Genocide By Telepathy, Hilberg
Explains
Robert Faurisson
|
Robert Faurisson is Europe's
foremost Holocaust revisionist scholar.
Born in 1929, he was educated at the
Paris Sorbonne, and served as a
professor at the University of Lyon in
France from 1974 until 1990. He is a
specialist of text and document
analysis. His writings on the Holocaust
issue have appeared in several books
and numerous scholarly articles, many
of which have been published in this
Journal. This essay is an adaptation of
a piece originally written in 1988..
|
Raul Hilberg, the most prestigious of the
authors who defend the thesis of the physical
extermination of Jews by the Germans during the
Second World War, began his investigation of
this subject in 1948.
In 1961, after more than a dozen years'
labor, he published The Destruction of the
European Jews (Chicago: Quadrangle Books). In
this work, he presents "the destruction of the
European Jews" as a vast undertaking personally
supervised by Hitler who, he says, gave two
orders to this effect. Then, he continues,
various German administrative agencies,
especially in the police and the military, acted
in conformity with these orders, duly
coordinating their efforts to prepare, organize,
control and carry out this vast criminal
enterprise.
In 1976 appeared The Hoax of the Twentieth
Century, a work by the most prestigious of
revisionist authors, Arthur R. Butz, who teaches
at Northwestern University near Chicago. He
shows that the alleged extermination of the Jews
constitutes "the hoax of the twentieth
century."
In 1978-1979, I published two articles in the
prominent Paris daily Le Monde demonstrating
that the alleged Nazi gas chambers could not
have existed, and this essentially for physical
and chemical reasons.Note
1 These articles caused something of a stir.
Two well-known French intellectuals, Raymond
Aron and François Furet, announced that
an international colloquium of experts would be
held to establish before the world that the
extermination of Jews and the Nazi gas chambers
really existed. Among the experts who figured in
this was Raul Hilberg.
Just before the start of the colloquium, a
lengthy interview with Hilberg appeared in the
influential French magazine Le Nouvel
Observateur, in which the German-born Jewish
historian expressed some astounding
ideas.Note 2
Regarding the destruction of the European Jews
and the Nazi gas chambers, he basically said
that no documents exist that really prove these
things, but rather only some testimonies that
"accord somewhat."
While Hilberg of course holds to his basic
extermination thesis, this explanation is
radically different from the one he had
previously given. It is obvious that revisionism
is responsible for this change. Hilberg more or
less conceded this, even if only indirectly.
Specifically, he declared:Note
3
I will say that, in a certain way,
Faurisson and others, without wanting to, did
us a favor. They raised questions which had
the effect of engaging historians in new
research. They have obliged us to once again
collect information, to re-examine documents
and to go further into the comprehension of
what has taken place.
The international colloquium took place as
scheduled at the Sorbonne from June 29 to July
2, 1982, but behind closed doors. Then, an
account of its discussions and conclusions was
given at a press conference. But, to the
surprise of everyone present, only Raymond Aron
and François Furet appeared at the press
conference, declaring, on the one hand, that
"despite the most scholarly research," no one
had been able to find any order by Hitler for
the extermination of the Jews, and, on the
other, that pursuing the revisionists in court
was like conducting a witch-hunt. Not one word
was said about gas chambers.
Seven months later Hilberg summarized his new
thesis before an audience of nearly 2,700 at
Avery Fischer Hall in New York City: the entire
German policy for the physical destruction of
the Jews was to be explained by mind reading! No
document attesting to this criminal policy could
be found, because no such document existed. For
several years, the entire German bureaucratic
machinery operated through a kind of telepathy.
As Hilberg put it:Note
4
But what began in 1941 was a process
of destruction not planned in advance, not
organized centrally by any agency. There was
no blueprint and there was no budget for
destructive measures. They [these
measures] were taken step by step, one
step at a time. Thus came about not so much a
plan being carried out, but an incredible
meeting of minds, a consensus -- mind reading
by a far-flung bureaucracy.
Let us note again those final words: "an
incredible meeting of minds, a consensus -- mind
reading by a far-flung bureaucracy."Note
5
Two years later, Hilberg confirmed those
words and this explanation during the first
"Holocaust trial" of Ernst Zündel in
Toronto. He did this under oath during his
cross-examination by Zündel's lawyer,
Douglas Christie, whom I was assisting.Note
6
That same year (1985) the "revised and
definitive" edition of his book appeared. In it,
the University of Vermont professor did not use
the expression "consensus" or "mind reading."
And yet he wrote:Note
7
In the final analysis, the
destruction of the Jews was not so much a
product of laws and commands as it was a
matter of spirit, of shared comprehension, of
consonance and synchronization.
He also wrote of "countless decision makers
in a far-flung bureaucratic machine" without "a
basic plan." He mentioned "written directives
not published," "oral directives and
authorizations," and "basic understandings of
officials resulting in decisions not requiring
orders or explanations." There had been "no one
agency," he wrote, and "no single organization
directed or coordinated the entire process." The
destruction of the Jews, he concluded, was "the
work of a far-flung administrative machine," and
"no special agency was created and no special
budget was devised to destroy the Jews of
Europe. Each organization was to play a specific
role in the process, and each was to find the
means to carry out its task."Note
8
For me, this is like explaining what would
have been a huge criminal undertaking of
industrial proportions based, in particular, on
a weapon (a chemical slaughterhouse using an
insecticide), operating through the intervention
of the Holy Ghost, all of which had been
conceived and created through a kind of
spontaneous generation.
I refuse to believe that which is not
believable. I refuse to believe in the
incredible. I refuse to believe in what Hilberg
himself calls "an incredible meeting of minds."
I refuse to believe in mind reading or
telepathy, just as I refuse to believe in the
intervention of the Holy Ghost or in spontaneous
generation. I take exception to any historical
thesis, any system of historical explanation,
based on such hare-brained notions.
On November 23, 1978, the French historian
René Rémond declared to me: "As
for the [Nazi] gas chambers, I am ready
to follow you; as for the genocide, I have the
deep conviction that Nazism in itself was
sufficiently perverse so that this genocide was
part of its motivations and its actions, but I
recognize that I have no scientific evidence for
this genocide."
This is indeed the least one might say when
one is concerned about historical truth.
Notes
- "'Le problème des chambres
à gaz' ou 'la rumeur d'Auschwitz'," Le
Monde, Dec. 29, 1978, and, "Une lettre de M.
Faurisson," Le Monde, Jan. 16, 1979,
Reprinted in: R. Faurisson, Memoire en
Defense (Paris: La Vieille Taupe, 1980), pp.
71-75, 83-88, and in: R. Faurisson,
Écrits Révisionnistes
(1974-1998), published in four volumes in
1999, vol. 1, pp. 122-124, 131-134.
- "Les Archives de
l'horreur," Le Nouvel Observateur, July 3-9,
1982, pp. 70-73, 75-76. The interview was
conducted Guy Sitbon, regular correspondent
in the United States for Le Nouvel
Observateur.
- Le Nouvel Observateur,
July 3-9, 1982, p. 71. Also quoted in the
Summer 1985 Journal, p. 170.
- Quoted in: George De
Wan, "The Holocaust in Perspective," Newsday
(Long Island, New York), Feb. 23, 1983, p.
II/3. Also quoted in the Summer 1985 Journal,
pp. 170-171.
- According to The
American Heritage Dictionary of the English
Language, "mind reading" is defined as "The
faculty of discerning another's thoughts
through extrasensory means of communication;
telepathy."
- Hilberg testimony on
Jan. 16, 1985 (Toronto). Trial transcript,
pp. 846-848.
- Raul Hilberg, The
Destruction of the European Jews (New York:
Holmes and Meier, 1985, 3 vols.), p. 55.
- R. Hilberg, The
Destruction of the European Jews (1985), pp.
53-55, 62.
|