June 23, 2000 http://www.jewishjournal.com/letters.06.23.00.htmlChallenging
Evil Deborah
Lipstadt talks about her historic trial at
LA's Annual ADL Meeting. By Michael Aushenker, Staff Writer Left
to right: Steve Gold, Cecelia E. Katz,
Bernard S.Kamine, Dr. Deborah Lipstadt, David A.
Lehrer It
was the case of David Irving vs. Deborah
Lipstadt. Or, as the British docket
officially labled it, "David Irving v.
Penguin Books and Another." With a firsthand perspective and ample
touches of wit and humor, Deborah
Lipstadt delineated her experience as
the subject of a vicious libel
suit when she made a featured
appearance in Los Angeles at the Anti-Defamation
League (ADL)'s Regional Board Annual
Meeting recently. Conducted in the British
court system, the trial, which wrapped up
in April, was the culmination of a
tortured five-year ordeal in which
Lipstadt and Penguin Books became the
target of a lawsuit brought by the British
Irving. Irving was responding to a
book by Lipstadt that Penguin had
published in which Lipstadt deemed him a
Holocaust denier and accused him of
maligning the Jews and Holocaust history
in his writings. "This battle came and found me," said
Lipstadt. "Had I not fought, he would have
won by default. He then would have been
able to say that he was correct.
I decided to
fight it with all my strength and all my
might. Not fighting was never an option,
to let evil go unchallenged." While Lipstadt said that she was not
sure why Irving had singled her out -- she
says others were more outspoken against
Irving, and only six of her book's 300
pages dealt with Irving -- the Emory
University Dorot professor of Modern
Jewish and Holocaust Studies had her
theories. Chief among them was her close
connection with the Jewish community. "He probably thought that as an
American and as a woman I would not
fight," said Lipstadt, who also believes
that, part and parcel with Irving's
anti-Semitic and racist mindset, he had a
streak of misogyny. In fact, Lipstadt said
that the crux of her defense during the
12-week trial was to prove that
anti-Semitism, racism and misogyny were
alive and well within Irving, and then
"showing how he lied and how he
continuously lied" and how he would "twist
the evidence as to fit his purpose" in
fabricating revisionist history. "This was not a trial on whether the
Holocaust happened," said Lipstadt. "This
is a trial on whether David Irving is a
historian." Irving himself had referred to Lipstadt
as the "gold-tipped spearhead of
the enemies of
truth." Lipstadt believes "enemies"
served as a euphemism for Jewish
organizations. The Englishman had twice
attempted to reach a settlement before the
trial; the first time with Penguin Books,
the second time with Penguin and Lipstadt,
but neither Lipstadt nor Penguin
entertained Irving's
offer, which was a demand of
£500,000
for his charity of choice, and a
validation of his credentials as a
historian. Lipstadt had much praise for
her barrister, a man of Scottish descent
named Richard Ram[p]ton,
who advised her not to settle or, as she
quoted him as saying,
"none of us will be
safe in our beds." She also exalted
her publishing house, which picked up
two-thirds of the defense's $3 million in
legal expenses. With Ram[p]ton's help,
Lipstadt and her
defense team set out to dismantle
Irving's credibility as a historian. They
researched the sources footnoted in
Irving's book, unearthing example after
example of instances where he would fudge
statistical information, historical
chronology and quotes to suit his agenda.
One such item regarded a skeptical comment
expressed by a Nuremburg judge regarding a
line of testimony made by a Holocaust
survivor. Irving took the judge's comment
and blew it out of proportion, making it
appear as if the judge had discounted the
survivor's entire account. The
British magistrate granted Lipstadt's team
access to Irving's entire collection of
audio and video documenting his
appearances. The court also allowed the
defense to seize
Irving's personal diaries, to
verify whether, as Irving had claimed, his
personal life was irreparably damaged by
Lipstadt's allegations. When all was said
and done, Lipstadt's side found, indeed,
numerous statements made by Irving
injurious to Jews, Arabs and Blacks, often
couched in smirky, off-the-cuff comments.
"It was a lesson even for me," said
Lipstadt, "listening to him try to justify
it." Ultimately, when the British court
ruled against Irving, the judge's 355-page
verdict proved "far more stronger than
anything I wrote about Irving," said
Lipstadt (Penguin Books will publish the
judge's journal in August). In addition to the trial itself,
Lipstadt had plenty to say on the
aftermath. Addressing her famous thumbs-up
sign of victory, she quipped, "Someone
said it was the wrong finger." And when an
audience member at the ADL gathering asked
her to comment on media coverage of her
case, Lipstadt complimented the Chicago
Tribune for an "excellent" job and The New
York Times for "okay" reporting on the
trial's beginning and end, then added that
"the L.A. Times covered it, but got it
wrong," singling out an article on Irving
where writer Kim Murphy portrayed the
Holocaust revisionist as a legitimate
historian. |
David
Irving has sent this letter correcting the
article's more obvious
errors: Friday, June 30, 2000 Dear Sir, Your article: "Challenging
Evil: Deborah Lipstadt talks about her
historic trial at LA's Annual ADL
Meeting." Your article quotes Deborah
Lipstadt as stating that I demanded
that she and Penguin Books Ltd pay
£500,000 to settle the libel action
which I brought. I was not interested in
money. I informed the defendants twice in
writing that I would drop the action if
they paid £500 to a charity for the
disabled in memory of my daughter. During the trial I also undertook three
times to halt the action forthwith if the
defendants could find any trace of the
holes in the roof of crematorium II at
Auschwitz-Birkenau, through which SS
officers -- so the "eye witnesses" claim,
poured the Zyklon-B cyanide pellets. We
now know (The
Times, London, Apr. 12, 2000) that
this challenge was taken seriously; the
Auschwitz authorities looked in the roof
for those holes, and then refused to
reveal the result of their search. Comment seems superfluous. Your article
does not mention that we shall be pursuing
an appeal in the Court of Appeal in
London. David Irving Focal Point Publications London W1M 5DJ phone |