Copyright (c) 1997 - Ingrid A. Rimland
May 19, 1997
Good Morning from the Zundelsite:
Many people wonder whatever happened to Fred Leuchter,
the man who went to Auschwitz on his honeymoon to do the secret samplings
of the Auschwitz ruins for traces of Zyklon B and who subsequently authored
the historical Leuchter Report. The truth be told - we don't know, although
we know about the fallout.
A bit of background up-front for our many neophytes just dipping a small
toe into Revisionism:
In 1991, Fred Leuchter, an American expert in execution technology and an
expert witness at Zündel's 1988 "false news" trial in Toronto,
gave a lecture on his findings regarding the alleged gas chamber installations
at the concentration camps of Auschwitz and Majdanek to the National Democratic
Party headed by Günter Deckert.
Deckert, bilingual in both German and English, interpreted the lecture to
attendees at the meeting and subsequently sold videos of the lecture in
Germany.
Deckert was later charged with inciting racial hatred by propagating Holocaust
revisionism. He was tried, found by one judge to be of good, sound character
and merely engaged in defending his German people against Holocaust promoters.
The Judge was promptly put on "Sick Leave." The media unleashed
a storm of rage against him.
An appeal was lodged. Deckert won!
He was re-tried. He lost!
Meanwhile, in October of 1993, ten minutes before Leuchter was to appear
as an invited guest on one of Germany's most popular TV talk show programmes,
he was arrested at the television studios on charges of contravening the
Auschwitz law and agitating the people.
The police making the arrest told the show's shocked producer that "the
decision to arrest Leuchter was political because his appearance on television
would have damaged Germany's image."
As though Germany's image is a function of the Holocaust - instead of the
other way around!
In March of 1994, Germany's Federal Court of Justice overturned Deckert's
conviction, holding that denying the Holocaust did not in itself constitute
incitement to racial hatred. However, the court ordered a new trial for
Deckert to determine whether Deckert sympathized with Nazi beliefs.
In April of 1994, the Supreme Court of Germany gave a contradictory ruling
in another case, stating that Holocaust revisionism fell within the purview
of the law. Deckert was tried again by a three judge panel who held that
he was, in fact, a "Nazi sympathizer".
However, the panel sentenced Deckert to only a suspended one-year jail sentence
and a small fine - on the grounds that he had only expressed an opinion
that came from his heart. He was a good family man. He was only trying to
strengthen German resistance to incessant Jewish demands.
The Deckert case created a storm of controversy in the media which even
created a new word in the German vocabulary - "Richterschelte"
- which meant "admonishing judges" or, better, "scolding
judges" - in other words, intimidating judges for politically incorrect
decisions.
Prior to the Deckert case, such media conduct was extremely unusual and
even illegal because German judges were supposed to be aloof from public
criticism - just as they are supposed to be aloof in Canada!
Two of the judges sitting on the Deckert case were immediately relieved
of their duties because of "long-term illness" - the only ground
upon which the German government could immediately remove them.
One judge, Ortelett, went public and said that he was not sick and did not
ask for sick leave - which caused another uproar!
On appeal , the Federal Court of Justice quickly overturned the sentence
and ordered another trial for Deckert.
In 1994, in response to the Deckert case and the pressure exerted by the
Federation of Jewish Communities, Germany passed a new law making Holocaust
revisionism in and of itself a criminal offence.
A spokesman for the Federation of Jewish Communities of Germany, Michael
Friedman, explained the reason for the law: it was a highly symbolic move
in the ". . . democratic Germany that was established under the condition
that it would accept responsibility for the history of the Third Reich and
the Holocaust."
Friedman expressed additional fury that Holocaust revisionism was not illegal
in Canada., thus allowing Zündel to send revisionist information into
Germany. (Globe & Mail, May 21, 1994)
International human rights groups such as "Human Rights Watch"
have protested the anti-Holocaust revisionist laws in Germany.
The distinguished legal authority on human rights, Ronald Dworkin, wrote
an article entitled "The unbearable cost of liberty," published
in the Index on Censorship in 1995 dealing with the Leuchter and Deckert
cases:
"The German Constitution guarantees freedom of speech. What
justifies this exception? It is implausible that allowing fanatics to deny
the Holocaust would substantially increase the risk of fascist violence
in Germany. Savage anti-Semitic crimes are indeed committed there, along
with equally savage crimes against immigrants, and right-wing groups are
undoubtedly responsible for much of this. But these groups do not need
to deny that Hitler slaughtered Jews in order to encourage Hitler worshippers
to attack Jews themselves. Neo-Nazis have found hundreds of lies and distortions
with which to inflame Germans who are angry, resentful and prejudiced.
Why should this one be picked out for special censorship, and punished
so severely?"
Dworkin warned that:
"We must not endorse the principle that opinion may be banned
when those in power are persuaded that it is false and that some group
would be deeply and understandably wounded by its publication . . . The
Muslim fundamentalists who banned Salman Rushdie were convinced that he
was wrong, and they, too, acted to protect people who had suffered deeply
from what they took to be outrageous insult . . . Beware principles you
can trust only in the hands of people who think as you do."
Human Rights Watch/Helsinki dealt with the German anti-Holocaust revisionist
laws in its 1995 publication "Germany for Germans: Xenophobia and
Racist Violence in Germany." After reviewing Germany's laws and recent
cases such as Deckert and Althans, a well-known youth leader who had expressed
doubt about the Holocaust in a documentary film inside the "gas chambers
in Auschwitz", and who was himself sentenced to four years in prison,
it stated:
"Human Rights Watch/Helsinki acknowledges that the tragedy of the
Holocaust is the historical context in which such laws were adopted. We
also recognize that, by more rigorously enforcing these laws, the German
government has underscored the seriousness with which it views the danger
posed by right-wing extremists.
"Nevertheless, Human Rights Watch/Helsinki believes that such measures
seriously restrict the protected right to freedom of expression, association
and assembly. We are mindful of the fact that international human rights
law provides different and conflicting standards in this area and base
our position on a strong commitment to freedom of expression as a core
principle of human rights. (...)
"Certainly those whose expressive activities constitute a direct and
immediate incitement to violence can and should be prosecuted to the fullest
extent of the law. But sweeping restrictions that affect entire parties,
organizations or philosophies inevitably cast too broad a net; they can
be used to suppress dissenting political movements of all sorts and often
encourage gratuitous restrictions beyond those initially foreseen. (...)
Our own research has shown that such restrictions are often misused by
majoritarian governments against minorities. It is our view that it is
inherently dangerous for governments to have the power to determine which
political philosophies are 'threatening'; power that invites abuse against
political foes." (pp. 70-77)
(end of Human Rights Watch document)
What about Deckert now? He rots in jail in Germany. The media and all "Human
Rights" groups are silent about his fate - and the fate of hundreds
of dissident Germans like him!
Ingrid
Thought for the Day:
"The certainties of one age are the problems of the next."
(R. H. Tawney)
Comments? E-Mail: irimland@cts.com
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