Born
in 1929 of a French father and a Scottish
mother, Robert Faurisson taught
classical letters (French, Latin, Greek)
before specialising first in the analysis
of modern and contemporary French literary
texts and, finally, in the appraisal of
texts and documents (literature, history,
media). He was professor at the Sorbonne
and the University of Lyon. Because of his
historical revisionist stands, he was
effectively forbidden from teaching. He
has incurred many convictions in the law
courts and has suffered ten physical
assaults. In France, access to the press,
radio, and television is barred to him, as
it is to all revisionists. Amongst his
works: Écrits
révisionnistes (1974-1998), in
four volumes (2nd edition, LV-2027
p.)
Professor
Robert Faurisson's "Sahar 1" appeal
hearing in Paris on May 30,
2007 By a Correspondent ON May 30, 2007
Professor Robert Faurisson appeared
before the 11th section of the Court of
Appeal in Paris regarding his conviction
of October 6, 2006 for comments made on
the telephone and broadcast on Iran's
"Sahar 1" satellite television channel.
Professor Faurisson's alleged "offence"
was to state in an interview, apparently
given and transmitted on February 3, 2005,
that during the Second World War there had
never been any attempt on the part of the
German State at a physical extermination
of Europe's Jews. Professor Faurisson told the court that
he did not dispute the fact that in the
period in question there had been
suffering and persecution where the Jews
were concerned: it was, for example, true
that one fifth of the Jews living in
France were deported. But he disputed the
war propaganda-based account that has
become entrenched in the historical record
and according to which there existed a
National Socialist project to exterminate
the Jews. On the other hand, there had
been an attempt to reach a "territorial
final solution" of the Jewish question,
but the word "territorial" was always left
out by the propagandists, journalists and
approved historians. The "extermination"
argument, for its part, was supported by
no evidence whatever, either material or
documentary: so he declared, having
conducted, as he put it, a
detective-style, rather than an academic,
inquiry. Since 1990 the "Fabius-Gayssot
Act" has prohibited the public
expression of such views in France.
Between 2000 and 2005 Professor Faurisson
gave numerous interviews to journalists,
amongst whom some Iranians, in which he
believed he could speak freely: hence his
great surprise in 2006 at being prosecuted
for this one. The European Court of Human Rights has
already had occasion to uphold and voice
its approval of the "Fabius-Gayssot Act",
described by Professor Faurisson's
barrister Eric Delcroix as an
"assault" on the French people's rights,
in legal terms, an illegitimate, wrongful
official act and not a law, which the
courts could, indeed must, refuse to
apply. The core of the professor's defence was
that he had expected his interview to be
broadcast or published only in Iran --
most likely in translation -- a country
with a quite different approach to the
protection of "human rights", and which,
unlike France, allows the free conduct of
historical debate. No-one has yet answered Professor
Faurisson's challenge, first issued 28
years ago, to produce evidence of an order
to kill the European Jews, or evidence of
any gas chamber used to such a purpose, or
even an explanation as to how, technically
and physically speaking, such a programme
had been carried out. Instead of an
answer, there stands the February 1979
ukase of the late Pierre
Vidal-Naquet, to which the political
and intellectual circles wholly subscribe,
that no debate on the gas chambers'
existence can be held, that such questions
simply must not be put. The only alleged "gas chamber" ever
subjected to official forensic examination
-- that of the Struthof-Natzweiler camp in
Alsace -- was conclusively proved by
French authorities not to have been a "gas
chamber". (The relevant report, signed in
December 1945 by the dean of pharmacology
in Paris, has ever since been suppressed,
locked away in the military archives.) Yet
the French courts take no account of such
facts when hearing cases under the
"Fabius-Gayssot Act". Last October Professor Faurisson was
given a three-month suspended prison
sentence for the telephone interview. At
the appeal hearing this May 30, the
professor and his barrister faced not only
the public prosecutor and a panel of three
judges, but also three hostile lawyers,
representing three separate "anti-racist"
organisations, each demanding
financial
compensation for the harm done to
them by the professor's brief
exposé, to a journalist in a
distant land, of the results of his
historical research. The public prosecutor asked for the
retired professor's suspended sentence to
be at least doubled, from three months to
six, while one of the three "anti-racist"
lawyers made a request for damages in the
same amount -- ¤5,000 -- as awarded
in first instance to the others, rather
than the mere symbolic damages won by his
group. The appeal court's judgment will be
handed down on July 4th 2007.
-- GN 
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Who's afraid of the big bad wolf? #2:
Robert
Faurisson's greatest victory yet:
Italian university closes to silence
him | Italian
University of Teramo shut down to
prevent lecture (invited by a
history professor) | bars
Holocaust denier | John Hooper (The
Guardian) calls it A
step too far? There was only one way to
stop a Holocaust denier from speaking:
close the university: "Picking up
on the prison sentence given to David
Irving and the various penalties
inflicted on his guest, [Professor
Moffa] poses the following
question: "Why is ... judicial
harassment that smacks of manic
obsession necessary if the arguments of
Faurisson and Co are indeed
'unfounded'?" | Faurisson
loses lawsuit 
A
paper read by Professor Robert
Faurisson to the Tehran holocaust
conference, Dec 11, 2006: The twenty
victories of revisionist historians,
and the price they have paid |
and
Italian text: VITTORIE
REVISIONISTE
Le
révisionniste Faurisson de
nouveau dans le Quid
(Robert Faurisson
is back in the Quid, France's most
popular annual encyclopaedia). But then
the traditional enemies counter-attack:
Demande
de retrait de la vente du Quid 2003:
jugement le 3
novembre 
Left-wing
liberal historian Fritjof Meyer
recalculates the death roll at
Revisionismus, Faurisson, Robert
Faurisson, in Osteuropa, May 2002:
German | English
1991: Le
"Quid" attaqué pour avoir
cité la thèse
négationniste de M.
Faurisson
1991: Against
Faurisson in the "Quid"
Encyclopedia
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