Copyright (c) 1998 - Ingrid A. Rimland


ZGram: Where Truth is Destiny and Destination!

 

April 3, 1999

 

Good Morning from the Zundelsite:

 

I was working on an update biography for Mr. Zundel - once it is finished, you will be amazed how much one man has done to decimate the Holocaust! - and found myself fishing through my oldies_but_goodies box to find a quickie ZGram.

 

I came across Doug Collin's August 1996 columns entitled "Auntie's knickers to warm Irving's book." Even though it is three years old, I think you will enjoy it:

 

Here's Mr. Collins:

 

There may have been other writers who have been hounded as much as historian David Irving but I can't think of any. A fascinating book could be written on the subject--if it could find a publisher.

 

That would not be easy. A lot of powerful people don't want to hear what he has to say. He digs up unwanted material.

 

He used to believe in the six million "holocaust" story, but after going through tons of original records it dawned on him that he had found no documents relating to a planned, mass extermination of the Jews.

 

He does not deny that thousands of them died in the camps, as did many others, or that thousands were slaughtered, especially in Eastern Europe during the war with Russia. But he had broken a taboo.

 

The result was that he condemned himself to the literary rack, the latest example being the cancellation by St. Martin's press in New York of his book _Goebbels,_Mastermind_of_the_Third_Reich_.

 

The work contains extracts from the Nazi propaganda minister's diaries, held by the Russians. It has been published in England to many favourable reviews, including one by historian Hugh Trevor Roper (Lord Dacre), an expert on the Nazi regime. But the moment it became known that it was to be published in the U.S, the American Book police got into action.

 

Jewish critics led the attack. _The_New_York_Times_, _The_Washington_Post_, _Time_ etc., gave it the full treatment. Most of them took the view that Irving condemns Goebbels, whom he describes as an evil man, while excusing Adolf Hitler.

 

We shall see. All I can say is that some writers have excused Joe Stalin while condemning Beria and Co. _The_New_York_Times_ itself was soft on Joe for decades, and apologized for it only three years ago.

 

Initially, St. Martin's resisted. But the pressure increased. Elie Wiesel, a "holocaust survivor" who has made a fortune writing about it, was quoted as saying he "wanted nothing to do with a firm that published Irving." Other Jewish authors threatened to pull their books.

 

St Martin's collapsed. As one of its to editors stated, "There's been all this mud-slinging on innocent people, horrible phone calls and death threats."

 

Irving may be a controversial figure but some commentators could hardly believe what was going on in the land of the free and the brave. Any publisher has the right to cancel a book, of course. But in this case things were being done that Goebbels himself might have been proud of.

 

Even some U.S. critics had second thoughts. Richard Cohen of The _Washington_ Post_ was one. To him, "Irving is a thoroughly repulsive character," but "this book is worth reading."

 

Irving's comment on that: "They stand by politely applauding, while You-Know-Who terrorizes St. Martin's, and then they salve their liberal consciences...."

 

Christopher Hitchins of _Vanity_Fair_ magazine declared that Irving has "never and not once called the Holocaust 'a hoax'" and that "unless you have read his studies on the Churchill-Roosevelt relationship, the Rommel campaigns and the bombing of Dresden you can't say you know such subjects at all."

 

The Goebbels book, says Hitchins, " contains amazing new material and was chosen by the Military Book Club as a main selection." It too has now cancelled. As for the critics, "they can't take the idea of a debate with David Irving."

 

In Hitchins' view, Irving is a great historian of Fascism, and St. Martin's has disgraced the business of publishing.

 

No writer has been libelled as much as Irving. It has often been reported, for instance, that he describes himself as a "mild Fascist." But he has explained how a British journalist put those words into his mouth.

 

"It seems to me, you're some kind of mild fascist," the man said. To which Irving replied, contemptuously, "You can call me what you like."

 

You can bet that the Canadian Book police will keep Goebbels out of Canada, just as Irving himself has been banned. But this is one book I am going to get even if my old Aunt Maud has to stick it in her knickers for me.

 

 

Thought for the Day:

 

". . . (did) anyone pick up on the story on Sunday about a British University - the newly-created Univ of Lincolnshire and Humberside - which is refusing to stock books by Jewish authors because it would offend its Arab patrons in the United Arab Emirates?"

 

(Gleaned from the fight-censorship list)




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