June 11 2000NEWS REVIEW A
Jewish academic is afraid that rampant
exploitation of the Holocaust is summoning
up a new anti-semitism. It is hard not to
agree, says Bryan Appleyard
Stop,
in the name of the Holocaust I
sometimes think," writes the American
academic Dr Norman Finkelstein,
"the worst thing that ever happened to the
Nazi Holocaust was that American Jewry
discovered it." The quotation comes from Finkelstein's
explosive and bitterly angry book
The Holocaust
Industry, to be published here
[London] next month. It accuses
those who exploit the Holocaust of telling
lies, conniving in Israeli atrocities, and
of naked greed. The pursuit of reparations
from Swiss bankers and others is damned as
"an outright extortion racket". The
ruthless industrialisation of the
Holocaust has encouraged the rebirth of
anti-semitism in Europe and the United
States. And, in conversation with me, he
said the fascination with Holocaust
memorials and museums - the latest being
the permanent exhibition at London's
Imperial War Museum, opened by the
Queen last week - was "a kind of
circus". If any of this had been written or said
by a non-Jew with no direct experience of
the Holocaust, it would have been savaged
as anti-semitism or, worse, Holocaust
denial. But Finkelstein is a Jew -- though
non-observant -- both of whose parents
were survivors of the Warsaw ghetto and
concentration camps. All the members of
their families were wiped out by the
Nazis. Even so, his views make him an
outcast among the American Jewish
establishment and define him, for many, as
an enemy of Israel. So why has he done
it? "I will not have," he shouts down the
phone from New York, "the suffering of my
parents used for any ulterior purpose,
whether it be the prevention of the
assimilation of Jews or the defence of
Israel." Finkelstein's father never spoke of his
experience, but his mother spoke of little
else. Yet, he recalls, even she was
disgusted at the rise of the Holocaust
industry in America. There were, he says,
only 60,000 Jewish survivors of the camps
and 20,000 of those died in the first week
after liberation. Yet in the 1960s and
1970s many of his parents' friends started
claiming to be survivors. Soon everybody
was a victim of the great martyrdom. "I'm not exaggerating when I
say that one out of three Jews you stop
in the street in New York will claim to
be a survivor. And, since 1993, the
industry has been claiming that 10,000
survivors have been dying every month.
That is completely impossible. It would
mean that there were 8m survivors in
1945, but there were only 7m Jews in
German-occupied Europe before the war." Finkelstein says the Holocaust industry
was born at the time of the six-day war in
June 1967 - before that both the Holocaust
and Israel were scarcely mentioned in
American public life. But it was not born,
as many have said, out of fear for the
survival of Israel; rather it sprang from
American strategic interests. Israel
became the American surrogate in the
Middle East and the Holocaust was evoked
morally to justify the alliance. Israel
became the defender of US values and,
since America at that time was losing the
Vietnam war, it was a more effective
defender than America herself. The American Jewish elite embraced the
cause of Israel and created the
contemporary image of the Holocaust.
Finkelstein highlights the power of this
elite by pointing out that Jewish income
is almost double that of non-Jews, 16 of
the 40 wealthiest Americans are Jews, 40%
of Nobel prizewinners in science and
economics are Jewish, 20% of professors at
main universities are Jewish, as are 40%
of partners in law firms in New York and
Washington. Led
by campaigners such as Simon
Wiesenthal (right) and Elie
Wiesel -- Finkelstein claims the
latter gets a minimum lecture fee of
$25,000 plus chauffeured limousine -- the
industry insists on the unique nature of
the atrocity. It can be compared, they
say, to nothing else. Finkelstein --
rightly, I believe -- identifies this as
the intellectual heart of the matter. Wiesel and others insist that the
Holocaust stands outside history and
rational discussion. The only final
response is silent incomprehension. This
position has become so extreme that any
attempt to compare it with other episodes
of human cruelty -- Finkelstein mentions
the deaths of 10m Africans in the Congo as
a result of the Belgian ivory and rubber
trade -- is often met with accusations of
anti-semitism and Holocaust denial. The result is that America is dotted
with Holocaust museums and memorials, but
there is none for the many more victims of
communism. There is not one even for the
gypsies and the mentally and physically
disabled who died under Nazism.
Finkelstein says that a higher proportion
of the gypsy population of Europe died
than of the Jewish. And, at his most scathing, Finkelstein
points out that there are no memorials to
the millions who died in the slave trade
or in the genocidal campaign against the
American Indians. The presence of the
Holocaust Museum in Washington "is
particularly incongruous in the absence of
a museum commemorating crimes in the
course of American history". "My parents would never have claimed
that the Holocaust was unique," he says,
"they would have said that it made them
sympathetic to the suffering of other
oppressed people." The danger of the uniqueness argument
is that it blinds us to the possibility of
other forms of evil. People see the
Holocaust museums and memorials, they see
the face of Hitler, and they think
that that is what evil is like. The truth
is that evil also wore the masks of
Stalin, Lenin, Mao and
Pol Pot. And, if we are convinced
that evil must wear jackboots and a little
moustache, we may not recognise it the
next time round. Finkelstein adds that the leaders of
the Holocaust industry use the uniqueness
argument to convince themselves of their
own virtue. If this particular suffering
and martyrdom were worse than any other
for the victims - including indirect
victims such as contemporary Jews and the
whole state of Israel - then who dare say
a word against the moral stature of those
who daily remind us? So is he right? Well, in one key sense,
he must be. The Holocaust cannot be
unique. Every starved, tortured and
murdered person, of any race, has
something in common with the victims of
Auschwitz. The idea that one historical
event is different from all others is
plainly irrational. It is also dangerous
because it silences discussion and
analysis of the Holocaust, and when that
happens we lose our ability to learn
anything. "The challenge today," writes
Finkelstein, "is to restore the Nazi
Holocaust as a rational subject of inquiry
. . . The abnormality of the Nazi
Holocaust springs not from the event
itself but from the exploitive industry
that has grown up around it . . . The
noblest gesture for those who perished is
to preserve their memory, learn from their
suffering and let them, finally, rest in
peace." But is he right that the Holocaust
industry is entirely self-serving, corrupt
and destructive? It is true that it has
produced absurd fantasists like
Binjamin Wilkomirski, who have
persuaded publishers and scholars of the
truth of their fabricated tales of
survival under the Nazis. Many of the
claims of those who pursue reparations are
plainly outrageous, and I do not doubt
that the political ruthlessness with which
many of these claims have been enforced
is, as Finkelstein says, encouraging a new
wave of anti-semitism.
BUT there is, in his book, a serious
problem of tone. It is a rant, and
Finkelstein is a man obsessed. Those who
know nothing of these matters are likely
to doubt the scholarship that underpins
such savagely expressed conviction. They
may also feel that there cannot be that
much wrong with the desire to remember the
5.1m -- Finkelstein's figure is typically
fewer than the 6m claimed by others - who
were unquestionably murdered by the Nazis.
However questionable the intellectual
climate that inspired it, the Imperial War
Museum's exhibition is an impressively
sombre experience that cannot be gainsaid.
It happened, and this is how it happened.
It is a fair criticism to say that other
awful things happened, and they should be
remembered, but that does not in itself
deny the legitimacy of the exhibition.
Finkelstein would have been more
persuasive if he had accepted that much of
his opposition's case. Nevertheless,
his attack on the Holocaust industry could
well have far-reaching effects. An
acceptance of his broad case would,
ultimately, weaken American support for
Israel, as it would undermine the sympathy
created by the idea of the unique
suffering of the Jews. It might also, by
removing the cultural adhesive of the
Holocaust experience, accelerate the
process of assimilation - the dilution of
Jewish identity primarily by "marrying
out" - which has already resulted in the
"loss" of millions of diaspora Jews in the
United States and elsewhere. Finkelstein is not too concerned about
either of these outcomes. He would like
the Israeli case to be more rationally
considered and, though he acknowledges the
ethnic loss involved in assimilation, he
prefers the Martin Luther King
position that people should come together
irrespective of the colour of their skin,
their race or their beliefs. I'm not so sure. I like the Jews and I
like Israel and I do not have to close my
eyes to its shortcomings. If the Holocaust
has become a brand name - which, I agree,
it has - then that is a big problem. But
there are some babies you really don't
throw out with the bathwater, and
Jewishness is one of them. Norman
Finkelstein
teaches political theory at the City
University of New York. He is the author
of A Nation on Trial: The Goldhagen Thesis
and Historical Truth (with Ruth Bettina
Birn). The Holocaust Industry: Reflections
on the Exploitation of Jewish Suffering,
by Norman G Finkelstein, is to be
published by Verso on July 20,
£16 Visit
his website: www.normanfinkelstein.com Related
items on this website:
Evening
Standard, London, attacks Holocaust
Industry | Anthony
Julius on Finkelstein: His people cast
aside | Raul
Hilberg on Finkelstein's The Holocaust
Industry | Berliner
Zeitung: Dachau meets Disneyland |
New York Times:
A Tale of Two Holocausts | Norman
Finkelstein writes on The Holocaust
Industry | Finkelstein:
Will The Holocaust Industry Incite
Anti-Semitism? Finkelstein2.html
| more links
to Finkelstein materials | Piper-Verlag
to publish Finkelstein Book |
Book
being silenced by Jewish US media
moguls |