Dec 11, 2010

ROSENBLUM: Think Again: Are Holocaust denial statutes worth it?

 


 

 

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Think Again: Are Holocaust denial

statutes worth it?

By JONATHAN ROSENBLUM

12/10/2010 15:38

They are, in fact, likely to be counterproductive. Worse, they could

add credibility to the claims of the deniers.

Growing up in the US, I never gave much thought to statutes criminalizing Holocaust

denial. Any such statute would almost surely be struck down under the First Amendment

of the Constitution. Such statutes, however, are common in Europe. Most Jews probably

have an instinctive sympathy for outlawing Holocaust denial and experience satisfaction

when some European Holocaust denier is sentenced to jail or fined. And indeed there

are at least two powerful arguments in favor of such statutes. The first has to do with the

special pain felt by the victims of the Holocaust caused by the denial of the hell they

went through and inhuman cruelty inflicted upon them. Few of them could have imagined

in their worst nightmares that within 50 years of their liberation, there would be a whole

cottage industry devoted to denial of their suffering.

The more compelling argument lies in the role of Holocaust denial in the arsenal of the

most virulent of contemporary anti-Semites. Until reading Prof. Robert Wistrich's The

Lethal Obsession, I never fully appreciated how important Holocaust denial is to present

day Hitler wannabes. Wistrich details how Holocaust deniers fan the flames of potentially

lethal anti-Semitism with their claims. For them, the "Holocaust myth" is but the latest

example of the Jews' talent for manipulation – a gigantic conspiracy that has

brainwashed almost the entire Western world and has been used to extract huge

reparations from the Germans and create sympathy for Jews and the State of Israel.

At the end of the day, however, anti-Holocaust denial statutes are likely to be

counterproductive. The very existence of such statutes will always be pointed to by anti-

Semites as further proof of the reach of the Jewish tentacles that hold European

legislators in their clutches. Worse, they could very well add credibility to the claims of

the deniers. The latter will point to the illegalization of Holocaust denial as proof of the

power of the their arguments. Precisely because they cannot refuted, the deniers will

claim, must their ideas be ruled outside the pale of legitimate discussion.

THE MOST powerful argument, however, has nothing to do with Jews. Such statutes

create a dangerous precedent for other efforts to outlaw certain discussion as beyond

the pale.

In his classic On Liberty, John Stuart Mill observes, "All silencing of discussion is an

assumption of infallibility."

Most of us could come up with a few candidates of propositions that we consider beyond

legitimate debate. Some global warming enthusiasts, for instance, refer to opponents as

"deniers" to link them to Holocaust deniers in their depravity.

Classical liberals are largely protected from the "assumption of infallibility" by their

emphasis on what Isaiah Berlin termed "negative liberty," the absence of barriers or

constraints on individuals, particularly on their freedom of thought and expression. But

those who conceive liberty positively, in terms of the liberation or self-realization of the

individual, or more typically some collectivity, are subject to the totalitarian temptation,

for that self-realization, particularly of the collective, requires the coercive power of the

state.

The totalitarian temptation, and its less extreme expressions, is further heightened

among those who have grown up in an environment in which one political viewpoint is so

dominant that it is easy to suspect anyone holding opposing views of being mentally

incompetent or morally corrupt. That would describe students at many elite universities

in the West. Not surprisingly, the speech and conduct codes at some American

universities are perhaps the most glaring examples of limitations on freedom of speech

in America. Opposition to homosexual behavior, for instance, as immoral, or even

quoting the biblical prohibition, could run afoul of some such codes.

WITH RESPECT to no subject is freedom of speech so imperiled as to Islam and its

adherents. Under a Council of Europe framework decision that went into effect on

November 28, all European Union member states are required to combat "certain forms

and expressions of racism and xenophobia by means of criminal law."

Inevitably, those laws will be used to prosecute critics of Islam and those who warn of

the dangers from Europe's growing Muslim population.

Indeed they already have. Elisabeth Sabaditsch- Wolff has been charged with "inciting

hatred against a religious group" and "defamation of religion" for a 2009 presentation on

the "Islamization of Europe."

And an Amsterdam Appeals Court overruled the Dutch Prosecutorial Services decision

not to charge Geert Wilders, the head of the Freedom Party, for comparing the Koran

toMein Kampf. An Austrian court even fined a retiree whose Muslim neighbors

complained that his yodeling sounded like the muezzin's call to prayer and was thus

insulting.

In both the Sabaditsch-Wolff and Wilders cases, the presentations for which they were

charged consisted primarily of quotations from the Koran and the hadith literature. Quite

likely, those presentations were tendentious and one-sided. Certainly some of

Sabaditsch-Wolff's examples of the imposition of Shari'a (Muslim religious law) – i.e.,

Muslim parents preventing their daughters from mixed swimming – will strike most

Americans and all religious Jews as legitimate exercises of freedom of religion. But

where the gravamen of a criminal complaint consists of quotes from Muslim sources,

then legitimate debate about an Islamic threat to Europe is being cut-off.

By attempting to shut down discussion of Islam, under the rubric of combating

Islamophobia, European policymakers are helping to bring about their worst nightmares.

Those nightmares involve bloody clashes between Muslims and native Europeans who

feel that their culture is under assault from fast-growing, poorly assimilated, immigrant

populations. That is indeed possible. But placing Islam or the behavior of Muslims so far

beyond the pale of discussion that even truth is no defense only exacerbates the danger.

Nothing injects more bitterness into the political system than the widespread feeling that

the playing field is tilted. If native Europeans see that prosecutions are never brought

against local imams for incitement against the infidels or that Christianity, but not Islam,

may be denigrated with impunity, their fury will only grow.

In addition, limits on discussion of issues of public concern because of the

uncomfortable implications of certain facts make it less likely that appropriate solutions

will be found in time.

Airport security in the US is a good example. The refusal to acknowledge that likely

terrorists are drawn from a small and largely discernible slice of the population imposes

an immense burden on air travelers and delivers a victory to terrorists.

The rising Muslim population in Europe, especially as that population grows more

radicalized, is a threat to European civilization, and pretending otherwise will not make

the threat go away. But such pretending by policy-makers will prevent the adoption of

immigration and social welfare policies that can reverse, in part, those trends.

Legal prohibitions on Holocaust denial serve as an attractive example for government

meddling in the free marketplace of ideas. But given the costs of any precedent for

allowing European elites to determine what is proper and improper speech, and what

topics may be discussed, giving up Holocaust denial statutes is a small sacrifice.

The writer is the director of Jewish Media Resources. He has written a regular column

inThe Jerusalem Post Magazine since 1997, and is the author of eight biographies of

modern Jewish leaders.

More about: Isaiah BerlinGeert WildersRobert S. WistrichCouncil of Europe

 

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