Holocaust-denial fever
By Douglas Davis
FEVERED OPPOSITION to the threatened Anglo-American
military strike against Iraq masked another spasm of
passion that has gripped the Arab world over the past
month.
The focus of that passion was the unlikely figure of an
85-year-old French intellectual, writer and politician,
Roger Garaudy.
Based on the conventional script, the former left-wing
deputy-speaker of the French National Assembly
should now be basking in the adoration of Left Bank
literary salons, the lionized hero of Parisian cafe society.
Instead, the Marxist-turned-Muslim is awaiting the
verdict of a Paris court this Friday [Feb 27] on
charges of denying crimes against humanity --
specifically Holocaust denial.
Garaudy's trial stemmed from his 1996 book, "Les
mythes fondateurs de la politique israelienne"
-- Founding Myths of Israeli Politics -- in which he
denies the existence of Nazi gas chambers and claims
that the number of Jews killed by the Nazis had been
grossly exaggerated in order to justify and strengthen
the Zionist case.
Hitler's killing of Jews, he asserted, were indeed
"massacres," but it is an exaggeration to term the
Nazi crimes "genocide" or a "Holocaust", and he
dismissed claims that six million Jews had perished.
Such sentiments are illegal under France's 1990
Gayssot law, which outlaws expressions of Nazi
revisionism, and, if convicted, Garaudy will face a
one-year jail term or a fine of 300,000 French
francs ($50,000).
Garaudy, whose political path has taken him from
Stalinism through Christianity to Islam, might have
been dismissed as just another crackpot.
What sets him apart, however, is that his book not
only prompted debate in France, but also sparked a
powerful wave of support throughout the Arab
world, not least among those who are involved in
negotiations, have established formal ties, or even
signed full-blown peace treaties with Israel.
"Garaudy, all of Palestine is with you," proclaimed
banners that were unfurled outside the French
Cultural Center in Gaza, where 70 Palestinian
professors, religious leaders and journalists rallied
in protest against Garaudy's trial.
The head of the Palestinian Journalists' Syndicate,
Naim Tubasi, railed against French law, which,
he said, "criminalizes all those who doubt the
Zionist tale of the victims of the Holocaust". At
the same time, the Palestinian Writers Association
expressed solidarity with Garaudy for "his
courageous fight for creative freedom".
In Beirut, a group of seven leading Lebanese lawyers
volunteered to defend Garaudy, while Beirut Bar
Association president Antoine Klimos declared that
"it is unacceptable that freedom of opinion be treated
as a crime" and Lebanon's Union of Arab Journalists
called on "Arab intellectuals to rally [for Garaudy] who
had the courage to divulge Zionist lies."
Not to be outdone, Egypt's Arab Lawyers' Union
dispatched a five-man legal delegation to Paris to
offer support during the trial.
In the event, Garaudy was defended by Maitre
Jacques Verges, whose reputation rests on his
defence of Nazi war criminal Klaus Barbie and,
more recently, the international terrorist Illich
Ramirez Sanchez, also known as "Carlos the
Jackal".
Meanwhile, Jordan's 12 opposition political parties
issued a statement criticising the trial -- "a theatrical
farce" -- and claimed that "Zionists have fabricated
the falsehoods about the extermination of the Jews in
Germany to mislead the world and blackmail Western
governments and society into supporting the Zionists'
plots against mankind and the Palestinian people."
Also in Jordan, the Arab Organization for Human
Rights issued a statement supporting Garaudy's
"freedom in everything he has said and written....
His is an opinion and political position adopted by
many intellectuals and historians."
In the Gulf, the United Arab Emirates daily al-
Khaleej published a front-page appeal to its
readers to send donations and messages of
support to Garaudy. The paper was inundated
with messages, including one from the wife
of UAE leader Sheikh Zayed ibn Sultan
Al-Nahayan, who stumped up a cash gift of
$50,000 to cover the maximum fine Garaudy
could face on Friday (the French prosecution
has waived demands for a jail term).
In another Gulf Arab state, Qatar, a Garaudy
Support Committee has been established to
collect donations, while the Qatar Women's
Youth Organization has sent messages of
solidarity.
And in Syria, where Garaudy was last year treated to
an audience with Foreign Minister Farouk ash-Sharaa,
Grand Mufti Sheikh Ahmad Kaftaro lobbed in a
message of "total support", declaring Garaudy to be
"a free thinker who does not compromise his principles".
But nowhere has Garaudy's star shone more brightly
than in Egypt, where he visited last week as guest of
Egyptian Minister of Culture Farouk Hosni to lecture
and participate in symposiums associated with the
annual Cairo Book Fair.
Garaudy was treated to a hero's welcome from religious
and intellectual leaders: "Every Moslem should support
Garaudy's thought and stand with all cultural, religious
and diplomatic efforts," declared Egypt's highest
religious authority, Grand Mufti Nasr Farid Wasel. "It
is a duty to defend him and stand by his side."
And Garaudy did not disappoint his hosts. "Under
France's freedom of speech, you can attack President
Jacques Chirac or even the Pope. But when you criticize
Israel you are lost," Garaudy told a seminar organised
by Egypt's Ministry of Culture. "This is because media
in the West is 95 percent controlled by the Zionists."
Explained Amina Rashid, who lectures in French
literature at Cairo University: "This warm welcome
for Garaudy is a result of his sound and clear
position against Israel and America and his support
for the Palestinians."
Some Egyptians accused the West of double standards
in trying Garaudy, while protecting British author
Salman Rushdie, whose novel "The Satanic Verses"
angered Moslems and prompted the late Iranian leader,
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, to issue a fatwa against
him.
Interviewed by an uncharacteristically sycophantic
"Al-Ahram last week, Garaudy told the semi-official
Cairo daily that he was aware that his book
"overstepped many red lines and that its content was
a violation of the oppressive law which punishes
anyone who criticizes the verdicts of the Nuremberg
trials or questions the number of Holocaust victims.
"Consequently," he said, "I was aware that the book
would anger French Zionist organisations which
control 90 percent of the media."
Added interviewer Fahmi Howeidi: "At his advanced
age, one would expect a person to choose a more sedate
lifestyle. The last thing one would imagine is that a
person of his age would choose to remain a stubborn
fighter, and that he would choose to do battle against
the all-powerful Zionist organisations in the heart of
Europe. But that is exactly what the man did."
Perhaps the phenomenon of anti-Semitism and
Holocaust-denial should not, after all, come as a
complete surprise in an Arab world, where Hitler's Mein Kampf is still readily available and the
Protocols of the Elders of Zion, a notorious
anti-Semitic forgery, remains a
01/01/98: Not Quite Conventional