was correct, and there
was nothing I could add by taking the
stand. Though I do have to say that for
me, someone for whom keeping quiet is an
unnatural act, it was terribly difficult
to restrain myself and listen to a man who
was spewing anti-Semitism and racism. DW-WORLD: That's where your
latest book comes in. Deborah
Lipstadt: The book is my voice
at long last coming out, and it really
follows three strands. It follows our
legal strategy, the historical issues --
how does this man twist the truth, how
does he play with the documents, and so on
-- and the third strand is the personal.
There was a very heavy personal element,
first of all in terms of the disruption to
my life, but that's the least of it. The most striking personal element was
the encounter with survivors and children
of survivors and veterans. People would
stop me as I walked into the courtroom in
the morning and put pieces of paper in my
hand with lists of victims' names, and
they would say, this is my evidence. There was a day when Irving was trying
to argue that the Allies were responsible
for the people who were found in the
concentration camps in Germany who looked
like cadavers at the end of the war,
because the Allies
had bombed the pharmaceuticals factories
and the infrastructure so the Germans
couldn't get food and medicine to the
camps. At the end of that day, an older man
walked up to me. He had a cane, but he
still had a sort of military bearing, very
ramrod straight. He said, "Madam, I was in
the British forces that liberated the
camps. It's awful to hear that man blame
it on us. Get
the bastard, madam, get the
bastard." Author Deanne
Corbett interviewed Deborah Lipstadt
[in
English, because this Holocaust expert
cannot read or speak
German] Deutsche
Welle is an official media service funded
by the German
Government on
this website:
- Dossier
on Deborah Lipstadt
- In
2002 Lipstadt
wrote in Nova Law Review a revealing
survey of the months before the
Lipstadt trial.
With full commentary by Mr
Irving
- Lipstadt
trial index
- Trial
transcripts
-
Lipstadt's
praise for Binjamin Wilkomirski, the
(ASSHOL) fraudster and liar:
"Deborah Lipstadt
has assigned Fragments in her
Emory University class on Holocaust
memoirs. When confronted with evidence
that it is a fraud, she commented that
the new revelations 'might complicate
matters somewhat, but [the
work] is still
powerful.'"-
Twelve
questions to put to Prof. Lipstadt the
next time you see her...
-
Controversy
April 2001 over Emory's choice of
Deborah Lipstadt as graduation speaker;
won't get honorary degree
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