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Editorial
picture: Robert Jan Van Pelt
Irving’s cross-examination said ‘surreal’
By FRANCES KRAFT Staff Reporter
TORONTO
– The verdict in the recent London trial that pitted American historian Deborah Lipstadt
against plaintiff David Irving, the British Holocaust denier, was “quite a bitter victory,” according to the
44-year-old University of Waterloo
professor of architecture who served as an expert witness in the case.
Although Lipstadt and her team celebrated their victory,
“there was a real sense that this was a completely obscene issue we’d been involved in,” said Robert Jan Van
Pelt in an interview at his home last week, following his return to Canada.
“When you’re a Jew – and I am a Jew – there’s something disconcerting in someone denying your own history and the history of your people.”
A native of Holland born to a Jewish mother and non-Jewish father, Van Pelt was named for an uncle who was killed in Auschwitz. He is a cultural historian (not an architect) and co-author with Deborah Dwork of the 1996 book
Auschwitz, 1270 to the
Present.
He wrote an even weightier tome on Auschwitz
– a 772-page report, along with two supplementary reports –
as evidence for the trial.
The issue of Auschwitz became the central point of contention at the trial, Van Pelt told The CJN.
“Irving was prepared to admit
large-scale killings on the east front – these could be
explained as killings done in the heat of war – but when
you come to extermination camps like Auschwitz, you
cannot explain this as part and parcel of the violence of
a normal war situation.”
In his cross-examination of Van Pelt, Irving — who served as his own lawyer — insisted that gas chambers at
Auschwitz had no roof vents and thus could not have been used to kill inmates.
Van Pelt countered that argument, and similar ones, saying that evidence and testimony in the years since World
War II made it a “moral certainty” that gas chambers were the main instruments of murder at Auschwitz between the summer of
1942 and fall of 1944.
His report explains at some length the difference between
“moral certainty” and other types of certainty. Moral certainty is based on quality of evidence and is the best certainty a historian can have, he said. “It’s a very particular technical term.”
As the first expert witness to be called, Van Pelt was cross-examined for a total of almost four days by Irving.
Unexpectedly, Van Pelt was compelled to declare his religion when the judge wrongly assumed the Bible on which Van Pelt would take his oath was a Dutch Protestant version. In fact, he used a German-Jewish prayerbook that has been in his family since the 1930s.
He was nervous, he admitted. Although Irving attempted to
undermine his credibility by exposing him as a non-architect, Van Pelt realized after the first half dozen hours “he wasn’t going to damage me, really.” In fact, one of Lipstadt’s lawyers,
Richard Rampton came to the same conclusion and on
Jan. 26 (the second day of Van Pelt’s cross-examination) penned an outline of a sinking S.S.
Irving alongside a victorious HMS Van Pelt, which he later presented to Van
Pelt.
The experience of being cross-examined by Irving was like a cat-and-mouse game, Van Pelt said. Irving’s “traps, most of the time, don’t appear to be much of a trap… You have this incredible tension… It becomes a kind of surreal situation.”
Related items on this website: Reader
A S Marques writes about Van Pelt on the “moral
certainty” | Van Pelt (fee: £109,000) used the term
in his Report [download
as pdf] | Mr Irving mocked this in his closing
statement on March 15 (Day
32) | Write
to Van Pelt
April 28, 2000
Website fact: The news item does not mention that this website has a complete transcript of
Van Pelt’s testimony ; or that it has a free download of Van
Pelt’s opus; or that the defence team floated on a six million dollar slush fund provided by Stephen Spielberg,
Edgar J Bronfman, and the American Jewish Committee, which enabled them to pay 21 lawyers and “experts”; This “not really an architect” Van Pelt (remember the fuss when it turned out that Fred Leuchter was “not
really” an engineer) received £109,000 (nearly $300,000 Canadian) to testify as he did. Mr Irving did not pay his defence witnesses one cent or sous: they testified from conviction, not for reward. [Help!]
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