| [images and
captions added by this website] The
Daily Vanguard Portland State University, Oregon, Friday, May 6,
2005
Infamous
anti-Semite quietly holds lecture at PSU Holocaust
denier David
Irving signs books at closed-door University Place
event, unbeknownst to staff,
students by Josie
Mulberry DAVID Irving, one of the world's
most prominent
Holocaust
deniers, found himself
welcomed to lecture, as well as sell and sign his
controversial books, in a quiet,
tea-and-cookie-catered conference room at Portland
State's University Place hotel.  David
Irving comments: PROF. GAUTHIER? Not on
my mailing list. I had always believed
that Gauthier was a particularly nasty
disease (ethnically confined to the Jewish
population), and this appears to be
true. This news story
is however noteworthy as evidence of how
the
traditional enemies of free speech
operate (even while publicly protesting
that they have no intention of silencing
me). What are they so frightened of, if I
manage to speak? Through their insider
information, Jewish individuals learn of
events and furtively spread the word -- as
Adolf Hitler once said of them,
mit Windeseile, "with the speed of
the winds" (but they were too late in this
case to silence the event, because our
security precautions were adequate); then
they frantically smearmonger and network
with all their other contacts in an
attempt to stifle debate. Their Prof Konrad
Kwiet did just the same in Australia
in Sept 1992, in order to halt my tour and
stifle free debate on history. Then, years down the
road, they whine: "Why us?" IT is enough to make even a rabbi
anti-Semitic. My spy who spotted this
particular news item comments: "Gee, the usual suspects
are really, really ticked that you were
able to hold a meeting at Portland State
without their raising the usual unholy
ruckus. The management and staffers
described you as polite, charming,
respectful, nice and kind. It was only
after you'd left that you were outed -- by
a homosexual employee -- and the
predictable wailing began. 'I am appalled...' 'We're really
offended. . .' 'It's really
hurtful. . .' 'It caught us off
guard..." All in all, a pretty
even-handed write-up all the same; it even
includes references to free speech and
'the marketplace of ideas.' So, just to be safe, a
slavish sidebar promoting Holocaust
Remembrance Day is appended." [see
below]   Remember
the Holocaust, today Sundown
last night marked the beginning of
National Holocaust Remembrance Day, a day
to remember the Jews, Gypsies, gays,
intellectuals and other peoples targeted
by the Nazis during World War
II.
 Website
illustration: After visiting Hitler on
Apr 20, 1942, Himmler orders Heydrich,
"Keine Vernichtung der Zigeuner" (don't
kill the gypsies). Bet you haven't
read that in the conformist
history-books. . .
This
year is the 60th anniversary of the end of
the World War II. In
observance of the day, Portland State's
Jewish Student Union will host a table in
the Park Blocks between noon and 1 p.m.
with tea light candles for students to
light. Kayla
Goldfarb, a co-coordinator of the group,
said all
four of her grandparents were Holocaust
survivors.
Her grandfather, who was in his 30s during
the war and lives to tell his story today,
survived
Buchenwald concentration
camp
alongside Nobel laureate Elie
Wiesel. Goldfarb
said she plans to contact her family in
recognition of the day and expressed
concern at the diminishing number of
survivors every year. "They're
all dying off," she said. "We're worried
that soon they're all going to be dead and
then who's going to tell their stories?
It's important that we talk about
it." "For
me it's a day to remember a great loss and
a weak moment in humanity's history," said
Jessica Marsden, Jewish Student Union
co-coordinator. Marsden
said she would attend synagogue in
recognition of the day. The
day of remembrance ends at sundown
tonight. | Not a single protester appeared. No reporters. No
student groups. It seems that, aside from the
lecture attendees themselves, nobody knew Irving
was there.Irving has been barred from several countries
because of his
neo-Nazi ties and
inflammatory publications, but on April 25,
[2005] the
67-year-old, Britain-born
Nazi sympathizer came
and went unnoticed -- almost. The hotel's general manager, David
Burkholder, who booked the private meeting room
for the event said he did not know who Irving
was. "He was polite with a
charming English accent," Burkholder said,
adding that he saw no reason to
investigate
Irving from his kind and scholarly
façade. In fact, a few years ago
[December
2003] Irving had rented a room at
University Place when it was the Doubletree Hotel,
prior to the University's acquisition of the
property, Burkholder said. Irving was familiar with
the facility and the booking process from that
appearance. "He even knew what room he wanted," Burkholder
said. The event was listed under Irving's company's
name, Parforce UK, Ltd. It was held behind closed
doors from 6:30 until 10 p.m. in a conference room
set up for 60, although hotel staffers said only
approximately 45 "older, white" people attended.
Two tables were piled with books for sale and a
video was playing in the room. "Everything had to do with Hitler," one staffer
said. Both staffers who prepared the room were
previously unfamiliar with Irving but said "he was
respectful and nice and kind." The staffers were
only present to set up, and unable to provide more
details about the event. But according to Irving's
web site, he has been touring the United
States, signing books and delivering lectures on
"The Faking of Adolf Hitler for History" as part of
his "International Campaign for Real History." Burkholder said he learned of Irving's
controversial topic when a gay hotel employee
alerted him to Irving's racist reputation after
Irving had checked out.
IT was a few days later before students and faculty
learned of Irving's visit, largely through e-mails
from University of Portland philosophy professor
Jeff Gauthier. In e-mails received by
Portland State's Jewish Student Union and The
Vanguard, he wrote, "I am appalled that a
taxpayer-funded institution that trumpets its
commitment to diversity and mutual respect
host[ed] such an event."
Gauthier was unavailable for comment for this
article. Jessica Marsden, co-coordinator of the
organization, echoed Gauthier's sentiment and
expressed further disappointment that the event
occurred during the Jewish holy week of
Passover. "We were really
offended," Jewish Student Union co-coordinator
Kayla Goldfarb said. "We should have had
an opportunity to voice that we were against
this before it took place." "It's really hurtful for people who are part of
the Jewish culture," she added. Her grandparents
were Holocaust survivors. "It caught me off guard that he was at PSU,"
said Randy Blazak associate professor of
Sociology and chair of the Coalition Against Hate
Crimes. He said that if he had known beforehand he would
have informed the media and alerted PSU President
Daniel Bernstine about potentially negative
publicity. But Blazak also said
that Irving's once acclaimed academic reputation
was completely discredited in 2000 after a
London court labeled him not only a
Holocaust
denier but also racist
and anti-Semitic. Since then his audience has
gotten increasingly smaller. In fact, calling Irving a "crackpot," Blazak
said, "He's one of the biggest jokes in the extreme
right movement." Still, he added, "I felt a little snickered that
he snuck by me and was on my
campus. There should be a statement
[from the university]." Goldfarb said that the Jewish Student Union also
wants to pursue an apology from the university. But
according to Interim Director for Finance and
Administration Cathy Dyck, the university
administration was as surprised by Irving's visit
as everyone else. "No university money went into
this and no groups sponsored this from the
university," she said. Dyck added, however, that while PSU does not
necessarily condone Irving's beliefs, PSU is a
public institution and as a matter of free speech
Irving had a right to be there. His event was not
open to the public, he did not advertise, he was
respectful and caused no safety issues. "All he did
was rent a [private] meeting room," she
said. "You can't just say 'I don't agree with your
beliefs so you can't come here.'" "We'll never tell anyone that they can't hold an
event on campus because it's controversial," said
John Eckman, associate director of Auxiliary
Services, which oversees scheduling at University
Place. "A university is a marketplace of
ideas." Irving received some praise in the 1960s and
'70s for his extensively researched writings and
archival findings on Nazi Germany in World War II,
but he grew increasingly extreme in the 1980s. He
has been involved in numerous lawsuits and was
declared anti-Semitic, racist and a
Holocaust denier by a
British judge in
a libel case he fought and lost against U.S.
Holocaust historian Deborah
Lipstadt. Lipstadt had called Irving a
Holocaust denier in
her book, "Denying
the Holocaust: the Growing Assault on Truth and
Memory." The countries
he has been barred from include Canada,
Austria, Germany, Australia and South Africa. His
books include the bestsellers "The Destruction of
Dresden" (1963) and "Hitler's War"
(1977).
|