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THIS
IS MY first public speaking engagement in America except, I
think, for an after-luncheon speech in Kansas to a Kansas
City ladies guild of some kind. This, I think, is because of
language problems. I am a master of many languages but the
American tongue is one that eludes me. I realized that this
was going to be a problem many years ago when my elder
brother came to the United States long before the rest of
our family. He came here as a stoker, what you would call an
engineer, in the Queen Mary, which is that battleship parked
some way down the coast here, which was still afloat; he
came over as a stoker and he came back to London and regaled
our family with the stories of how he immigrated into the
United States. It was still Ellis Island in those days, and
the man in front of him in the immigration line was asked by
the immigration officer what his profession was, and this
Englishman answered and said "I'm a clerk" and the
immigration officer said "You're a whaat?" and he said "I'm
a clerk" and the immigration officer said "You're a whaaat?"
and this Englishman repeated "I'm a clerk" and the
immigration officer said "What do you mean, you're a claaak,
you go tick, taaak, tick, taaak?" The
Englishman, of course, was what you call a clurk. |
Attlee had this appointment with Churchill at 3:00. Now,
Churchill had no reason on this morning to believe that the
air raid was coming that night; he thought the air raid was
going to come the following night and by that time he would
be safe out in the country, in a country house of a friend
of his out in Ditchely, Oxfordshire. So he goes through the
morning's appointments with relative phlegm and equanimity
until at 1:00 the Air Ministry contacts him and says it
looks like the air raid is going to be tonight, Prime
Minister, because the Germans have already sent ou t the
reconnaissance plane they always send out in advance of an
air raid to check the weather conditions over the target.
And we've monitored the radio traffic of that plane, so the
air raid's being laid on today. However, the Air Ministry
follows in a message. They say: we believe the attack is
going to be on Central London tonight therefore. However, a
prisoner taken a few days ago has been overheard by a hidden
microphone in his cell, talking of Coventry or Birmingham
instead. But we think, says the Air Ministry, that the air
raid is going to be on Central London tonight. We will know
for certain by 3 o'clock this afternoon when the Germans
switch on their blind bombing radio beams. The town at which
these beams intersect is going to be the target. We will
find that out at 3 o'clock this afternoon. We will tell you
immediately. |
I am not anti-Jewish, I am not anti-Semitic . I have
employed Jewish staff: my lawyer, my attorney in London for
the last 26 years has been the firm of Michael Rubinstein;
they've lost every case they've fought for me but I've still
stood loyal to them. I should add straight away and I ought
to tell the ADL that in this country, of course, your laws
of libel are very lax and people can say what they like
about other people. That may or may not be right; I'm not
sure. In England and in Germany the laws of libel are much
stricter: you can't go 'round defaming people, and get away
with it, just because they happen to be on the public stage.
In Germany we have several libel actions running now against
people who've said precisely the same things as the ADL has
said in its report about me; one case is against a Communist
who's been handing ou t leaflets attacking me in Germany.
(That's now gone to the Court of Appeal and he's going to
lose because the Court of Appeal Judge already indicated
which way he's going to find.) It's just unfortunate that in
this country you cannot proceed against well-funded,
well-organized smear campaigns of the kind that we've seen
there, particularly when they are concealed smear campaigns.
I don't know who that ADL report has gone to. I can only
suspect. I can suspect from the facts above all in the case
of my book on the Hungarian Revolution of 1956, Uprising
,which was to be published in many countries around the
world. It was published in England by Hodder and Stoughton,
a very respectable and old company, was going to be
published in the United States by Putnam's, was published in
Germany and in Italy and France and many other countries. In
the United States two weeks before publication date,
Putnam's cancelled the contract. They gave no explanation,
they just quite simply swallowed the losses that they had
sustained, and Peter Israel, the managing directorof
Putnam's, telephoned me to say that the deal was off: they
weren't going to publish. Now we don't know what kind of
pressure, if any, was put on Putnam's. It is something very
close to a boycott, and I think that any organization that
starts a boycott has to watch [500AE] its onions.
Because the knife can veryrapidly turn. A boycott is the
cruelest and most dishonest weapon to use. The Nazis used it
against the Jews in the 1930s and if the Jews now start
themselves, through the ADL or Anti-Defamation League, to
try to use the same weapon against historians like myself
who are only interest ed in establishing the truth, I think
they will long live to regret it . This book, on Hungary, is
an attempt to fill a gap, as I perceived it. I considered
when I was writing it, ten years ago, that there had been no
proper investigation of the anti-Communist uprising of 1956
in Soviet-occupied Hungary. There had been a number of lurid
newspaper articles; it was probably the first historical
event that I myself remember living through (I was at the
university at the time) and it was immediately masked of
course by the fact that we British in connivance and
conspiracy with the Israelis and the French attacked Egypt
and the Suez Canal. This indeed masked the tragedy of
Hungary effectively from the world's view. |
This Jewish camarilla, this four-headed monster which
descended on the Hungarian people, bore down on them from
Moscow, had been in Moscow throughout the war years and was
imposed upon them as the post war government, obtaining
power by quite illegal and undemocratic means, and
exercising that power with brutality and ruthlessness. Its
primary executive arm was the secret police, initially
called the Allamvedelmi Osztaly (AVO), the State Security
Office, and subsequently the AVH. Now it is necessary to
know that the officer corps of that secret police was almos
t entirely Jewish and from the Russian point of view you can
understand this. They needed people on whom they could rely
100% to be their officer corps, their secret police. |
Dudas emerged from nowhere when the uprising began,
organized a street army, a rabble of people, marched on the
Communist newspaper headquarters, the Free People building
in downtown Budapest, took over the party newspaper building
which is still there, evicted nearly all the staff, and used
it as his revolutionary headquarters for an army which he
very rapidly built. He found to his delight that the
Communists' secret telephone system, the kisbugo or red
K-line system,was still operating, and he thus used the
Communists' own telephone network in order to obtain
intelligence from all over the country about the Soviet
troop movements. He built up such a vast following, and so
fast, from his own newspaper which he published called
Magyar Fugetlenseg (Hungarian Independence) that in no time
at all his name had become a byword in Soviet-occupied
Hungary. When the Russian tanks moved back in at the
beginning of November 1956, he went underground but Janos
Kadar, the present prime minister and first secretary of
Hungary, realizing that he couldn't get ahead without
negotiating with Joseph Dudas, sent for Dudas to come and
see him in the Parliament building. Like a fool, Dudas went.
Kidnapped, arrested, deported, hanged. That was the future
of many, many scores of the people who were involved in the
Hungarian uprising. |
They were the ones who had kept the lid firmly screwed
down on all the popular unrest that was swelling up over
this lack of freedom, lack of a future, in their country.
But now, of course, they realized that the lid was about to
blow off and none of them wanted to be the actual ones to
unscrew it; they wanted to be out there in the front of the
revolution, so they could claim later on as in fact they
subsequently did that they were in the very vanguard. We've
all heard the Hungarian intellectuals claiming that they
were the ones who touched off the revolution. They weren't.
Itwas the workers, the Hungarian workers and the Hungarian
students. The workers poured out of the factories and they
got the guns, handed to them by the soldiers. They grabbed
the guns off the secret policemen and by 9:00 that evening,
in fact, the revolutionaries had got arms and that's the
difference between wha thappened in Hungary then and what's
happening in Poland now. (These Poles can march and
countermarch and hold their strikes and demonstrations but
unless they get guns in their hands the government always
has the last laugh.) |