Flirtation With Holocaust denial
DEBORAH LIPSTADT
1:00 PM ET
... Last Friday, I was in Amsterdam attending a screening of the movie Denial. Its a film about the libel suit David Irving, once arguably the worlds most influential Holocaust denier, brought against me for having called him a denier. The trial, held in 2000, lasted 10 weeks. Because of the nature of British libel laws which placed the burden of proof on me, I had no choice but to fight. Had I not fought he would have won by default and his denial version of the Holocaust no gas chambers, no mass killings, no Hitler involvement, and that this is all a myth concocted by Jews would have been enshrined in British law ...
... the White House had released a statement for Holocaust Remembrance Day that did not mention Jews or anti-Semitism. Instead it bemoaned the innocent victims. The internet was buzzing and many people were fuming. Though no fan of Trump, I chalked it up as a rookie mistake by a new administration busy issuing a slew of executive orders. Someone had screwed up. I refused to get agitated, and counseled my growing number of correspondents to hold their fire. A clarification would certainly soon follow. I was wrong.
In a clumsy defense Hope Hicks, the White House director of strategic communications, insisted that, the White House, by not referring to Jews, was acting in an inclusive manner. It deserved praise not condemnation. Hicks pointed those who inquired to an article which bemoaned the fact that, too often the other victims of the Holocaust were forgotten. Underlying this claim is the contention that the Jews are stealing the Holocaust for themselves. It is a calumny founded in anti-Semitism ...
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2017/01/the-trump-administrations-softcore-holocaust-denial/514974/