Embattled Bigots:
A bitter dispute has recently engulfed the Holocaust denial movement
in the United States, resulting in a split in the ranks of its main
propaganda outlet, the
Institute for Historical Review (IHR), a pseudo-
academic institution whose business is peddling hateful lies. Within the
past year the feud has included these dramatic events: lawsuits filed by
IHR's founder against several IHR staffers, their countersuit against him,
his issuing of a new, competing Holocaust denial publication, and a
violent physical altercation at the IHR office between the two factions.
It is unclear what the schism will ultimately mean for this insidious
movement.
The Institute for Historical Review is the primary force in the
international anti-Semitic propaganda movement known as Holocaust denial.
Through its publications and periodic conferences, the IHR has attempted
to garner scholarly respectability and popular visibility for what it
claims to be historical "revisionism." [See ADL report Hitler's
Apologists: The Anti-Semitic Propaganda of Holocaust "Revisionism"
(1993)]
Since 1979, the IHR has enjoyed increased attention within the extremist
community, despite significant legal and financial setbacks. The best
known of these reversals occurred in 1985 when IHR agreed in a court-
approved settlement to pay $90,000 to
Mel Mermelstein, an Auschwitz
concentration camp survivor. Mermelstein had sued the organization for
failing to pay him a $50,000 "reward" it had offered for "proof" that
the Nazis operated execution gas chambers at the concentration camps
in WWII.
Ironically, the Mermelstein case and other financial difficulties, such
as a 1984 fire at IHR headquarters, are not responsible for the most
serious problem facing the group. It seems that after a decade and a
half of nefarious activity, the IHR's most formidable challenge is a
conflict between its founder and its own activists.
The
original plaintext version
of this file is available via
ftp.
[
Index ]
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A Split in the Ranks of the Holocaust Denial Movement
Introduction