Deborah Lipstadt

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Lipstadt's book: Denying The Holocaust
Lipstadt's book: Denying The Holocaust

Deborah Esther Lipstadt (born March 18, 1947, New York City) is an American historian and author of the book Denying the Holocaust. She is the Dorot Professor of Modern Jewish and Holocaust Studies at Emory University. She received her BA from City College of New York and her MA and PhD from Brandeis University.

David Irving sued her and her publisher, Penguin Books, for libel in a British court, after she characterized some of his writings and public statements as Holocaust denial in her book Denying the Holocaust. The legal defense team was led by Anthony Julius, and the defense was presented in court by Richard Rampton QC in early 2000. Although UK libel law puts the burden of proof on the defendant rather than the plaintiff, Lipstadt and Penguin won the case using the justification defense -- that is, by demonstrating in court that Lipstadt's accusations against Irving were substantially true and therefore not libelous. The case was argued as a bench trial before Justice Charles Gray, who produced a written judgment hundreds of pages long, detailing Irving's systematic distortion of the historical record of World War II. The Times (April 14, 2000, page 23) said of Lipstadt's victory, "History has had its day in court and scored a crushing victory."[1]

Lipstadt was a consultant to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. In 1994 she was appointed by Bill Clinton to the United States Holocaust Memorial Council.

Contents

[edit] Free speech

Despite her acrimonious history with Holocaust denier David Irving (and in keeping with herself being sued by him for her writing), she has stated that she is personally opposed to the Austrian court's decision[1] in 2005 to sentence Irving to three years in prison for his speech (Holocaust denial is punishable in Austria by a maximum 20-year sentence). "I am uncomfortable with imprisoning people for speech. Let him go and let him fade from everyone's radar screens."[2]

[edit] "Soft-core denial" of the Holocaust

In the first week of February 2007, Lipstadt used a neologism "soft-core denial" at the Zionist Federation's annual fundraising dinner in London. Referring to such groups as the Muslim Council of Britain, reportedly she stated: "'When groups of people refuse to commemorate Holocaust Memorial Day unless equal time is given to anti-Muslim prejudice, this is soft-core denial.'"[3] According to Paul, "She received huge applause when she asked how former US President Jimmy Carter could omit the years 1939-1947 from a chronology in his book"; referring to his recently-published and controversial book Palestine Peace Not Apartheid, she said: "'When a former president of the United States writes a book on the Israeli-Palestinian crisis and writes a chronology at the beginning of the book in order to help them understand the emergence of the situation and in that chronology lists nothing of importance between 1939 and 1947, that is soft-core denial.'"[3]

See main article: Palestine Peace Not Apartheid
See also: Commentary on Palestine Peace Not Apartheid

[edit] Academic criticism

Ward Churchill accuses Lipstadt of denying the genocide of Native Americans in his book A Little Matter of Genocide, though in some other respects he appears to appreciate her work. Churchill argues that by claiming that the Holocaust cannot be compared to anything else in human history, citing its uniqueness, Lipstadt herself is engaging in a form of what she later would call "soft-core denial"; for, if one does not recognize the genocide of Native Americans to be as morally despicable as the Holocaust, then one is denying the true nature of that genocide, similarities among these otherwise-disparate genocidal phenomena.[4][5]

[edit] Bibliography

  • Beyond Belief : The American Press And The Coming Of The Holocaust, 1933- 1945 (1993). ISBN 0-02-919161-0.
  • Denying the Holocaust: The Growing Assault on Truth and Memory (1994). ISBN 0-452-27274-2.
  • History on Trial: My Day in Court with David Irving (2005). ISBN 0-06-059376-8.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Holocaust Denial On Trial: Truth Triumphs in 2000 Historical Court Victory], a project of The Rabbi Donald A. Tam Institute for Jewish Studies at Emory University, last updated in August 2006, accessed 13 February 2007.
  2. ^ Brendan O'Neill, "'Irving? Let the guy go home'," BBC News 4 January 2007, accessed 13 February 2007.
  3. ^ a b Qtd. by Jonny Paul, "Jerusalem Post Holocaust Scholar Warns of New 'soft-core' Denial," The Jerusalem Post 6 February 2007, accessed 12 February 2007.
  4. ^ Ward Churchill, A Little Matter Of Genocide: Holocaust And Denial In The Americas 1492 To The Present (San Francisco CA: City Lights Books, 1998) 31-53. ISBN 978-0-87286-323-1 (paperback); ISBN 978-0-87286-343-9 (hardcover)).
  5. ^ Cf. Ward Churchill, "Forbidding the "G-Word": Holocaust Denial as Judicial Doctrine in Canada," Other Voices 2.1 (February 2000), accessed February 13, 2007.

[edit] External links

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