Monday, August 31, 2009

"Distorting the Holocaust: Why Numbers Matter"

In this article Dr. Alex Grobman refocuses interest in the Holocaust and World War II away from fantasy and fuzzy thinking and toward what he calls "objective truth."

He argues that although the oft-cited number of six million Jews killed is more an average of the most credible numbers than an exact figure, the difference between saying 6 million people were killed and saying 11 million (or 50 million) were killed during the Holocaust reveals a crucial distinction. When historians speak about the Holocaust they refer to "
the systematic bureaucratically administered destruction by the Nazis and their collaborators of six million Jews during the Second World War."

On the other hand, references to the 11 million dead "
equate the destruction of the Jews of Europe with that of the others who were murdered." Yet, no other group, Grobman insists was targeted "for complete destruction." It is true that the Roma and Sinti were targeted for "asocial" behavior but the Nazis never marked them for complete annihilation. The Nazis did kill millions of others including Russian prisoners of war, the physically and mentally disabled, Polish intellectuals and clergy, etc.

However, Grobman insists that history must create distinctions and maintain separations between contemporaneous events in order to understand complex events. He summarizes his argument by saying "When we use 11 million or any other number than the Six Million to describe the Shoah, we are distorting the historical record. We trivialize the importance of this unprecedented event in modern history, minimize the experiences of all those who suffered and prevent a legitimate understanding of its causes and its universal implications for Western society."

Interestingly, in the comments to his book Denying History on Amazon one finds references to "
The Official Version of Holocaust [sic]" and "The Holocaust legend." These denier euphemisms speak to the resistance to history that does not prevail but does persist. Or perhaps they resist the voice of the victims, the voice of suffering, the unfathomable loss.

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Deborah Lipstadt, Carol Ann Lee and Francine Prose discuss Anne Frank


In this call-in radio program, "The importance of Anne Frank," Carol Ann Lee and Francine Prose discuss the continued relevance of Anne Frank's life and diary. Amidst a great deal of interesting discussion, one caller relates the experience of discovering his own mother was a Holocaust "revisionist."

Dr. Lipstadt also addresses and debunks denier claims about the diary.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

"Health care debate turns vile with Nazi analogy"

Dr. Arthur Caplan, Emanuel and Robert Hart Professor of Bioethics at University of Pennsylvania, discusses the recent comparison of President Obama's health care reform policies to Nazi medicine by its critics. He argues convincingly that this analogy amounts to a form of Holocaust denial.