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ATLANTA AND THE WORLD
Debating society opts to disinvite Holocaust denier
by BERT ROUGHTON JR., DON MELVIN
THE prestigious Oxford Union on Wednesday canceled a debate that was to feature the maverick historian who lost a libel suit against an Atlanta professor who depicted him as a Holocaust denier.
David Irving, who rejects accepted accounts of the Nazi campaign to exterminate Jews, was to have debated
Richard Rampton, the lawyer who won the case against him last year. The encounter at the 178-year-old debate society at England’s Oxford University had been scheduled for today behind closed doors.Rampton successfully defended Emory
University professor Deborah
Lipstadt and her British publisher,
Penguin Books, against Irving’s lawsuit
over her portrayal of him in the book
“Denying the Holocaust: The Growing
Assault on Truth and Memory.”After hearing three months of testimony, a
British judge supported Lipstadt’s portrait of Irving as a bigoted would-be historian who had distorted historical facts to support his extremist views.
Irving’s appeal will be heard in June.Informed of the Oxford Union’s decision, Irving said,
“The student body had been
whipped up into a ferment by subversive
groups working on campus. They decided
to go ahead with the free speech debate
without me, which should be rather
ironic.”Irving had intended to argue the proposition: “This house would restrict the free speech of extremists.” The topic refers to an earlier scheduled appearance by Irving that also was canceled under student pressure.
The Oxford Union is a private club and debating society that operates independently of Oxford University.
Simon Petar, a representative of the National Union of Students, condemned
Irving’s planned appearance at Oxford.“It is an utter travesty that a historic institution such as the Oxford
Union, which should be committed to truth and justice, has decided to abandon these values and provide a platform for a man who has been vilified by the High Court for questioning whether 6
million Jews were killed by the Nazis,”
Petar said.The Oxford Union made no comment about the cancellation. In an earlier statement,
Amy Harland, the union’s president, defended the invitation to Irving.“These complex issues have not been properly debated for some time,” she said.
“If Britain is to be a free and diverse nation, (freedom of speech) needs to be addressed”.Copyright
2001 The Atlanta
Constitution
See Also
- The Holocaust (Document)
- It appeared in Holocaust and Genocide studies (Document)
- the Death Toll at Auschwitz (Document)
- Why They Did Not Call Auschwitz Survivors as Witnesses (Document)
- Real History and Propaganda Stories about Auschwitz (Document)