Alternet Posted on March 25, 2005, Printed on March 25,
2005
Holocaust
Denial, C-SPAN and Ward Churchill By Bill Weinberg, World War 4 Report OVER 200 historians have signed
a petition in protest of C-SPAN's plan to pair
coverage of a lecture by Deborah Lipstadt,
professor of Holocaust studies at Georgia's Emory
University, with one by David Irving, the
notorious
Holocaust revisionist. Irving, author of
Hitler's War and other books,
sued
Lipstadt in his native
U.K. after she called him out as a revisionist in
her own book Denying the Holocaust: The Growing
Assault on Truth and Memory. British courts dismissed the suit in 2000,
finding that Irving deliberately misrepresented
historical evidence. Lipstadt's book on the case,
History on Trial: My Day in Court with David
Irving, has just been published. Read the
petition, circulated by the David. S. Wyman
Institute for Holocaust Studies: "Falsifiers of history cannot 'balance'
historians. Falsehoods cannot 'balance' the
truth ... If C-SPAN broadcasts a lecture by
David Irving, it will provide publicity and
legitimacy to Holocaust-denial, which is nothing
more than a mask for anti-Jewish bigotry." In a 1991 speech, Irving told his audience that
"more women died on
the back seat of Edward Kennedy's car at
Chappaquiddick than ever died in a gas chamber in
Auschwitz." This is the kind of voice to which
C-SPAN is about to loan credibility. In Lipstadt's own blog, History on Trial, she
notes that another one of her prominent critics is
supposed American
Indian scholar Ward Churchill, who recently
gained notoreity [sic] by calling 9/11
victims "little Eichmanns." She links to a recent
story in New York's conservative Jewish Week
recalling that in an essay a few years back
Churchill hurled his favorite "Eichmann" epithet at
Lipstadt. The paper predictably failed to quote the
original essay beyond this one incendiary word, or
provide the context of Churchill's argument. The
essay, "Forbidding the 'G-Word'," which appeared in
the online journal Other Voices in 2000, attacked
the notion of "Jewish exclusivism," and especially
the denial of the term "genocide" to describe the
extermination of Native American peoples. Churchill
wrote that "exclusivists" like Lipstadt engage in
their own form of genocide denial, and are part of
a propaganda system that legitimizes ongoing
genocide against native peoples: "Denial of genocide, insofar as it
plainly facilitates continuation of the crime,
amounts to complicity in it ... There is no
difference in this sense between ... a Deborah
Lipstadt and an Adolf Eichmann." What makes this all complicated is that
Churchill's overall point here is an absolutely
valid one. But by calling Lipstadt an "Eichmann"
(as if every writer who suffers from some racist
illusions is the equivalent of the architect of
industrial mass murder), Churchill allows his own
valid critique to be dismissed as the ravings of a
nut. Recognition that the industrial destruction of
indigenous lands and culture in the western
hemisphere constitutes genocide (as defined under
international law) can be lumped in with the
pseudo-history of an Irving -- or (more to the
point) Churchill's own witless cheer-leading for
mass murder in the 9/11 attacks. And Churchill (perhaps merely through shabby
scholarship) engages in his own revisionism in the
"G-Word" essay. He protests that in the
"exclusivist" worldview, "the fates of the Gypsies,
Slavs, homosexuals and others at the hands of the
Nazis are routinely minimized and consigned to the
ambiguous category of 'non-genocidal suffering.'"
In fact, the Jews and the Roma ("Gypsies") were the
only two groups explicitly targeted for
extermination by the Nazis. Poles and Czechs
suffered horribly under the Nazis of course, but
historical accuracy is not served by conflating
their experience with that of the Jews. Further, the "exclusivist" portrayal of the
Holocaust as "phenomenologically unique" does have
its limited validity. It was not
"phenomenologically unique" in being genocide, but
in the application of industrial methods to the
task. There is an echo of this in the western
hemisphere genocides. The earliest grain of what
would become the Holocaust were the coercive
sterilization programs targeted at Jews, Roma and
the mentally and physically disabled; nearly
identical programs have been used against Native
American populations in the 20th century. The European Holocaust was also
"phenomenologically unique" in the irrational
motives underlying the hyper-rational methodology:
the Nazi genocide was not (as in the case of the
American Indians) about appropriating land and
resources, but about purifying the German nation,
and actually drained resources from the critical
war effort. Industry also comes into play when oil and
mineral companies destroy traditional lands of
Indian peoples, leaving them in desperate poverty,
a toxic environment, communities broken by
alcoholism and suicide -- and we shouldn't dismiss
this echo of Nazi industrial extermination glibly.
But the aim here is extraction of resources, not
mass murder, and a simple conflation with the Nazi
Holocaust is also glib. So a nuanced sense of history is called for to
really make sense of these issues -- an unlikely
prospect in an atmosphere degraded by cynicism and
fealty to shallow sound-bites. Meanwhile, if C-SPAN capitulates and drops the
Irving segment, it will merely confirm the
perception in the growing ranks of Jew-haters that
"the Jews" control the media. Unless some honest
and courageous voices are brought to the debate
quickly, this affair will be a lose/lose no matter
how we slice it. -
Index to the
media scandal surrounding Prof Lipstadt's
attempt to silence C-Span and the history
debate
-
Lipstadt writes a paid OpEd in New York Sun:
'Why I said No to
C-Span'
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