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Real History, and David Irving’s imprisonment in Vienna The Index to the Traditional Enemies of Free Speech Alphabetical index (text) [images added by this website] London, Sunday January 22, 2006 ‘Hitler? He was good in parts’ The right-wing historian David Irving was arrested in Austria last year for denying the Holocaust and faces trial next month.
From his Viennese prison, he gives his first interview to German author and academic Malte Herwig , who asks if arrogance is at the heart of Irving’s desire for outrage – or something more sinister by Malte Herwig AS darkness descends upon the thick walls of Vienna’s ancient Josefstadt courthouse, the adjacent prison compound comes to life. Shouts and cries echo across the inner courtyard as the inmates talk to each other in a plethora of languages.
The Englishman in Block C looks up briefly from the stack of papers that is lying on the small wooden table in front of him and listens before he resumes his writing. ‘I’m writing my memoirs – about 20 pages each day,’ David Irving tells me the next morning when I visit him in the Viennese prison that has been his home since the Austrian police arrested him in November last year on charges of denying the Holocaust.
I had been sitting in a squalid little waiting room for an hour together with large families arguing with each other and teenage mothers pushing prams around. One of their relatives is behind bars for threatening to kill his wife, another has been arrested for drug offences. ‘If only all the inmates were as well behaved as he is,’ a prison guard sighed when I asked him about Irving.
No, I think, as my number comes up and I enter the high security meeting room, you wouldn’t normally expect an historian and writer among the thieves, pimps and drug dealers held here. But there he is, sitting behind a thick pane of bulletproof glass, smartly dressed in a dark blue suit and tie, telephone in hand. ‘It’s nonsense to put someone in prison for his views,’ he says in impeccable, accent-free German. ‘It’s like having a law that prohibits wearing yellow collars.’
Irving is referring to Austria’s Verbotsgesetz , a constitutional law dating