Hadassa Ben-Itto
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Hadassa Ben-Itto (Hebrew: הדסה בן-עתו, born 1926, Poland) is an author and a jurist. She is best known for her scholarly work, The Lie That Would Not Die, The Protocols of the Elders of Zion (2005), with Preface by Lord Woolf (Lord Chief Justice) and Forward by Judge Edward R. Korman (United State District Court for the Eastern District of New York).
Literary sholarship has pretty much established that the Protocols of Zion constitutes an instance of Plagiarism. Ben-Itto's work pretty much settles the question that this infamous text that won't die is a Forgery and an Untruth.
It is generally forgotten that the Bern Trial was reversed on appeal, as the court below lacked power to grant relief--a judgment favorable to plaintiff--under the existing anti-obscenity statute.
However, Ben-Itto, as a judicial scholar, as well as an expert on United Nations procedures and proceedings, was ideally placed to study both the nature of the so-called Protocols, a term which often involves international relations, as well as their notorious fabricated nature. She was, by her credentials, ideally suited to examine the evidence which has been retained and presented to the court of law at Berne, Switzerland where The Berne Trial was held. She therefore was well qualified to issue a scholarly determination as to the nature of this notorious text, irrespective as to the guilt of the accused or the merits of the case, the defense of which Hitler's Nazi agents were financing, behind the scenes.
Contents |
[edit] Works
The Lie That Would Not Die, The Protocols of the Elders of Zion
- by Hadassa Ben-Itto
- Preface by Lord Woolf (Lord Chief Justice)
- Forward by Judge Edward R. Korman
- (United State District Court
- for the Eastern District of New York)
- (London; Portland, Oragon: Valentine Mitchell, 2005)
- ISBN O-85303-602-0 (cloth) Amazon.com:[1]
- ISBN O-95303-595-4 (paper)
[edit] Service and Awards
- Served twice as member of Israel's delegation UN General Assembly.
- Served twice as member of Israel's delegation to UNESCO conference on human rights, Paris, 1982.
- Taught criminal procedure at Bar-Ilan University.
- Served since 1988 as World President of the International Association of Jewish Lawyers and Jurists.
- Awarded in 1999 the Zeltner Prize, a most prestgious prize awarded in Israel to an outstanding jurist.
[edit] See Slso
[edit] External links
- The Lie That Would't Die, Interview by Jamie Glazov, FrontPageMagazine.Com, August 28, 2006: [2]
- Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center
at the Center for Special Studies (C.S.S) [3]