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			by Frank Scott 
			Online Journal Contributing 
			Writer 
			Oct 19, 2007, 01:39 
			from 
			OnLineJournal Website 
			
			  
			
			During an exceptionally rude 
			introduction of President Ahmadinejad of Iran, a university 
			president announced that the holocaust was the most documented event 
			in history. While this overstatement was in keeping with most of his 
			remarks, it provokes a question: exactly what do we mean when we say 
			“the holocaust”? 
			 
			When someone is called a “holocaust denier,” what is being denied?
			 
			
			  
			
			Confusion over those words is being used 
			to cloud minds and threaten another war in the Middle East, once 
			again for reasons that cannot be substantiated in the material world 
			but are simply political excuses to commit mass murder. 
			 
			Those who express doubt about some key aspects of
			
			the story of Nazi persecution of Jews in 
			Europe during the Second World War are often imprisoned 
			or face threats to their very lives. We witnessed the spectacle of a 
			head of state invited to speak at an American university and 
			introduced with the most scurrilous language imaginable, all 
			provoked by that leader’s alleged “denial” of the holocaust, along 
			with his supposed existential threat to the Jewish state of Israel. 
			And when speaking of one, the other must be addressed, since there 
			is no rationale for the Jewish state of Israel without “the 
			holocaust.” 
			 
			There is no question about the dreadful treatment of European Jews 
			by the Nazis, their racist persecution, their deportation from 
			homelands to concentration and labor camps where tens of thousands 
			died under the most deplorable conditions. Nor is there any question 
			that many suffered massacres outside of camps, whether conducted by 
			Germans or others acting under their rule. These things, as the 
			crude academic claimed, are well documented. And there is little 
			doubt about them, except for honest questions about the actual 
			death toll. 
			 
			But critics wonder about the centrally organized and secret plan to 
			annihilate all the Jews of Europe, and the use of mass extermination 
			gas chambers to murder hundreds of thousands, or even millions of 
			people. No such devices were ever found, and verification of 
			their existence depends entirely on stories told by traumatized 
			survivors, confessions made under severe stress if not outright 
			torture, and photographs of empty buildings or reconstructed ruins 
			said to have once been used as gas chambers. 
			 
			Consider whether we would uncritically accept the reality of 
			America’s ugly racist history of lynching, with no more evidence 
			than hearing stories of the horror told by miraculous survivors, and 
			seeing photos of trees alleged to have once had bodies hanging from 
			them. 
			 
			Any critical person can wonder, but millions of us have been so 
			shocked at films of the terrible conditions of the liberated camps, 
			and especially the piles of emaciated dead bodies, that little 
			thought is given to asking how those terrible scenes of suffering 
			and death could have had anything to do with gas chambers, let alone 
			crematoria.  
			
			  
			
			And if a plan was afoot to secretly 
			murder millions and cremate their bodies to remove evidence, why and 
			how could so many have been left plainly exposed to public view? 
			 
			The near total physical breakdown of Germany near the war’s end 
			never seems to enter consciousness as a possible reason for some of 
			the drastic scenes revealed at those camps. While many German cities 
			were devastated by bombing, with their citizens reduced to homeless 
			refugees often near starvation, should we imagine that under such 
			conditions prison camps, which were dreadful places to begin with, 
			would somehow be able to furnish adequate food, shelter and medical 
			care to all inmates? 
			 
			When President Ahmadinejad referred to myth surrounding 
			the story, he was not denying that Jews suffered, anymore than 
			holocaust revisionists - who are slurred as “deniers” - make such a 
			charge. But they, and he, and thousands the world over who have read 
			critical works that barely see the light of day in the West, join in 
			questioning vital aspects of that story. Bigots who smear them with 
			nasty labels are playing with words, and in lethal fashion. 
			 
			Anyone who would deny the racial madness of the Nazi ethnic 
			cleansing of European Jews might be an idiot, or simply consumed 
			by hate. But those who deny the right to question the 
			existence of gas chambers or other details of the story, and vilify 
			those who dare to do so are either ignorant, or more likely, driven 
			by a more dangerous hate. Anything forbidden to be questioned must 
			be held suspect by thinking people, and the more that criticism is 
			suppressed, the more dangerous the possibilities for the world, and 
			not just the suppressors. 
			 
			Ahmadinejad repeatedly says that whatever crime Europeans 
			committed against Jews is no reason for the terrible persecution and 
			suffering inflicted upon the Palestinians, who were guilty of 
			nothing. Most of the world agrees with him, as do many in the West, 
			though hardly anyone in American politics will risk stating that 
			obvious fact. The power exerted by the Israel lobby is such that 
			even when a former president, or establishment scholars site the 
			moral injustice and the threat to our nation posed by one-sided 
			policies in the Middle East, they are slandered as anti-Semites,
			the way that revisionists are smeared as deniers. 
			 
			While thousands of Jews in Iran are apparently living without fear, 
			thousands of Jews in America have been led to believe that 
			Ahmadinejad threatens them with another holocaust. That is not 
			just irrational, but dangerous for all humanity. This situation is 
			being used to help provoke a further bloody war in the Middle East, 
			but reason must prevail over fanatical beliefs and psychotic fears 
			or all of us will suffer.  
			
			  
			
			The war over these words and their clear 
			meaning must not be allowed to perpetuate more injustice, and worse, 
			threaten a global disaster. 
			
			  
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