I
do not speak for weeks
sometimes. This is why my
voice tends to give way in the
courtroom.
-- |
Image
added by this website: Robert Faurisson,
Fred Leuchter at Carlton SAtreet;
Zündel seated in
background Toronto, Saturday, March 6,
2004
[see also: Editorial] Ernst
Zündel, civil-rights
champion? After
more than a year in solitary
confinement, Canada's most famous
Holocaust denier is still fighting
deportation, KIRK MAKIN reports, and he
may rewrite the law in the process. All
because he wants to know what the
secret case is against him By KIRK
MAKIN Toronto Globe and Mail
<[email protected]> ERNST Zündel was
framing a painting at his retirement home,
high in the Smokey Mountains of Tennessee,
when a van pulled into his driveway
followed by three police cars. "It was a
whole armada," he recalls. "I knew what
was coming next." The van was from the U.S. Immigration
and Naturalization Service. "They put me
up against my pickup truck, spread-eagled
me, and said I was being arrested and
deported. Within five minutes, I was
gone." That was Feb. 17, 2003. Since then, he
has not seen his wife or his home. In
fact, he has yet to get out of solitary
confinement. Mr. Zündel was whisked back to
Canada, the country he had abandoned to
escape the 20-year series of prosecutions
that had made him its most recognized
extreme right-winger. Canada, in turn,
wants to whisk him back to Germany, where
he faces at least five years in
prison. Ironically,
the battle he is waging against that
deportation could make the famed
purveyor of Holocaust-denying, neo-Nazi
material a champion of civil
liberties. Mr.
Zündel is confined to a Toronto
detention centre because the government is
holding him on a national security
certificate -- the controversial and
Draconian procedure usually reserved for
terrorist suspects. Now, just as he once compelled Canada's
courts to grant him freedom to express his
views, he could again break constitutional
ground. This spring, the Ontario Court of
Appeal is to hear his bid under the
Charter of Rights and Freedoms to quash
the certificate. Win or lose, its ruling
will probably land in the Supreme Court of
Canada, which could declare the
certificate unconstitutional. If that happens, he will be a mixed
blessing to rights advocates. He is now 64
and into his second year in jail, but Mr.
Zündel seems every bit as unrepentant
and provocative as when he first captured
public attention in the early 1980s. "The Jewish
community wants me on my knees," he
says in an exclusive interview. "I am
the last man standing who has not
apologized. It would be the height of
indignity for me to do that." A security certificate is signed by two
federal cabinet ministers who, based on
secret intelligence, decide that an
immigrant should be deported as a danger
to Canadian citizens. Even the alleged
spies and terrorists normally targeted
this way are not permitted access to the
precise allegations against them. Of the 27 security certificates issued
since 1991 -- just five since the 9/11
attack -- virtually all have involved
suspected terrorists from such countries
as Iran, Lebanon and Algeria. Why, then,
use such an extreme measure against a
Holocaust-denier? "It is tragic that the whole Western
world has deteriorated," Mr. Zündel
says. "We are going to be living in
Stalinist-time dictatorships."
HIS lawyer, Peter Lindsay,
maintains that the case goes straight to
the heart of Canada's response to
terrorism. "Mr. Zündel lived here
from 1958 to 2000 in a very public way. In
all that time, he hasn't committed a
single crime. He has been charged a number
of times unsuccessfully for things he has
said or pamphlets he has distributed, but
never for an act of violence. He is not
some sleeper agent skulking around in the
shadows." Slapping his client with a security
certificate, Mr. Lindsay argues, is just
the sort of abuse civil libertarians
warned of after 9/11. "The problem is that
this law doesn't just get applied to Ernst
Zündel. It gets applied to other
people out on the fringes of our society.
There is an old expression that hard cases
make bad law. Well, there is no harder
case than Ernst Zündel." Although the government case relies
heavily on accusations revealed only in
secret to a judge, an unclassified
"summary" compiled by the Canadian
Security Intelligence Service accuses Mr.
Zündel of being a dangerous preacher
of anti-Semitic, white-supremacist hatred.
Even if he doesn't advocate violence, it
reads, he is dangerous because he's seen
as a guru by extremists who do embrace
violence. CSIC describes
the white-supremacist movement as a
network of groups with a common racist
ideology. "Many followers are attracted
by Zündel's messaging, his
dedication to the cause and his
personal charisma," according to the
summary. "By his comportment as a
leader and ideologue, the service
believes Zündel intends serious
violence to be a consequence of his
influence." To Mr. Zündel, this is guilt by
association. How others interpret and
apply his writing is not his business, he
says: "I am not the policeman for the
right." He admits to speaking at meetings
attended by "headline-seekers," but he
insists that he resents how their crude
tactics marginalize his views. "The one hallmark that has always
earned me the title of being a coward in
our circles is that I disdained the use of
violence," he says. "I never joined any of
these right-wing groups because they were
politically impotent." The inordinate secrecy of the security
certificate procedure has left Mr. Lindsay
ill-equipped to attack the CSIS
allegations. He says he can only guess
what facts, hearsay or falsehoods may
pepper the classified government
documents. "There could be someone lying through
their teeth in evidence that could be
attacked and ripped to pieces. I believe
in an adversarial system, where both sides
can challenge the other side's evidence in
an open forum. I don't care whether it is
Ernst Zündel or anyone else; there
should be one system of justice that works
for everybody, including the marginalized
and those no one else cares about." Of
course, the government isn't alone in
considering the man a threat. "Ernst
Zündel epitomizes and sanctions the
worst form of Holocaust denial," contends
Bernie Farber, a spokesman for the
Canadian Jewish Congress. "Once he had renounced his Canadian
citizenship, which is how we see it, there
was no need for us to welcome him back. We
should not welcome a person whose life
ambition it was to foment hatred." Security certificates ought to be used
sparingly, Mr. Farber concedes, but Mr.
Zündel's status with violent
neo-Nazis makes him a genuine security
risk. "He provides the kind of support,
succour and oxygen to those who do commit
violent acts. Ernst Zündel is not a
clown. He is a serious player in the
neo-Nazi scene worldwide." Mr. Zündel came to Canada in 1958
at the age of 19, but was never granted
full citizenship. Soon after arriving, he
fell under the influence of Adrian
Arcand, the famed ultra-rightist in
Quebec, and grew obsessed with his belief
that Germans had been defamed by
"propaganda" stories about their
unspeakably brutal treatment of Jews. "I realized I was a brainwashed young
German," he testified last month before
Mr. Justice Pierre Blais of the
Federal Court of Canada. "It really
troubled me and shook me up. . . . I was
championing a lost cause. I did it for
ethical reasons and for my father's
generation, who could not defend
themselves." In 1968, he ran for the leadership of
the federal Liberals, infuriating the
party establishment. He finished far
behind Pierre Trudeau, but
nonetheless gained a valuable podium from
which to espouse his views. He then moved
to Toronto and almost died of cancer, but
recovered to throw himself into his
graphic-art business, attracting clients
ranging from large corporations to
Maclean's magazine. He also wrote,
under a pseudonym, several books about
unidentified flying objects to support
publishing pro-Nazi, Holocaust-denial
material to send around the world. By the late 1980s, Mr. Zündel was
attracting demonstrations of up to 3,000
anti-racists outside his home in downtown
Toronto, receiving hate calls by the score
and bombs in the mail. Over the years, he
turned his home into a fortress with
elaborate security devices, lighting and
24-hour camera surveillance. Even so, in
1995, an arsonist struck, causing $500,000
in damage to his home and that of a
neighbour. Finally, in 2000, he ended his
stay in Canada, heading south to join his
wife in Tennessee. Now, lodged in
an isolation cell at the Metro West
Detention Centre, he rarely sees
anyone. He takes medication for a heart
condition, bad circulation and serious
dental problems, and is allowed just 10
minutes of exercise a day. His tiny
cell has a cot, toilet and sink, but no
toothbrush or towels. If he wants to
write, he must perch on a stack of
transcripts and use his sink as a
desk. "I do not speak for weeks sometimes,"
he says. "This is why my voice tends to
give way in the courtroom. I'm not
bitching, but this is Canada -- it's not
Turkistan. I do think somebody is
inflicting pain on me." Mr. Zündel contends that he was
turfed out of the United States because of
a clandestine request from Canadian
authorities, and that U.S. immigration
authorities used as a their pretext a
minor omission he had made in his
paperwork, something that rarely causes a
newcomer such grief. Even so, the odds that he will stay in
Canada are heavily stacked against him.
His deportation will be carried out if
Judge Blais finds that CSIS and the
Solicitor-General acted "reasonably" when
they issued the certificate. It is an
extremely low legal threshold, and no
appeal is possible. Mr. Zündel says his great fear is
that the secret evidence against him has
been concocted. As a graphic artist, he
says he knows just how easy it is to
doctor a document or a photograph. "With
redigitalization and retouching, anything
can be created. They could have me making
love to Golda Meir." Even so, he insists that that he would
rather spend his old age in a German
prison cell than agree to cease his
Holocaust-denying activities. "For a lifetime, I have fought for
equality for Germans to tell their side,"
he says. "I would be like an intellectual
eunuch. People have directed hundreds of
thousands of dollars -- millions, actually
-- to my legal struggle. I owe these
people a fierce fight." Bench
strengthThe secret case against Ernst
Zündel was compiled by the Canadian
Security Intelligence Service. In a coincidence guaranteed to stoke a
thousand conspiracy theories, the man
passing judgment on that case used to be
in charge of CSIS. Before being appointed a judge of the
Federal Court of Canada in 1998, Pierre
Blais was an MP and cabinet minister in
the Brian Mulroney government whose
portfolios included a stint in 1989 as
solicitor-general -- and thus, the
minister responsible for the security
service. Because of this connection, Mr.
Zündel's lawyer, Peter Lindsay, asked
Judge Blais to withdraw from the case. The
judge flatly refused. So, there was a certain irony apparent
one day in February when Mr. Zündel,
a man with no criminal record who is rated
a serious national security risk,
testified at length about a litany of
threats and acts of violence that have
been directed toward him. As
Mr. Zündel was describing how the
authorities had failed to notify him when
charges
were dropped against two Vancouver men
accused of sending a bomb to his home, the
former solicitor-general exploded. "This is a very serious matter," Judge
Blais boomed, slamming a law book on his
desk. "We are talking about an attempt to
murder Ernst Zündel by manufacturing
and mailing an explosive device. But he
was never told about what happened, and we
don't know if these people are still
walking the streets or what happened. "I can't believe this. If there are
valid reasons, I want them reported to
me." Kirk
Makin is
The Globe and Mail's justice
reporter. Picture above:
Zündel with his former lawyer
Doug Christie -
Canada
offered to set Zündel free to
travel to the country of his choice if
he would plead guilty to being a
national security threat
-
Zündel
seeks asylum after U.S. deportation:
Now 'he's our
problem'
-
Zündel
seeking refugee status
-
Ernst
Zündel held in Batavia, N.Y.,
detention center
-
Wife
fears key could soon be thrown
away
-
Zündel
headed back to Canada
-
Arrest
of Ernst Zündel by US: Is held in
Jail
-
Reknowned
Neo-Nazi activist held in Blount County
jail
-
Feb
2001: Ernst Zuendel has emigrated from
Canada to the United States
|