READERS RESPOND
Institute director defends his historical perspective
We are used to inaccurate writing about the Institute for Historical
Review, but Steve Marble’s front-page column sets some kind of record for
errors and misrepresentations (“Some pieces of history not worth
reviewing,” March 15). Before firing off his polemic, he didn’t even
check our Web site (www.ihr.org), much less contact us directly. He
doesn’t even get our address right in the first paragraph.
A 1989 review meeting was not forced out of the Red Lion Inn because
“hotel execs caught wind of what was up,” but in response to outrageous
threats and intimidation by the Jewish Defense League, a violent group
that the FBI has identified as a terrorist organization.
Far from being a promoter of “hate,” as Marble suggest, the institute
has itself been a victim of hate and bigotry. It has been the target of
repeated violent attacks, culminating in a devastating arson attack
against our office and warehouse on July 4, 1984.
The institute opposes bigotry of all kinds in its efforts to promote
greater public understanding of key chapters of history. Speakers at our
meeting and contributors to our Journal Of Historical Review have
included respected scholars from around the world. We are proud of the
backing we have received from people of the most diverse ethnic and
religious backgrounds, including Jewish.
Marble’s characterization of our legal dispute with Auschwitz survivor
Mel Mermelstein is one-sided. In fact, Mermelstein’s campaign against the
institute came to a dramatic end on Sept. 19, 1991 when his $11 million
lawsuit against the institute was dismissed in Los Angeles Superior
Court. Judge Steven Lachs granted the institute’s motion for dismissal of
his malicious prosecution complaint, and soon afterwords Mermelstein
himself dismissed his libel and conspiracy complaints. Mermelstein’s
appeal of the ruling was unanimously rejected by the California Court of
Appeal.
While it is quite true that many hundreds of thousands of Jews were
killed and otherwise perished during the World War II as a result of the
brutality anti-Jewish policies of Germany and its allies, it is also true
-- as revisionists scholars have carefully established -- that specific
Holocaust claims are untrue or exaggerated.
It is now authoritatively acknowledged, for instance, that the gas
chamber at Auschwitz that has been shown for decades to tourists in its
“original” state is actually a fraudulent postwar reconstruction.
Likewise, apparently persuasive evidence presented at the Nuremberg Trial
of 1945-46 “proving” that prisoners were gassed at the Dachau and
Buchenwald concentration camps is now universally recognized as
worthless.
If the revisionist view of the Holocaust were really as simplistic and
mistaken as Marble suggests, it would not have gained the support of
university professors such as Arthur Butz and Robert Faurisson,
historians such as Roger Garaudy, David Irving and Harry Elmer Barnes,
and former concentration camp inmates such as Paul Rassinier. These
individuals did not decide publicly to reject the orthodox Holocaust
story -- thereby risking public censure, and worse, because they are
fools, or because their motives are evil -- but rather on the basis of a
sincere and thoughtful evaluation of the evidence.
The headline that “some pieces of history don’t need reviewing,” is
dangerously mistaken. Especially a chapter of history as politicized and
polemicized as the Holocaust deserves close and critical review.
MARK WEBER
Director of the Institute for Historical Review
Editor’s note: Columnist Steve Marble stands by his story as being
fair and accurate.
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