PROCEEDINGS - DAY ONE
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Tuesday, 11th January
2000.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Mr Irving and Mr Rampton, I am
conscious that this court is not capable of accommodating all who would like to
be here.
MR RAMPTON: Including counsel, my Lord!
THE CHAIRMAN: Including counsel -- you have rather more space than some
of the people at the back. All I can say is that we have done our best to find
a court that can accommodate the technology and is physically big enough to
cope with all the bundles.
I would like to be able to say that we could try to find another court where
everybody could be found a place to sit down, but I just do not think it is
possible. I will make enquiries, but it is very desirable that everybody who
wants to be here should be here and I am afraid they are not. So I will make
enquiries, but I think we will probably have to stay here, so I hope everyone
will put up with the discomfort and I am sorry about it.
Mr Irving, I have a copy of your opening statement. Are there any other
preliminary matters that need to be discussed and decided before you embark on
it?
MR IRVING: My Lord, I did address a letter to you within the last few
days recommending that before I embark on my opening statement, with your
Lordship's permission, we address one or two procedural matters ----
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MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes, I thought there might be.
MR IRVING: --- covering the opening phase and also how, with the
agreement of the Defendants, we propose to structure the hearing of this
action.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes.
MR IRVING: The most interesting part of the action in the light of
history is, undoubtedly, the Holocaust and Auschwitz and is also, I think we
all apprehend, the most complicated to prepare. By agreement between the
parties, we propose to divide the action into these two phases, but basically
all the rest followed by Auschwitz, if I have understood the proposals also
made by the Defendants in this connection?
MR RAMPTON: I think that is a misunderstanding. I had supposed that we
were going to do Auschwitz first, and if that causes Mr Irving a difficulty --
I am not saying whose fault the understanding is, but misunderstanding,
however, it undoubtedly is -- we have scheduled our Auschwitz expert, Professor
van Pelt, it to be here for the last week in January which is about when I
expected to start my cross-examination.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: So what is being proposed, that the whole case should
be divided, as it were, into two?
MR RAMPTON: No, I do not think so -- well, in two, yes. What is proposed
by us (and which Mr Irving has agreed to, though it appears there is a
misunderstanding about the
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timing of it) was that
Auschwitz should be dealt with as a discrete or separate topic.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: With the Claimant's evidence and then the Defendants'
evidence.
MR RAMPTON: The Claimant gives his evidence, I would then cross-examine
him and immediately following that or his own re-examination, I would call the
Auschwitz expert for the Defence, Professor van Pelt, who can be cross-examined
by Mr Irving.
I had expected that process to start at the end of this month. From what Mr
Irving has just said, it now appears that he has thought that Auschwitz would
come at the end of the case which is contrary to my understanding.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I am a bit surprised that there should be such a
fundamental disagreement.
MR RAMPTON: I hear it now for the first time with surprise.
I utter no word or criticism or blame. I do not know how it comes about. It may
be that I should have when I have found out what has happened. But it is
extremely inconvenient from our expert's point of view and he is not resident
in this country. He is in Canada.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: On the other hand, Mr Irving must really be free as
Claimant to take his own course, unless agreement can be reached to some other
effect.
MR RAMPTON: I do not know there is much to be gained by having
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a discussion about that
particular topic in front of your Lordship now. It seems to me we have to go
back to the drawing board and work out a schedule which suits both sides. But,
as matters presently stand, it would cause us a great deal of difficulty as we
thought we had an agreement that we could start that topic first, but there it
is.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Mr Irving, I think it is right that we do want to spend
time discussing this in open court unless and until it proves to be necessary.
Do you agree with that?
MR IRVING: I agree, my Lord, except that I would remark that I received
on Friday evening after close of business about 6,000 pages of document
relating to van Pelt's evidence, though I am surprised that they would imagine
they could launch straight into the preparation of the Auschwitz section of the
hearing without not giving us time to examine each and every one of these
documents and have them examined.
On the other hand, I agree, we do not have to discuss it in open court. I am
perfectly prepared to have Professor van Pelt come over in the middle of
whatever else is going on and we can take him as a separate entirety. He is
certainly an extremely interesting witness to be heard.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: My view really is this at the moment, that
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you are the Claimant,
you have a right to take the case all in one bite or in two bites, whichever
you like, and if it is to be two bites, then the parties will have to try to
reach agreement and, if necessary, I can decide it.
MR IRVING: My Lord, we will try to reach an agreement behind the scenes
with the Defendants in this matter.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Will you try? I do realize you are wrestling with a
pretty enormous burden as a litigant in person.
MR RAMPTON: That I entirely understand and it gives rise again in an
entirely neutral way to this small problem: my cross-examination of Mr Irving
will consist in some considerable degree of reference to Professor van Pelt's
report and underlying documents, particularly the blueprints and the
contemporaneous journal. I cannot judge when Mr Irving will finish his
evidence-in-chief, but as soon as he does, then (as with him) I must be free, I
believe, to cross-examine in whichever order I see fit.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Of course.
MR RAMPTON: Therefore, as I say, I expected him to finish his
evidence-in-chief probably towards the end of January by which time I would
start straightaway with Auschwitz.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: What I would like to do at some stage (and I think now
is not the right time) is to work out an anticipated programme. I am not going
to say anything about time limits at the moment, but this is the kind of case
where it may become necessary to keep the thing
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within sensible bounds.
MR RAMPTON: Absolutely, yes.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: But I do not think now is the time because I have not
the feel for how it is going to go and I do not think it is right to ask Mr
Irving to estimate anything at the moment.
MR IRVING: We all have constraints imposed on us, my Lord, by the fact
that we have witnesses coming from overseas who have to fit in their visits
here with their own academic time-tables. For this reason, I am showing a great
degree of flexibility over the timetable and i am sure the Defendants will show
the same courtesy.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: In a day or two's time, I think, if we spend half an
hour -- perhaps if you would both like to think about it before then -- trying
to work out how we hope we will make progress, and then do our level best to
stick whatever programme we have decided on.
MR IRVING: Very well, my Lord.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I think that would be sensible.
MR IRVING: I think that is probably the only advance procedural matter
which I wished to address at this stage, my Lord, and with your Lordship's
permission, I will now commence with my opening statement.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Can I just raise one small topic with you, which is
that you wrote, I think, that you are intending to show a couple of video
clips.
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MR IRVING: I do not think we will get to that today, my Lord.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Right. I was not clear why they should form part of
your opening. That is the only...
MR IRVING: They do not form part of the opening, my Lord.
There are immediately following it.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Right. If there is no objection, there is no objection.
There is not.
MR IRVING: One of the video clips I wish to show largely because it
contains about 20 minutes of the Second Defendant talking on television and, as
I understand, the Second Defendant will probably not be giving evidence in
person, and I thought it was fair that we should hear her in her own words
explaining her position
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes.
MR RAMPTON: My Lord, before Mr Irving opens his case, can I say this in
advance? I say it now and I hope I will not need to say it again. So far as the
introduction of evidence by Mr Irving is concerned, there will be only two
grounds on which I shall ever object, since this is a case which is being tried
without a jury; the first is that it is a waste of time and the second is that
it is designed to catch the public eye and is not relevant to the case.
My Lord, those are the only two matters, otherwise I am happy to leave it to
your Lordship. There may be whole areas which are not really much to do with
the case, but if Mr Irving wants to go down those roads, then subject to
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case management, I have
no objection.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: It appeared to me, having now spent quite a lot of time
with the papers, in a curious way it is a case that does not depend to a very
great extent on the oral evidence which is an unusual feature of a case of this
length.
MR IRVING: My Lord, in this particular video which I wish to show, there
are passages which show the Second Defendant making certain statements on which
I wish to rely and also Professor van Pelt standing in a certain position in
the site of Auschwitz making certain statements upon which I wish also to rely.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: There is no objection taken, so I would not dream of
preventing you doing it.
MR IRVING: Yes, and that is the reason why I wish particularly to show
those videos. I know videos are a sore point between us because we discussed
this at the pretrial hearing. Your Lordship will remember that I am concerned
about the state of commercially edited videos where there have been
cross-cuttings ----
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes.
MR IRVING: --- and things cut out, and so on.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes. Now do open the case.
MR IRVING: May it please your Lordship, this is my opening statement in
the matter of David Irving v. Penguin Books and Deborah Lipstadt. I appear as a
litigant in person
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and the Defendants are
represented by Richard Rampton and Miss Rogers of counsel and by Mr Anthony
Julius.
My Lord, there were originally three other Defendants as well who can be characterised
here as booksellers, which your Lordship will observe that they no longer
figure in this action, a settlement having been reached.
This is an action in libel arising from the publication by the First Defendant
of a book entitled "Denying the Holocaust" written by the Second
Defendant, Professor Lipstadt.
As your Lordship is aware, the work complained of has attracted considerable
attention, both in this country and in the United States and elsewhere since it
was first published in 1993. Your Lordship will have before you my Statement of
Claim in which I set out the grounds for my complaint, the consequence of which
I am asking that the Defendants be ordered to pay damages of an amount which I
will venture to suggest, and I will invite your Lordship to issue an injunction
against further publication of this work and also order that the Defendants
should make the usual undertakings.
My Lord, it is almost 30 years to the day since I last set foot in these Law
Courts, and I trust that your Lordship will allow me to digress for two or
three minutes, being (in my submission) something of
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an historian, on the
history of those events because there are not without relevance to the
proceedings upon which we are about to embark.
The occasion of that visit to this building was an action heard before Lawton
J, which became well-known to law students as Cassell v. Broome & Another.
It too was a libel action and I am ashamed to admit that I was the
"Another", having written a book on a naval operation, "The
Destruction of Convoy PQ17. That was the only actively fought libel action in
which I became engaged in 30 years of writing. There were two reasons for this
abstinence; my Lord, first, I became more prudent about how I wrote and,
second, I was taught to turn the other cheek.
The man who taught me the latter lesson was my first publisher. He had signed
up my first book, "The Destruction of Dresden" which was eventually
published in 1963. I had been approached in about 1961 by this gentleman, a
well-known English publisher, Mr William Kimber. When I visited him in his
offices (which were on a site which has long since been built over, buried by a
luxury hotel, the Berkeley in Belgravia) I found him surrounded by files and
documents, rather as we all are in this courtroom today, my Lord, and he wore
an air of exhaustion.
Your Lordship may remember that Mr Kimber and
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his author, Mr Leon
Uris, had become involved through a book which Mr Uris had written, entitled
"Exodus", in a libel action brought by a London doctor who had been
obliged to serve at Auschwitz. That case was also heard before Lawton J. There
was one other similarity that closes this particular circle of coincidence:
like me now, Mr Kimber was, in consequence, also obliged to spend two or three
years of his life wading, as he put it, "knee deep" through the most
appalling stories of atrocities and human delegation.
That day he advised me never, ever, to become in involved in libel litigation.
I might add that, with one exception that I shall later mention, I have heeded
his advice.
There have since been one or two minor legal skirmishes which have not involved
much "bloodshed".
There was an action against an author which I foolishly started at the same
time as the PQ17 case and, having lost the latter, i was obliged for evident
reasons to abandon it on relatively painless conditions; and a more recent
actions against a major London newspaper who put into my mouth, no doubt
inadvertently, some particularly offensive words which had, in fact, been
uttered by Adolf Hitler.
That newspaper settled out of court with me on terms that were eminently
acceptable, my Lord.
I have often thought of Mr Kimber's predicament
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since the 1960s and,
more particularly, the last three years. I have been plunged into precisely the
same "knee deep" position ever since I issued the originating writs
in this action in September 1996.
My Lord, by the way, does your Lordship actually require to see the writs
today?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: No, not at all; if I need to look at any document, I
will just mention that I would like to look at it -- certainly not the writs.
Thank you.
MR IRVING: If I am late with the bundles and papers upon which this
court relies, I can only plead this in mitigation, knee deep.
I have never held myself out to be a Holocaust expert, nor have I written books
about what is now called the Holocaust. If I am an expert in anything at all, I
may be so immodest to submit that it is in the role that Adolf Hitler played in
the propagation of World War II, and in the decisions which he made and the
knowledge on which he based those decisions.
As a peripheral matter to that topic on which I have written a number of books,
I inevitably investigated the extent to which Hitler participated in or had
cognisance of the Holocaust. That was the sum total of my involvement as a book
author up to the launching of these writs.
Since then, because of the tactics chosen by the
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Defendants, my Lord, I
have been obliged willy-nilly to become something of an expert through no
desire of my own. To my utmost distaste, it has become evident that it is no
longer possible to write pure history, untrammelled and uninfluenced by
politics, once one ventures into this unpleasant field.
I have done my best to prepare the case that follows, but I respectfully submit
that I do not have any duty to become an expert on the Holocaust, my Lord. It
is not saying anything unknown to this court. I remind those present that, the
Defendants having pleaded justification, as they have, it is not incumbent upon
me, as the Claimant, to prove the wrongness of what they have published; it is
for them to prove that what they wrote was true.
I intend to show that far from being a "Holocaust denier" -- the
phrase in the title of the book -- I have repeatedly draw attention to major
aspects of the Holocaust and I have described them and I have provided
historical documents, both to the community of scholars and to the general
public of which they were completely unaware before I discovered these documents,
and published them and translated them.
It will be found that I selflessly provided copies of the documents, that I had
at great expense myself unearthed foreign archives even to my rival
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historians, as I felt
that it was important in the interests of general historical research that they
should be aware of these documents. I am referring, for example, to the Bruns
Report, my Lord, which we will shall shortly hear -- it is the document which I
provided to you separately -- and to the dossier on Kurt Aumeier in British
files, a dossier which even the Defence experts admit is one of the most
important historical finds since the writings of Rudolph Hoss, the commandant
of Auschwitz, were published after the war.
My Lord, that actual document I quote all the relevant parts in the opening
statement, but I have submitted the document to your Lordship as a courtesy.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Thank you very much.
MR IRVING: There is one essential plea that I wish to make of this
court: I am aware that the Defendants have expended a considerable sum of money
in researching all over again the harrowing story of what actually happened in
what they call the Holocaust.
I submit that, harsh though it may seem, the court should take no interest in
that tragedy. The court may well disagree with me, and show a profound interest
in it, but, in my submission, we have to avoid the temptations of raking over
the history of what happened in Poland or in Russia 50 years ago. What is moot
here is not what happened in those sites of atrocities, but what
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happened over the last
32 years on my writing desk in my apartment off Grosvenor Square. That is what
is at stake here.
To justify her allegations of manipulation and distortion, it will not suffice
for Professor Lipstadt to show, if she can, that I misrepresented what
happened, but that I knew what happened and that I perversely and deliberately,
for whatever purpose, portrayed it differently from how I knew it to have
happened.
That is what manipulation and distortion means, and the other, though
fundamental, story of what actually happened is neither here nor there. In
effect, this enquiry should not leave the four walls of my study, my Lord. It
should look at the papers that lay before me and not before some other
magnificently funded research or scholar, and at the manuscript that I then
produced on the basis of my own limited sources.
My Lord, if we were to seek a title for this libel action, I would venture to
suggest "Pictures at an execution" -- my execution.
Your Lordship may or not be aware that I have had a reputation as an historian
and as an investigative writer arising from the 30 or so works which I have
published in English and other languages over the years since 1961. I am the
author of many scores of articles in serious and respected newspapers,
including over the years
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in this country, The
Daily Telegraph, The Sunday Telegraph, the Jewish Chronicle, the Sunday
Express, the Evening Standard, Encounter and publications of similar repute in
Germany. My articles have appeared in newspapers ranging from Die Welt, Die
Welt am Sonntag, and magazines and journals like Stern, Der Spiegel, Neue
Illustrierte, Quick.
My books have appeared between hard covers under the imprint of the finest
publishing houses. I might mention in this country the imprints of William
Kimber Ltd, Cassell & Company Ltd, Macmillan Limited, Hodder &
Stoughton, Penguin -- Penguin, the First Defendants in this action -- and Allen
Lane and others. As the Second Defendant is, I understand, an American citizen,
it might be meritorious for me to add that my works have also been published by
her country's leading publishing houses too, including the Viking Press,
Little, Brown, Simon & Schuster, Holt, Reinhardt, Winston, St Martin's
Press and a score of no less reputable paperback publishing houses.
Each of those published works by me contained in or near the title page a list
of my previous publications and frequently a sample of the accolades bestowed
on my works by the leading names of literature and historiography on both sides
of the Atlantic.
This happy situation, namely having my works published in the leading
publishing houses of the world,
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ended a year ago, a year
or two ago, under circumstance which I shall venture, if your Lordship permits,
to set out later in my remarks. Suffice it to say that this very day, during
the night, the Australia/Israel Review has published in Sydney, Australia, a
presumably well-informed article (of which I have provided a copy to your
Lordship; I have marked the sentence on which I rely) coming as it does from
their corner, which provides one missing link in the circumstances under which
St Martin's Press finally terminated their contract to publish my book,
"Goebbels. Mastermind of the Third Reich". I quote: "... One of
the catalysts for the case was Irving's", they are talking about this
action today, "experience with American publisher, St Martin's Press,
which, after being warned by Lipstadt and others about Irving's approach to
history, then cancelled its agreement to publish Irving's book 'Goebbels.
Mastermind of the Third Reich' in the United States." So these Defendants
have done very real damage to my professional existence. May I, first of all,
set out the very real pecuniary damage which can be done to an author in
general terms, my Lord, by an attack on his reputation. It is not merely that
he suffers injury and hurt to his feelings from unjustified attacks, whatever
their nature; an author, by virtue of his trade, lives a precarious financial
existence. A tenured professor or
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other scholar can look
forward to a brief career, lengthy vacations, high rewards and eventually a
pension. Perhaps some members of the legal profession enjoy the same fortunate
expectations.
A writer leads a much lonelier and more hazardous existence. When he first
embarks on his career he may write a string of works that are never published.
I was fortunate in this respect. When I first started advertising in The Times
in 1961, inviting British airmen who had taken part in the principal operations
of Royal Air Force Bomber Command to come forward, among those who contacted me
was Mr William Kimber, a publisher of great repute, who himself felt deeply
about the ethical questions raised by these saturation bombing operations.
I , therefore, did not have the usual problem that faces most first time
authors, namely that of crossing the difficult threshold from being an
unpublished to a published author. My first book, "The Destruction of
Dresden" was serialised by The Sunday Telegraph and attracted much
critical acclaim. It was only then that I took the perhaps fateful decision to
become a writer.
If I may now advance rapidly some 20 or 30 years (and I sense the court's
relief) I would repeat a brief conversation I had with my accountant at a time
when I was earning more than £100,000 a year. My accountant, no doubt with his
eye on the commission involved, asked what
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steps I had taken in
anticipation of retirement. My immodest reply was that I did not intend to
retire, and when he murmured something about pensions, I replied that my books
were my pension fund.
If I may explain that remark? If an author has written a good book, it will be
published and republished, and on each occasion a fresh ripple of royalties
reaches the author's bank account. Admittedly, the ripples become smaller as
the years progress, as the years recede, but if he his written enough books in
his 30 or 40 years of creativity, then the ripples together make waves large
enough to sustain him into and beyond the years of retirement. Indeed, they
should also provide something of a legacy for his children of whom I still have
four.
That situation no longer obtains, my Lord. By virtue of the activities of the
Defendants, in particular of the Second Defendant, and of those who funded her
and guided her hand, I have since 1996 seen one fearful publisher after another
falling away from me, declining to reprint my works, refusing to accept new
commissions and turning their backs on me when I approach.
In private, the senior editors at those publishing houses still welcome me
warmly as a friend and they invite me to lunch in expensive New York
restaurants, and then lament that if they were to sign a contract with me on a
new book, there would always be somebody in their
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publishing house who
would object; such is the nature of the odium that has been generated by the
waves of hatred recklessly propagated against me by the Defendants.
In short, my "pension" has vanished, as assuredly as if I had been
employed by one of those companies taken over by the late Mr Robert Maxwell.
I am not submitting that it is these Defendants alone who have single handedly
wrought this disaster upon me. I am not even denying that I may have been
partly to blame for it myself.
Had I written books about the Zulu Wars, as the Air Ministry earnestly advised
me back in 1963, when my book "The Destruction of Dresden" was first
published, I would, no doubt, not have faced this hatred.
Unfortunately, World War II became my area of expertise. I generated a personal
archive of documents, a network of sources and contacts, a language ability, a
facility to research in foreign archives and eventually a constituency of
readers who expected and wanted me to write only about the Third Reich and its
criminal leadership.
What obliges me to make these sweeping opening remarks is that I shall maintain
that the Defendants did not act alone in their determination to destroy my
career and to vandalise my legitimacy as an historian. That is a phrase that I would
ask your Lordship to bear in mind.
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They were part of an
organized international endeavour at achieving precisely that. I have seen the
papers. I have copies of the documents. I shall show them to this court. I know
they did it and I now know why.
Nearly all of these villains acted beyond the jurisdiction of these courts.
Some of them, however, acted within, and I have on one disastrous occasion
tried to proceed against them too.
I mention here (and only in a few words) that one example: as the court will,
no doubt, hear, I was expelled in the most demeaning circumstances from Canada
in November 1992. I need not go into the background of that event here, but I
shall certainly do so later if in their attempts to blacken my name further the
Defendants indulge in that exercise in this court.
Seeking to establish why Canada, a friendly government of a country which I had
entered unhindered for 30 years or more, should suddenly round upon me as
savagely as a rottweiler, I used all the appliances of Canadian law to
establish what had gone on behind closed doors.
I discovered in the files of the Canadian Government, using that country's
Access to Information Act, a mysterious and anonymous document blackening my
name had been planted there for the purpose of procuring
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precisely the ugly
consequence that had flowed from it in 1992.
Stupid lies, among the stupid lies that this anonymous document contained about
me was the suggestion that I had married my first wife because she was
"the daughter of one of General Francisco Franco's top generals" in
order to ingratiate myself with the Spanish fascist regime. Another suggestion
was that I lived too well for an author -- I have lived for 32 years, over 32
years, in the same house off Grosvenor Square, my Lord -- and that to sustain
such a level of living purely from my income as an author was impossible; the
implication being that I was receiving secret cheques from Nazi fugitives in
South America.
I telephoned my first wife to ask her what her father had been. She reminded me
that he was an industrial chemist, a dedicated enemy of the regime after two of
his brothers had been shot by Franco's men. So that was the true story.
It took over a year to establish beyond a doubt who was the author of this
infamous document. It turned out to have been provided secretly to the Canadian
Government by an unofficial body based in London whose name I do not propose to
state in this court here, my Lord, as they are not formally represented in this
action.
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Suffice it to say that
when I applied to a judge in chambers for leave to take libel action out of
time, the culprits made no attempt to justify their libels, but pleaded that
the Statute of Limitations had run, which plea was allowed, though I maintain
with regret, by Toulson J. The mendacious body concerned then had the temerity
to pursue me to the threshold of the Bankruptcy Court for the legal costs it
had incurred in that one day hearing, amounting to over £7,500. It is a rough
life, being an independent author, my Lord.
This brings us to the present case. In 1993, the First Defendant (as they allow
in their witness statements) published "Denying the Holocaust", the
work complained of, within the jurisdiction, written by the Second Defendant.
The book purports to be a scholarly investigation of the operations of an
international network or conspiracy of people whom the Second Defendant has
dubbed "Holocaust Deniers". It is not. The phrase itself, which the
Second Defendant prides herself on having coined and crafted, appears
repeatedly throughout the work and it has subsequently become embedded in the
vernacular of a certain kind of journalist who wishes to blacken the name of
some person, where the more usual rhetoric of neo-Nazi, Nazi or racist and
other similar epithets is no longer deemed adequate. Indeed, the phrase
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appears over 300 times
in just one of the Defendants' experts reports, "Holocaust denier",
300 times in one report, my Lord.
It has become one of the most potent phrases in the arsenal of insult,
replacing the N-word, the F-word and a whole alphabet of other slurs. If an
American politician, like Mr Patrick Mr Buchanan, is branded even briefly a
"Holocaust denier", his career can well be said to be in ruins. If a
writer, no matter how well reviewed and received until then, has that phrase
stuck to him, then he too can regard his career as rumbling off the edge of a
precipice.
As a phrase, it is of itself quite meaningless.
The word "Holocaust" is an artificial label commonly attached to one
of the greatest and still most unexplained tragedies of this century.
The word "denier" is particularly evil because no person in full
command of his mental faculties, and with even the slightest understanding of
what happened in World War II, can deny that the tragedy actually happened,
however much we dissident historians way wish to quibble about the means, the
scale, the dates and the other minutia.
Yet meaningless though it is, the phrase has become a part of the English
language. It is a poison to which there is virtually no anti-dote, less lethal
than a
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hypodermic with nerve
gas jabbed in the neck, but deadly all the same. For the chosen victim, it is
like being called a wife beater or a paedophile. It is enough for the label to
be attached for the attachee to find himself designated as a pariah, an outcast
from normal society. It is a verbal Yellow Star.
In many countries now where it was considered that the mere verbal labelling
was not enough, governments have been prevailed upon to pass the most
questionable laws, including some which can only be considered a total
infringement of the normal rights of free speech, free opinion and freedom of
assembly.
Germany has not had an enviable reputation in any of these freedoms over the
last century, my Lord.
True to form, in Germany it is now a criminal offence to question the mode, the
scale, the system or even the statistics of the Holocaust. Criminal offence. No
defence is allowed. Some good friends of mine, I have no hesitation in allowing
to this court, are sitting at this very moment in German prisons for having
ventured to voice such questions. One of them has been in prison for seven
years.
In France, the situation is even more absurd.
Any person found guilty in France under a new law aptly named an
"amendment of the law on the freedom of the Press" finds himself
fined or imprisoned or both. This
P-26
law, passed in 1991,
makes it a criminal offence in France to challenge (the French word is
contester) any war crimes or crimes against humanity "as defined by the
Nuremberg Statute" of 1945.
Fifty years on, it has become a criminal offence to question whether Nuremberg
got it right. History is to be as defined by the four victorious powers in the
Nuremberg trials of 1945 to 1946.
I respectfully submit and would, indeed, hope that your Lordship would find
such laws if enacted in this country to be utterly repugnant. For that same
reason I have no hesitation in saying that some more good friends of mine have
been fined under precisely this French law.
Indeed, in 1993 or 1994, I myself was fined the sum of £500 by a Paris court
under this law.
I had given an interview to a French journalist in the study of my home in
London. This interview was published in a reputable French journal. There were
complaints in Paris and I was summoned before the French Magistrates and fined,
along with the publisher, the editor and the journalist concerned for having
given this interview. It is, indeed, a very sorry state of affairs.
My Lord, we may hear the word "conspiracy" uttered during the next
few days and weeks. If there has been a conspiracy, it is a conspiracy against
free speech.
P-27
I might mention that my
father fought as an officer in the Royal Navy in both World Wars, both in the
Battle of Jutland in 1916 and in the Arctic convoys of 1942. Both my brothers
have served with the Royal Air Force. My father was an arctic explorer between
the wars. Admiralty charts show two island points in the South Sandwich Islands
named after him and his first officer, my uncle.
I come from a service family and I find it odious that at the end of the 20th
century writers and historians going about their own respective businesses,
writing books that may, indeed, have been completely wrong have found
themselves suddenly and vicariously threatened with imprisonment or with
crippling fines having expressed opinions on history which are at variance with
these new freshly enacted laws, which have been introduced at the insistence of
wealthy pressure groups and other enemies of the free speech for which we
fought two World Wars in this country.
Your Lordship will undoubtedly hear from the Defendants that I was fined a very
substantial sum of money by the Germany Government under these witless new
laws. It is no matter of shame for me, although it has had catastrophic
consequences, as it now makes me de facto a convict with a criminal record and,
as such, liable to a concatenation of further indignities and sanctions in
P-28
every foreign country
which I now wish to visit.
The circumstances these are these. I may say here quite briefly that on April
21st 1990, nearly ten years ago, my Lord, I delivered an address, quite
possibly ill-judged, to an audience at a hall in Munich. When one agrees to
attend such functions one has little way of knowing in advance what kind of
audience one will be addressing, and has no control over the external
appearance of the function. I make no complaint about that.
Your Lordship will hear no doubt that in the course of my speech, of which
apparently no full transcript survives, I uttered the following remark:
"We now know that the gas chambers shown to the tourists in Auschwitz is a
fake built by the Poles after the war, just like the one established by the
Americans at Dachau." Those are two concentration camps, my Lord.
This may well raise eyebrows. It might be found to be offensive by sections of
the community, and if they take such offence I can assure this court that I
regret it and that such was not my intention. The fact remains that these
remarks were true. The Poles admitted it in January 1995, and under English law
truth has always been regarded as an absolute defence.
We shall hear, indeed, from the Defences' own expert witnesses, though perhaps
the admission will have
P-29
to be bludgeoned out of them,
that the gas chamber shown to the tourists at Auschwitz was indeed built by the
Polish communist three years after the war was over.
I think it is fair to note there that at this point Mr Rampton is shaking his
head and I apologise if I have misunderstood the evidence given by their
witnesses.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: You carry on with your speech.
MR IRVING: I do not intend to go into the question of whether or not
there were gas chambers at Birkenau, my Lord, some five miles from Auschwitz,
in these opening remarks. By the time this trial is over we shall all be
heartily sick of the debate which has little or no relevance, in my submission,
to the issues that are pleaded.
So what are the issues that are pleaded and how do I propose to address those
issues in opening this case? First let me emphasise that I also have no
intentions, and neither is it the purpose of this trial, to refight World War
II. I shall not argue and have never argued that the wrong side won the war,
for example, or that the history of war needs to be grossly rewritten. I must
confess that I am mystified at the broad thrust which the Defendants have taken
in the vast body of documentation which they have served upon this court and
myself, another 5,000 pages delivered to me on Friday evening and more last
night. It is all something of an embarrassment to me and
P-30
I am being forced into
positions that I have not previously adopted. I have never claimed to be a
Holocaust historian. As I have said, I have no written no book about the Holocaust.
I have written no article about it. If I have spoken about it, it is usually
because somebody has asked me a question, I have been questioned about it. On
such occasions I have emphasised my lack of expertise and I have expatiated
only upon those areas with which I am familiar. In doing so I have offended
many of my friends who wish that history was different, but you cannot wish
documents away, and it is in documents that I have always specialized as a
writer.
Your Lordship will find upon reviewing my various printed works that I have
very seldom used other people's books as sources. I found it otiose and
tedious, not only because they are ill-written but because in reading other
people's books you are liable to imbibe the errors and prejudices with which
those books are beset.
If, however, you go to he original documents you will often find to your joy
that the weight of documents you have to read is pound for pound, or indeed ton
for ton, less than the weight of books hat you might otherwise have to read
upon the same subject, and you are kilometres closer to the original real
history.
As for the nature of documents, I remember that in 1969 I visited Professor
Hugh Trevor Roper (now Lord
P-31
Dacre who I am glad to
say is still with us). He very kindly made available to me his considerable
collection of several thousand original intelligence documents for my biography
of Adolf Hitler, and in doing so he advised me as follows: When considering new
documents you should ask yourself three questions. If I remember correctly, my
Lord, those tree criteria were as follows.
1) Is the document genuine? (Possibly in the light of the "Hitler
Diaries" scandal, an unfortunate pre-requisite in this case).
2) Is the document written by a person in a position to know what he is talking
about? 3) Why does this document exist? The latter is quite interesting, as we
have all experienced in the archives, coming across documents obviously written
for window dressing or buck passing purposes.
It is documents in this case which I think the court will find most interesting
and illuminating. By that I mean the documents at every level. The court will
have to consider not only the documents originating in World War II on both
sides, my Lord, but also the documents that have been generated by that painful
process known as Discovery. It will not escape the court, my Lord, when the
time comes that like many personalities I have kept the most voluminous records
throughout my career
P-32
as a writer and even
before it. Along with my writing career I have kept a diary. Sometimes I
wondered why but I think the reason is basically this. If you are a writer,
self-employed, you need the discipline that a diary imposes upon you, and you
cannot in conscious enter in a diary at the end of the day: "I did nothing
all day".
Your Lordship will be amused no doubt to hear that at one stage in the
discovery process in this action at the request of Mr Julius, I readily agreed
to make available to the Defence my entire diaries in so far as they still
exist. A few pages are missing. Mr Julius only then learned that these diaries
occupy a shelf eight feet long, and that in them there are approximately or
probably 10 or 20 million words to be read. Mr Julius and his staff have,
however, risen most nobly to challenge that these pages presented, and I am
sure that over the next few days and weeks we shall be hearing more than one
morsal that they have dredged out of the pages. They will hold it aloft, still
dripping with something or other, read it to this court with a squeal of
delight, proclaiming that this is the philosopher's stone that they needed to
justify their client's libels all along. We shall see. That is not what this
trial is all about.
This trial is not really about what happened in the Holocaust or how many Jews
and other persecuted minorities
P-33
were tortured and put to
death. The court will I hope agree with me when the time comes that the issue
us is not what happened but how I treated it in my works of history.
It may be that I was totally ignorant on some aspects of World War II, and I
hasten to say that I do not believe I was, but to be accused of deliberate
manipulation and distorting, and mistranslating is perverse. The Defendants
must show, in my humble submission, first that a particular thing happened or
existed; second that I was aware of that particular thing as it happened or
existed, at the time that I wrote about it from the records then before me;
third, that I then wilfully manipulated the text or mistranslated or distorted
it for the purposes that they imply.
I will submit that in no instance can they prove this to be the case. They have
certainly not done so in the documents so far pleaded.
I readily concede that what I have read of the reports submitted by the
Defendants' experts, particularly those of the historians, is of the utmost
interest.
I have to congratulate Professor Jan van Pelt for the literary quality of his
lengthy report on Auschwitz, which will no doubt eventually see general
circulation in the bookstores. Indeed, I congratulated him three years ago
already on the first book that he published on this topic.
P-34
I admit too that there
are documents contained in the expertise of Professor Browning of which I was
not aware, and which have my own perception of some aspects of the Nazi
atrocities on the Eastern front. For example, I was not aware that the SS
Obergruppenfuhrer Reinhard Heydrich had issued instructions to his commanders
in the Baltic States after Operation Barbarossa began, the invasion of Russia,
in June 1941, not only to turn a blind eye -- this was his instructions -- on
the anti-Jewish progroms started by the local population in those countries,
but also actively to initiate them and to provide assistance. That was unknown
to me.
This document, however, emerged only recently from the Russian archives and
there can surely be no reproach against me for not having known that when I
wrote my biography of Hitler, published in 1977, or in my later works. That
cannot be branded as manipulation or distortion, just by way of example.
What is manipulation or distortion of history would be this, in my submission:
for example, knowing of the existence of a key document and then ignoring it or
suppressing it entirely, without even a mention.
If, for example, it should turn out and be proven in this very courtroom that
in the spring of 1942 the Nazi leader, Adolf Hitler, was quoted by a senior
Reich Minister in writing as repeatedly saying that he
P-35
"wanted the final
solution of the Jewish problem postponed until the war is over"; and if
the document recording those remarkable words has been found in the German
archives, it would surely be classifiable as manipulation or distortion if an
historian were to attempt to write the history of the Holocaust without even
mentioning the document's existence, would it not, my Lord? The Defendants
have, as said, arbitrarily and recklessly decided to label me a "Holocaust
denier". Their motivation for doing so we shall shortly hear about.
My Lord, before I continue to address the court on this point in my opening
statement, may I take this opportunity to read to the court, with your
Lordship's permission, and into the record, a two-page document which I shall
refer to over the coming weeks as the Walter Bruns interrogation?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes, I do not see why you should not; I have not read
it myself. This is the document you handed in?
MR IRVING: It is the document I gave you, my Lord. It is an eye witness
description. I do so because perceptions matter. I want at this late hour to
leave a firm perception in the minds of all those present about where I stand.
It is a document which first came into my hands some time before 1985.
P-36
I should say, my Lord,
by way of introduction, that this document (which is in my discovery) was
originally a British top Secret document. Top Secret is only one rung lower
than Ultra-secret; some several steps above Secret and Most Secret, in other
words. It is the classification given to the British decoded intercepts. It was
top Secret because it is the record of an interrogation which was obtained by
methods that were illegal, I understand, under the Conventions.
Enemy prisoners of war (in this case German) were brought into British prison
camps, treated lavishly, well-fed, reassured by their relaxed surroundings, and
gradually led into conversation, unaware that in every fitting and appliance in
the room were hidden microphones capable of picking up everything. (That was
the illegality; you are not allowed to do that under the Conventions).
Released to the British archives only a few years ago were all of these
reports, but I had already obtained several hundred of them 15 or 20 years
earlier. I consider these transcripts to be an historical source which, if
properly used and if certain criteria are applied, can be regarded as part of
the bedrock of Real History.
I would say further by way of preamble, my Lord, that the speaker whose
recorded voice we are about to
P-37
hear, as reproduced in
this typescript, was on November 30th 1941, the day of the episode he narrates,
a Colonel in the German Army Engineers Force (the sappers or Pioniere). He was
commanding a unit based at Riga, the capital of Latvia. He had learned to his
vexation that it was intended by the local SS unit to round up all the local
Jews, including "his Jews" in the next day or two and to liquidate
them.
I read from this document before I do so, my Lord, it is of interest to see
that, purely by coincidence and chance, Mr Rampton has picked on precisely the
same day in the statement which I understand that he is to make following upon
mine.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I am not quite following. Picked on the same day as
being what?
MR IRVING: The same episode and the same day as an example of my
treatment of documents, so it is a very interesting case.
I read from the document itself. It is headed: "Top secret. CSDIC
(UK)" which is Combined Services Detailed Interrogation Centre UK".
"GG Report. If the information contained in this report is required for
distribution, it should be paraphrased so that no mention is made of the
prisoners' names, nor of the methods by which the information has been
obtained" because, of course, it was illegal.
P-38
"The following
conversation took place between General-Major Bruns", his full name was Walter
Bruns. At this time he was at the Heeres-Waffenmeisterschule which was an army
school, an armament school, in Berlin, "captured at Gottingen on April 8th
1945, and other Senior Officer Prisoners of War whose voices could not be
identified". In other words, it is a conversation between this General and
various other prisoners overheard by hidden microphones on April 25th 1945.
"Information received: 25 April 1945", in other words, the war is
still running.
"Translation: Bruns: As soon as I heard those Jews were to be shot on
Friday, I went to a 21 year old boy and said that they had made themselves very
useful in the area under my command, besides which the Army MT park had
employed 1500 and the 'Heeresgruppe' 800 women to make underclothes of the stores
we captured in Riga; besides which about 1200 women in the neighbourhood of
Riga were turning millions of captured sheepskins into articles we urgently
required: ear protectors, fur caps, fur waistcoats, etc. Nothing had been
proved, as of course the Russian campaign was known to have come to a
victorious end in October 1941!" Sarcasm there. "In short, all those
women were employed in a useful capacity. I tried to save them. I told that
fellow Altenmeyer(?) whose name I shall always remember and who
P-39
will be added to the
list of war criminals: 'Listen to me, they represent valuable manpower!' 'Do
you call Jews valuable human beings, sir?'" That was the answer. "I
said: 'Listen to me properly, I said valuable manpower. I didn't mention their
value as human beings'. He said: 'Well, they're to be shot in accordance with
the Fuhrer's orders!' I said: 'Fuhrer's orders?' 'Yes', whereupon he showed me
his orders. This happened at Skiotawa(?) eight kilometres from Riga, between
Siaulai and Jelgava, where 5,000 Berlin Jews were suddenly taken off the train
and shot. I didn't see that myself, but what happened at Skiotawa(?) - to cut a
long story short, I argued with the fellow and telephoned to the General at HQ,
to Jakobs and Aberger(?) and to a Dr Schultz who was attached to the Engineer
General, on behalf of these people". It is a bit incoherent the way that
people talk when they are gossiping with each other. "I told him:
'Granting that the Jews have committed a crime against the other peoples of the
world, at least let them do the drudgery; send them to throw earth on the roads
to prevent our heavy lorries skidding'. 'Then I'd have to feed them!' I said:
'The little amount of food they receive, let's assume 2 million Jews - they got
125 grammes of bread a day - we can't even manage that, the sooner we end the
war the better'. Then I telephoned, thinking it would take some time. At any
rate, on Sunday morning", that is
P-40
November 30th 1941,
"I heard that they had already started on it. The Ghetto was cleared. They
were told: 'You're being transferred: take along your essential things.'
Incidentally, it was a happy release for those people, as their life in the
Ghetto was a martyrdom. I wouldn't believe it and drove there to have a
look". The person he is talking to says: "Everyone abroad knew about
it; only we Germans were kept in ignorance".
Bruns continues his narrative: "I'll tell you something: some of the
details may have been correct, but it was remarkable that the firing squad
detailed that morning - six men with tommy-guns posted at each pit; the pits
were 24 meters in length and 3 metres in breadth - they had to lie down like
sardines in a tin with their heads in the centre'", like that in the pit.
"'Above them were six men with tommy-guns who gave them the coup de
grace", who shot them. "When I arrived those pits were so full that
the living had to lie down on top of the dead; then they were shot and, in
order to save room, they had to lie down neatly in layers. Before this,
however, they were stripped of everything at one of the stations - here at the
edge of the wood were the three pits they used that Sunday and here they stood
in a queue one and-a-half kilometres long which they approached step by step -
a queuing up for
P-41
death. As they drew
nearer they saw what was going on. About here they had to hand over their
jewellery and suitcases. All good stuff was put into the suitcases and the
remainder was thrown on a heap. This was to serve as clothing for our suffering
population - and then a little further on they had to undress and, 500 metres
in front of the wood, strip completely; they were only permitted to keep on a
chemise or knickers. They were all women and small two-year old children. Then
all those cynical remarks! If only I had seen those tommy-gunners, who were
relieved every hour because of over-exertion, carry out their task with
distaste, but no, nasty remarks like: 'Here comes a Jewish beauty!' I can still
see it all in my memory: a pretty woman in a flame-coloured chemise. Talk about
keeping the race pure: at RIGA they first slept with them and then shot them to
prevent them from talking.
"Then I sent two officers out there, one of whom is still alive", in
April 1945, "because I wanted eye-witnesses. I didn't tell them what was
going on, but said: 'Go out to the forest of Skiotawa(?), see what's up there
and send me a report'. I added a memorandum to their report and took it to
Jakobs myself. He said: 'I have already two complaints sent me by Engineer
"Bataillone" from the Ukraine'. There they shot them on the brink of
large crevices and let them fall down into
P-42
them; they nearly had an
epidemic of plague, at any rate a pestilential smell. They thought they could
break off the edges with picks, thus burying them. That loess there" --
that is a kind of ground -- "was so hard that two Engineer 'Bataillone'
were required to dynamite the edges; those 'Bataillone' complained.
Jakobs" -- he was the engineer general in charge of the pioneer corps --
"had received that complaint. He said: 'We didn't quite know how to tell
the Fuhrer'", Adolf Hitler. "'We'd better do it through Canaris', the
Chief of the German Intelligence. "So Canaris had the unsavoury task of
waiting for the favourable moment to give the Fuhrer certain gentle hints. A
fortnight later I visited the Oberburgermeister, or whatever he was called
then, concerning some over business. Altenmeyer(?)" who was the SS man on
the spot "triumphantly showed me: 'Here is an order just issued,
prohibiting mass shootings on that scale from taking place in future. They are
to be carried out more discreetly'. From warnings given me recently, I knew
that I was receiving still more attentions from spies".
Then his interlocutor says to him: "It's a wonder you're still
alive". Bruns says: "At Gottingen, I expected to be arrested every
day".
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Mr Irving, I see the time. I think probably we will
adjourn. My recollection of this document is
P-43
(which I have not seen
as a document before) that it is relied on by the Defendants for the reference
to the Fuhrer's orders on page 1, is that right?
MR RAMPTON: And also the one on page 2.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Towards the end.
MR IRVING: I have no objection to that, my Lord. The reason why I rely
on it now will become plain as we continue after lunch.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Of course. Yes, I am not stopping you; it is just that
now it is after 1 o'clock. Yes, Mr Rampton?
MR RAMPTON: Can I ask your Lordship's indulgence? I too have written an
opening statement. Your Lordship has not seen it. It is very short,
comparatively speaking. Can I hand it up so that your Lordship can read it over
the lunch?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes. Mr Irving has had a copy?
MR RAMPTON: Yes. It is only by that route that the press can have copies
of it.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I do not know whether we are going to manage to get to
your speech today in a way -- if we did, yes.
MR RAMPTON: That is why. Once this court has read it, then it is a
public document.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I will look at it over the adjournment.
MR RAMPTON: I am grateful.
(Luncheon adjournment)
(2.00 p.m.)
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes, Mr Irving?
P-44
MR IRVING: My Lord, when we adjourned I just completed reading out to
what you I was calling the Bruns Report ----
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes.
MR IRVING: --- which was an eyewitness account by a German General
(unaware he was being overheard) of a mass shooting of Jewish civilians which
he had witnessed in Riga on a particular Sunday which I maintain was November
30th 1941.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes.
MR IRVING: He had said, you will recall, that one of the gunmen had
called out: "'Here comes a Jewish beauty.
I can see it all in my memory: a pretty woman in a flame coloured
chemise." I understand Mr Rampton to say that he is going to rely on the
last sentence which is a reference to the Fuhrer and the order.
I will now continue.
My Lord, permit me a word about the credentials of that particular document. It
is authentic. It comes from the British archives. A copy can be found in the
Public Record Office this very day, if anyone wishes to go and see it.
First: is the General describing something he had really seen? I mention this
because later, on his sworn oath in the witness stand in Nuremberg, this same
General claimed only to have heard of this atrocity; yet there can surely be no
doubt of the verisimilitude. It
P-45
does not take university
level textual analysis to realize that if a General says: "I can see her
in my mind's eye now, a girl in a flame-red dress", this is a man who has
been there and seen it with his own eyes.
This document has, in my submission, considerable evidentiary value. It is not
self-serving. The General is not testifying in his own interest. He is merely
talking, probably in a muffled whisper, to fellow prisoners at a British
interrogation centre, and he has no idea that in another room British experts
are listening to and recording every word. We also have the original German
text of this document, I might add, my Lord.
So to what purpose do I mention this? Well, firstly, because I shall later on
in these proceedings add further unknown documents from the same superb British
archives -- that is the Public Record Office -- documents that go to the events
of this one day, November 30th 1941, documents which show Adolf Hitler taking a
most remarkable stand on this atrocity.
But I also adduce this document for the following reason which is immediately
of importance, given the title of the book: "Denying the Holocaust".
I adduce this document for the following reason: if an historian repeatedly
refers to this document, the Bruns Report; if he quotes from it; if he
immediately writes as soon as he finds it showing it to fellow historians, both
Jews and
P-46
non-Jews alike, and in
writing draws their attention to the existence of this document, and its fellow
documents, all of which were hitherto unknown to them; if, moreover, that
historian reads out this document in public, with its awful, infernal
descriptions of the mass killings of Jews by the Nazis on the Eastern front on
multiple speaking occasions; if this historian, speaking to audiences even of
the most extreme hues of left and right, heedless as to their anger, insists on
reading out the document in full, thus "rubbing their noses in it",
so to speak; if continues to do so over a period of 15 years again and again
right up to the present date, and if he quotes that document in the text and
references that document in the footnotes of all his most recent works,
beginning with the "Hitler's War", the biography, the republication
in 1991, through "Goebbels. Mastermind of the Third Reich" in 1996
and "Nuremberg, the Last Battle" in 1997, if all these things are
true, then is it not a libel of the most grotesque and offensive nature to
brand that same historian around the world as a "Holocaust denier"
when he has not only discovered and found and propagated this document and
brought it to the attention of both his colleagues and his rivals and his foes,
regardless of their race or religion, and to countless audiences? This is not
an isolated example, my Lord. In Introduction to my biography of Adolf Hitler,
"Hitler's
P-47
War", which was
published by The Viking Press in America and by Hodder & Stoughton in the
United Kingdom and later by Macmillan, we shall find that I have drawn specific
and repeated attention of the reader to the crimes that Adolf Hitler committed.
How did all this happen? I shall invite the court to hear expert evidence on
the relationship between the world's Jewish communities and the rest of us,
given by a professor of sociology at a leading American university who has
published a number of book-length studies on the topic.
The Jewish community, their fame and fortunes, play a central role in these
proceedings. It will not surprise the court, I suppose, that among the
allegations levelled against me by the Defendants by their experts is the
adjective of "anti-Semitic".
This adjective is both the most odious and the most overworked of epithets.
Almost invariably it is wielded by members or representatives of that community
to denigrate those outside their community in whom they find disfavour.
It does not matter that the person whom they label as anti-Semitic has
conducted himself towards that community in an irreproachable manner until
then; it does not matter that he has shown them the same favours that he has
shown to others; it does not seem to matter either
P-48
that that same community
who thus labels him or her has conducted against him an international campaign
of the most questionable character in an attempt to destroy his legitimacy, the
economic existence upon which he and his family depends.
If he defends himself against these attacks, he is sooner or later bound to be
described as anti-Semitic.
It has become a ritual. No doubt the English people, who in 1940 found it
necessary to defend themselves against the Germans, would by the same token
earn the title of anti-German. Is a person who defends himself ultimately and
wearily and after turning the other cheek for 20 or 30 years ipso facto no
better than the most incorrigible kind of ingrained anti-Semite with whom we
are probably all familiar? I submit that he is not.
This court will find that, like most Englishmen, I have had dealings with both
English and foreign Jews throughout my professional life.
There were, to my knowledge, no pupils of the Jewish faith at the minor Essex
Public School that I attended (in common with our present Home Secretary) from
1947 to 1956. In fact, I was surprised when I recently heard the suggestion
that there had been one.
I encountered many Jewish students when I attended London University, however.
I would like to commemorate here the name of my flat mate at Imperial
P-49
College, Mike Gorb, who
died tragically in a mountaineering accident. I regarded as a good friend
another senior student, Jon Bloc. There was one student, a Mr Peter L, who
began agitating against me for the views that I profounded while at University,
views I can no longer remember; and I have to confess that I found his
agitation both perplexing and irritating because it all seemed rather petty and
spiteful at the time.
As my own witness statement recalls, at the time of the Anglo-Israeli-French
"police action" in Suez in 1956, I joined student demonstrations on
behalf of the Israelis, though for the life of me now I cannot remember why. It
is the kind of thing you do when you are a student.
My Lord, when my first book was published, "The Destruction of
Dresden" in 1963, I became uncomfortably aware that I had somehow offended
the Jewish community.
I did not at the time realize why and I do not fully realise why even today.
Whatever the reason, their journalists were in the spearhead of the attack on
me. As other books appeared, this polarisation among the English critics became
more pronounced. I remember the name of Mr Arthur Pottersman, writing for a
tabloid newspaper -- the Daily Sketch -- as being one of the few vicious
critics, not of Dresden book but of my person.
My publisher, Mr William Kimber, to whom I
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have earlier referred,
recommended to me the services of his lawyer, Mr Michael Rubinstein, a name
with which the older members of this court may perhaps be familiar -- a very
well known lawyer at the time. Mr Kimber said to me in his drawling, affable
voice: "You will like Michael. He is very Jewish but a very Christian kind
of a Jew, rather like Jesus Christ". You remember that kind of thing. It
is the kind of inexplicable sentence that one remembers even now, nearly 40
years on down the road. I found Michael an enormously capable, energetic and
likeable person - indeed, very English, his advice always sound, and he stood
by me as legal adviser for the next 20 years, two decades. He had a rhinoceros
hide, as I remarked once in my diary -- a remark seize upon by the Defendants
as evidence of my anti-Semitism.
I also form the long term friendship (which exists to this day) with well-known
writers like the American David Kahn, an expert on code breaking. Being an
author dealing with American and British publishers, I frequently came into
contact with the Jewish members of the publishing profession.
The editor of "Hitler's War" for the Viking Press was Stan Hochman
who became, as the correspondence and for all I know also my diaries show, a
good friend; Peter Israel, who purchase "Uprising", which was my book
on the 1956 Hungarian uprising, was editorial director at
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Putnam's, and so on.
The discovery documents, my Lord, show that there was also some kind of
relationship between myself and our own George Weidenfeld which was the usual
kind love/hate relationship that exists between authors and publishers. George
published several of my books, including my biographies of top Nazis like Field
Marshal Erhard Milch and Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, and I do not believe that
he made a loss on those operations. But behind my back, I learned that he had
made unhelpful remarks about me, and I had occasion to write him one or two
terse letters about that. But I believe we are still friends and my relations
with the present Managing Director of Weidenfeld & Nicholson are of the
very best.
But those are all individuals, my Lord. Even as I speak of Weidenfeld, it
reminds me that during the 1960s and 1970s I became vaguely aware of forces
gathering to oppose me. George had originally bought the rights to publish my
biography of "Hitler's War". At some stage Weidenfeld's repudiated
the contract. Publishers can always find an excuse, a loophole to do so if they
want, and I was not unhappy as it gave me the chance to offer it to an equally
prestigious Publishing House, Messrs Hodder & Stoughton, for an even larger
fee.
At the Frankfurt book fair on October 13th 1973
P-52
-- my diary entry
relates the whole of this -- George Weidenfeld sat next to me at dinner and
lamented after a few cocktails his mistake in "tearing up" the
contract for "Hitler's War". When I asked him why he had done so, he
explained: "I had to do so. I came under pressure from three Embassies.
One of them was a NATO power", which I took to be Germany, "one of
them was France and the other was Israel".
It is right that I should state here, and the correspondence shows, that he
later denied having said this, but I took a very detailed diary note that same
night, which is in my discovery, the bundle of which -- it is marked
"Global" -- we shall look at briefly over the next few days, if your
Lordship pleases.
So it became gradually evident (and I have to emphasise that I cannot pin down
any particular year in which I finally realized that I was being victimized by
this hidden campaign) that I was the target of a hidden international attempt
to exclude me, if it could be done, from publishing further works of history.
It did not affect my attitude towards the Jews in the way that people might
expect it to. I did not go on the stump, up and down the land, vituperating
against them.
I merely made a mental note that I had to be on the look-out for trouble. Such
trouble had already begun
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in November 1963 when a
three-man squad of burglars, evidently at the commission of the English body to
whom I earlier made reference, my Lord, was caught red-handed by the police,
whom I had alerted, as they raided my North London apartment, disguised as
telephone engineers and equipped with stolen GPO passes. There is a reason why
I mention this.
The leader of that gang (whose name I shall not mention as he is not
represented in this court) told the police that he had hoped to find my secret
correspondence with Hitler's henchman, Mr Martin Bormann! Perhaps I ought to
add that there is no secret correspondence with Bormann.
I mention this episode for a reason, my Lord.
This gentleman subsequently became editor of a left wing
"Anti-Fascist" machine called "Searchlight", and he has
made it his lifelong task over the intervening 30 years to take his malicious
revenge upon me for the criminal conviction which he earned as a result of his
felony.
His magazine repeatedly inveighed against me, reporting sometimes true, often
part true, but usually totally fictitious rumours about my activities and
alleged "Nazi" connections around the world in an attempt to blacken
my name.
I will not say that the rumours are all untrue, my Lord. They never are. I
believe Mr Winston Churchill
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once famously said:
"The world is full of the most dreadful stories and rumours about me, and
the damnable thing about them is that most of them are true!" At least, so
rumour has it.
But the untrue ones about me are the ones that have a habit of surfacing again
and again with their original polish undimmed. I mention this case, as the
Defendants here seek to rely heavily on the outpouring of this troubled soul,
the editor of "Searchlight".
The court might wonder why I took no action against this journal or, indeed,
any of the other parties who had defamed me over the years. One of the things
that Mr Rubinstein, like Mr Kimber, my publisher, dinned into me very early on
was to avoid at all costs taking libel action.
My Lord, I am sure I do not need to labour the reasons why in this opening
statement. Suffice it to say that I had already realized by 1970, at the time
of the "Convoy PQ17" libel action -- that is Broome v. Cassell --
that libel actions are time consuming, costly and vexatious, and are indeed in
the words of the cliche "to be avoided like the plague".
Besides, this particular magazine had no assets, so any type of litigation
would have been quite pointless. I might add that only once in recent years
have I been forced to take action in this jurisdiction
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under the Defamation Act
against a major national newspaper four or five years ago, which resulted in an
immediate settlement out of court which I can only describe as most
satisfactory. The terms of this settlement are covered by the usual Court
Order, though I fancy they are known to the Defendants here who asked for, and
were given, full disclosure of the relevant papers.
It will become evident to this court from the evidence that I lead over the
next few days, my Lord, that the international community started to intensify
its campaign to destroy me and to truncate my career as an author either before
or at about the same time as The Viking Press and other publishers published my
well-known biography of Adolf Hitler, "Hitler's War", which was 1997.
The court will be shown at least one internal document, dated April 1977, which
I have identified as emanating from the Washington files of the so-called
Anti-Defamation League, a part of the B'nai Brith, in the United States, which
reveals quite unabashedly how they tried to pressure television producers to
cancel invitations to me to discuss "Hitler's War" book on their programmes.
It failed. The programme in question went ahead and the ADL noted, aghast, in a
secret memorandum that I was well versed in the matters of history, a
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formidable opponent who
could not, however, be called anti-Semitic. I would have to be destroyed by
other means.
This is a document in my discovery. By various entirely legal means, I obtained
several such disturbing documents from within their files.
From them and, in particular, from their details registered out the Data
Protection Act in this country, it appears that these bodies, which are also
embedded in our society in Britain and elsewhere, have seen their task,
unbidden, as being to spy upon members of our society, to maintain dossiers on
us all, and to deploy those dossiers when necessary to smite those of us of
whom they disapprove.
As the court will see, the dossiers are explicitly designed to hold such
material on the subjects' personal lives, criminal records, credit
delinquencies, marital difficulties, dietary habits and even sexual
proclivities. That is what we know from their details of registration.
It is not anti-Semitic to reveal this. The spying and smearing by these bodies
goes on against fellow Jew and non-Jew alike. The Jewish writer, Noam Chomsky,
relates that he found, quite by chance, that they were "monitoring"
(for that is the word they use) him too. Several of our own most notable
personalities
P-57
have already commented
on this unsavoury element of British life. In an article in a UK magazine, the
writer, Mr Auberon Waugh, remarked upon how he too inadvertently found that
such a file was being kept on him.
May I add that these "dossiers" provided by this London body to the
Canadians, to the Anti-Defamation League, and to various similar bodies in
Australia, South Africa and elsewhere, have been drawn upon heavily and without
question by the Defendants in this action, which my justification, I submit,
for drawing your Lordship's attention to this disturbing and sleazy background.
When I attempted to take the libel action against the London-based body that I
have mentioned, its Director, Mr Michael Whine, admitted in an affidavit that
his body had taken upon itself to "monitor" -- here is that word
again -- my activities, as he called them, for many years. He also freely
admitted that when secretly called upon by his Canadian associates in 1992 to
provide them with a smear dossier for the purposes of destroying my presence in
Canada by planting it in government files in Ottawa, he willingly agreed to do
so.
This is how that file turned up in Canadian Government resources; which in turn
is how it came into my hands, years later, through lengthy "Access to
Information Act" procedures; otherwise I would never have known why I
found myself being taken in handcuffs aboard an Air Canada
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flight in 1992, after 30
years as an honoured visitor in that country and deported, an event to which
the Defendants make gleeful reference in their book "Denying the
Holocaust".
I may be rather naive, but this kind of thing offends me as an Englishman, as
no doubt the idea will offend many of those present in court 37 today. The
notion that a non-Governmental body, unofficial body, equipped evidently with
limitless financial resources, can take it upon itself to spy upon law-abiding
members of the community for the purpose of destroying them is one that I find
discomfiting.
I have never done it to my fellow human beings.
I can think only of the wartime Gestapo and its offshoots in Nazi-occupied
Europe as a body engaged in similar practices. It is an offensive and ugly
comparison, I warrant, and one that I have never made before, but in a legal
battle of this magnitude, I consider it necessary to use ammunition of the
proper calibre.
My Lord, I will now come to the matter of the glass microfiche plates
containing the diaries of the Nazi propaganda Minister, Dr Joseph Goebbels.
Your Lordship will have seen from the Statement of Claim that the Defendants
have accused me of having improperly obtained these glass plates from the
Moscow -- it was in 1992 -- or damaged them.
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May I set out some of
the antecedents of this matter? Your Lordship will, perhaps, remember the
widespread newspaper sensation that was caused by the revelation at the
beginning of July 1992 that I had succeeded in retrieving from the former KGB
archives in Moscow the long last diaries of Dr Joseph Goebbels, a close
confidant of Adolf Hitler and his propaganda minister and, indeed, his
successor as Reich Chancellor.
I may see here that scholars have been searching for a number of diaries ever
since the end of World War II. I would mention here only the example of the
diaries of Hitler's Intelligence Chief, Vice-Admiral Wilhelm Canaris, in the
search for which I was concerned in the 1960s and 1970s. (The Canaris diaries
offered to myself and Messrs William Collins Limited on that occasion turned
out to be fake, which I established by the use of the appropriate forensic
laboratory in the City of London, Messrs Hehner & Cox).
Forensic tests are to play quite a large part in these current proceedings too.
In writing my own biographies of the leading Nazis, I have attached importance
to primary sources, like the original diaries which they wrote at the time.
When I have found these documents, as many scholars know, I have invariably and
without delay donated them (or copies of them) either to the German Federal
Archives in Koblenz or
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to the Institute fur
Zeitgeschichte, which is the Institute of Contemporary History in Munich. In
the case of the Goebbels' diaries, after I retrieved them from Moscow, I
additionally gave a set of copies to the archives of Monchen-Gladbach, his home
town, where they maintain a collection of Goebbels' documents, the municipal
archives.
In fact, the only items which I consider to be of greater source value than
diaries, which are always susceptible to faking or tampering, are private
letters. In my experience, once a private letter has been posted by its writer,
it is virtually impossible for him to retrieve it and to alter its content.
If I may take the liberty of enlightening the court at this point by way of an
example, I would say that I had earlier also found the diaries of Field Marshal
Rommel; some I retrieved in shorthand from the American archives and I had them
transcribed. Those in typescript turned out to have been altered some months
after one crucial battle ("Crusader") to eradicate a tactical error
which the Field Marshal considered he had made in the Western desert. But the
hundreds of letters he wrote to his wife were clearly above any kind of
suspicion.
On a somewhat earthier plane, while the diaries of the Chief of the SS,
Heinrich Himmler, which have in part been recently retrieved from the same
archives in
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Moscow, yield little
information by themselves, I have managed to locate in private hands in Chicago
the 200 letters which this murderous Nazi wrote to his mistress, and these
contain material of much larger historical importance.
Until my career was sabotaged, therefore, I had earned the reputation of being
a person who was always digging up new historical evidence; that was until the
countries and the archives of the world were prevailed upon, as we shall see,
to close their doors to me! After I procured these 600 pages of manuscripts
written by Adolf Eichmann when I visited Argentina in October 1991, the German
Federal Archives grudgingly referred to me in a press release as a
Truffle-Schwein, which I hope is more flattering than it sounds.
We are concerned here, however, primarily with the diaries of Dr Joseph
Goebbels of which the Defendants made mention in their book. This is the inside
story on those.
I begun the search for these diaries, in fact, 30 years earlier. In my
discovery are papers relating to the first search that I conducted for the very
last diaries which Dr Goebbels dictated, in April 1945 -- right at the end of
his life. Since there was no time for them to be typed up, Dr Goebbels had the
spiral-bound shorthand pads buried in a glass conserving jar in a forest
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somewhere along the road
between Hamburg and Berlin. Chance provided me in about 1969 with the
"treasure map" revealing the precise burial place of this glass jar,
and with the permission of the Communist East German Government, I and a team
of Oxford University experts, equipped with a kind of ground penetrating radar
(in fact, a proton magnetometer) mounted a determined attempt to unearth it in
the forest.
We never found that particular truffle.
Unfortunate, the topography of such a forest changes considerably in 20 years
or more and, despite our best efforts, aided by the East German Ministry of the
Interior, Communist Ministry of the Interior, and a biologist whose task would
be to assess the age of the fungi and other biological materials found in and
around the jar, we came away empty-handed. This is nothing new. Field work
often brings disappointments like that. Twenty-five years later, however, now
back in 1992, I had the conversation which was to lead to the retrieval of the
Goebbels' diaries in Moscow, and indirectly to our presence here in these
courts today.
In May 1992, I invited long time friend, a leading historian at the Institut
fur Zeitgeschichte, to have lunch with me at a restaurant in Munich. We had
been good friends since 1964, nearly 30 years, and she is still in the
Institute's employ today. As my diaries show, this
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friend and colleague, Dr
Elke Frohlich, had dropped several hints during the previous 12 months that she
had traced the whereabouts of the missing Goebbels' diaries. We all knew, my
Lord, those of us who had engaged in research into Hitler, Goebbels and the
Third Reich, that Dr Goebbels had placed these diaries on microfiches -- that
is photographic glass plates -- in the closing months of the War to ensure that
they were preserved for posterity. But they had vanished since then.
His Private Secretary, Dr Richard Otte, whom I had questioned over 20 years
previously in connection with our search in the forest in East Germany, had
told us about these glass plates. So we knew they existed. I should mention
that he was actually one of the small burial party who had hidden the glass
jar, but he was unable to accompany us as at that time he was still in West
German government employment. We could only presume that the glass plate
microfiches were either destroyed in Berlin in the last weeks of the war or
that they had been seized by the Red Army.
During this lunch-time conversation in Munich in May 1992, Dr Elke Frohlich
revealed to me that the latter supposition was correct. She had seen them
herself a few weeks previously -- she had held them in her hands -- on a visit
to the archives in Moscow. My Lord, you can imagine
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the thrill that kind of
thing gives an historian to have something like that.
My recollection of the conversation at this point is that she continued by
saying that the Institute's Directors were unwilling to fund a further
expedition to procure these diaries.
Now that I have seen some of the documents provided to the Defendants in this
action by the Russians and by the Institute, it is possible that my
recollection on this point is wrong, namely, that the Institute were not
willing to pay for it.
My recollection of the following is, however, secure. Dr Frohlich informed me
that the Director of the Russian archives, the "trophy" archives, as
they were known, Dr Bondarev, was in a serious predicament, as he was faced
with the economic consequences of the collapse of the Soviet Empire; he had no
longer the financial means necessary for the upkeep of the archives and the
payment of his staff.
The plates, in my view, were seriously at risk.
Dr. Frohlich indicated that if I were to take a sufficient sum of foreign
currency to Moscow, I could purchase the glass plates from Dr Bondarev. It was
clear from her remarks that Dr Bondarev had already discussed this prospect
with her.
Dr Frohlich added that the glass plates were in
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fragile condition and
needed to be rescued before they came to serious harm. I recall that she said:
"If you are going to do this deal with the Russians, you will have to take
a lot of silk paper with you from England to place between the glass plates.
The plates are just packed into boxes with nothing between them". My Lord,
when I provide you with bundles of photographs later on, there were photographs
of the actual plates in the cardboard boxes. I asked how much money we were
talking about, and either she or I suggested a figure of US$20,000. I
immediately contacted my American publishers in New York who seemed the most
immediate source of money. I informed them of this likely windfall and asked if
we could increase the cash advance on my Goebbels' manuscript accordingly.
My manuscript of the Goebbels' biography was at that time complete and
undergoing editing by myself. It was already ready for delivery to the
publishers.
The American publisher responded enthusiastically at first, and upon my return
from Munich to London I began negotiations through intermediaries with the
Russian archivist, Dr Bondarev. (Dr Bondarev will not, unfortunately, be called
by either party in this action as a witness. He seems to have vanished. He is
certainly no longer employed by the "trophy" archives). The first
intermediary I used was a
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Russian-language
specialist employed by Warburg's Bank in Moscow. He undertook the preliminary
negotiations with Dr BondarevI instructed him to tell Bondarev as openly as was
prudent of my intention to come and look at the glass plates, and also to make
it quite plain that we were coming with a substantial sum of hard currency.
Many American institutions were currently engaged in the same practice -- it is
important I should say this -- as I knew from the newspapers.
At about this time, it became plain that the German Government was also keen to
get its hands on these glass plates. Naturally, I desired to beat them to it,
first, because of professional pride and the desire to have an historical scoop
and, secondly, years of working with the German Government Archives had proven
both to me and many scholars that as soon as high-grade documents like these
dropped into their hands they vanished for many years while they were assessed,
catalogued and indexed. Sometimes they were even squirreled away for later
exploitation by the Chief Archivists themselves (the "Hossbach
Papers" were a case in point).
These vital Nazi diaries would, therefore, vanish from the public gaze possibly
for five or 10 years. My fears in this respect had been amply confirmed by
events, I would submit, because many of those glass plates which I saw in
Moscow in 1992 have since vanished
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into the maw of the
German Government and the Munich Institut fur Zeitgeschichte, and they are
still not available even now.
I considered, therefore, that I should be rendering to the historical community
the best service by doing the utmost that I could to extract those glass plates
or, failing that, copies of them or, failing that, copies of the maximum number
of pages possible, by hook or by crook, from the KGB archives before a wind of
change might suddenly result in the resealing of all these Soviet former
archives (and once again this apprehension has been largely confirmed by the
attitude of the Russian Archive Authorities, who have resealed numbers of these
files and made them once again inaccessible to Western historians).
The second intermediary upon whom I relied was the former KGB Officer, Mr Lev
Bezymenski. I have known mr Bezymenski for many years, about 35 years, and over
these years we have engaged in a fruitful exercise of exchanging of documents.
I would hasten to add that the documents which I furnished to Mr Bezymenski
were entirely of a public-domain nature.
Mr Bezymenski, however, in return extracted from secret Soviet archives for me
vital collections of documents, for example, their diplomatic files on Sir
Winston Churchill and the private papers of the Commander in Chief of the
German Army, Colonel-General Werner von
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Fritsch. From the
Russian archives I obtained, via Mr Bezymenski, Fritsch's personal writings
during and about the "Bloomberg-Fritsch scandal" of 1938, which had
historic consequences for Germany, for Hitler and, ultimately, for the whole
world. I immediately donated a complete set of those Fritsch papers to the
German Government archives where they can still be seen.
Dr Bezymenski, unfortunately, turned out to be something of a "double
agent".
Fearing that Dr Bondarev was not properly getting my message, I asked Mr
Bezymenski to approach him on my behalf and inform him that there were certain
documents he held in which I was interested, and that I was coming as a representative
of the Sunday Times, well armed with foreign currency. Mr Bezymenski enquired
what those documents were. I refused to tell him and he replied: "You are
referring to the Goebbels diaries I presume". This I affirmed and ten
minutes after this phone call from me in London and Mr Bezymenski in Moscow, I
receive a phone call from Dr Frohlich in Munich complaining bitterly that I
revealed our intentions to Mr Bezymenski. Instead of acting as I had requested,
my friend had immediately sent a fax to the Institut fur Zeitgeschichte to
alert them to what I was "up to". This set the cat among the pigeons,
and the Institut fur Zeitgeschichte left no stone unturned to prevent the
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Russians from providing
me with diaries or other material, for reasons which this court can readily
surmise.
I had in the meantime approached the Sunday Times after my American publishers
got cold feet, and I succeeded in persuading a Mr Andrew Neil that I could
obtain Goebbels Diaries from the Moscow archives, and that I was by chance one
of the very few people capable of reading the handwriting.
Two years previously, in 1990, my Italian publisher, Mondadori, had
commissioned me to transcribe the handwritten 1938 diary volume of Dr Goebbels,
a copy of which they had purchased from a Russian source. So the diaries were
in the process of being purchased. I was thus acquainted with the difficult
handwriting of the Nazi propaganda Minister. At that time there were probably
only three or four people in the world who were capable of deciphering it. The
negotiations with Andrew Neil proceeded smoothly, that is between me and Mr
Neil. He did express at one stage enough nervousness at the prospect of
entering into another "Nazi diaries" deal.
Your Lordship will remember that his newspaper group had been made to look
foolish for the purchase and publication in 1983 of the Adolf Hitler diaries.
I pointed out that I had warned them writing once ahead in 1982 that the Hitler
Diaries were fakes, and I added: "I am offering the Sunday Times the chance
t
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rehabilitate
itself".
Armed with the prestige and the superior financial resources of the Sunday
Times, I went to Moscow in June 1992, and negotiated directly with Dr Bondarev
and his superior, Professor Tarasov, who was at that time the overall head of
the Russian Federation Archival System. Dr Bondarev expressed willingness to
assist us, although there could no longer be any talk of the clandestine
purchase of the plates which we had originally hoped for, since Mr Bezymenski
let the cat out of the bag. I say "clandestine", but of course I
understand that the same archives had sold off many other collections of
papers, for example, to the Hoover Institution in California and US publishing
houses, publishing giants, and to my colleague the late John Costello as well.
My own little deal was not to be.
My Lord, professor Tarasov is to be one of the witnesses in this case called
question by the Defence. Your Lordship will be able to study the documents
exhibited to his witness statement. I confess that I fail to the relevance of
very many of them, but no doubt we shall see that difficulty removed by Mr
Rampton in due course.
The Moscow negotiations were not easy. We negotiated directly with Professor
Tarasov for access to the glass plates. The negotiations were conducted in my
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presence by Mr Peter
Miller, a freelance journalist working for the Sunday Times, who spoke Russian
with a commendable fluency. He will also be giving evidence in this action on
my behalf, my Lord. With my limited "O" level Russian I was able to
follow the gist in conversation and also to intervene speaking German after it
emerged that Professor Tarasov had studied and taught for many years at the
famous Humboldt University in Communist Berlin.
By now both Dr Bondarev and Tarasov were aware, if they had not been aware
previously, that these Goebbels Diaries were of commercial and historical
value. The negotiations took far longer than I had expected.
I produced to Professor Tarasov copies of the Soviet editions of my books which
had been published years earlier, and I donated to him as well as to the
Archives staff later copies of my own edition of the biography of Hitler's War.
This established my credentials to their satisfaction, and Tarasov gave
instructions that we were to be given access to the entire collection of Dr
Goebbels Diaries. It was evident to me when I finally saw the glass plates that
the diaries had hardly been examined at all. It seemed to me, for example, from
the splinters of glass still trapped between the photographic plates, that
there had been little movement in the boxes of plates for
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nearly 50 years. The
boxes were the original boxes. The brown paper round them in some parts was
still the original brown paper. The plates were in total disarray and no
attempt had been made to sort them. I have seen no work of history, Soviet or
otherwise, that is quoted from them before I got them. My Lord, my excitement
as an historian getting my hands on original material like this can readily be
imagined.
The moot point is that there is a dispute as to the nature of the Russian
permission. This alleged agreement is one of the issues pleaded by the
Defendants in this action. It is difficult for me to reconstruct seven years
later precisely whether there was any verbal agreement exceeding a nod and a
wink or what the terms were or how rigid an agreement may have been reached.
There is no reference to such an agreement in my contemporary diaries.
Certainly the Russians committed nothing to paper about such an agreement.
Professor Tarasov's word was law, and he had just picked up the phone in our
presence and spoken that word to Dr Bondarev.
My own recollection at the time was that the arrangement was of a very
free-wheeling nature, with the Russians being very happy and indeed proud to
help us in the spirit reigning at that time of Glasnost and Perestroika, and
the extreme co-operativeness between West
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and East. They were keen
to give us access to these plates which they had hitherto regarded as not being
of much value.
Tarasov did mention that the German Government were also interested in these
plates, and that they were coming shortly to conduct negotiations about them.
I remember clearly, and I think this is also shown in the diary which I wrote
on that date, that Dr Tarasov hesitated as to whether he should allow us access
without first consulting the German authorities. I rather mischievously
reminded Dr Tarasov of which side had won the war, and I expressed astonishment
that the Russians were now intending to ask their defeated enemy for permission
to show to a third party records which were in their own archives, and this
unsubtle argument appears to have swayed him to grant us complete access
without further misgivings.
There was no signed agreement either between the Russian authorities and us or
at that time between the Russians and the German authorities, my Lord. I would
add here that I was never shown any agreement between the Russian and the
German authorities, nor was I told any details of it, nor of course could it
have been in any way binding upon me.
We returned to the archives the following morning, Mr Miller and I, to begin
exploiting the
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diaries. Miller went off
on his own devices. I had brought a German assistant with me to act as a
scribe. My Lord, her diary is also in my discovery, and I admit that I have not
yet found time to read it. I have got an odd aversion to reading other people's
diaries, unless it is by way of my business. I must admit that I was rather
perplexed by the chaotic conditions that I found there, that is in the Russian
archives. There were no technical means whatever of reading the diaries, the
glass plates. The Nazis had reduced them to the size of a small postage stamp
on the glass plates. I should have photographs of them brought to you, my Lord.
Fortunately, Dr Frohlich had alerted me about this possibility, the lack of
technical resources, and I had bought at Selfridges a 12-times magnifier, a
little thing about the size of a nail clipper, with which by peering very hard
I could just decipher the handwriting. It was even more alarming to someone
accustomed to working in Western archives with very strict conditions on how to
handle documents, and cleanliness and security, to see the way that the shelves
and tables and chairs were littered with bundles of papers. At one stage the
Archivist (I think it may be one of the ladies who is coming to give evidence
for the Defendants) brought in bottles of red wine and loads of bread and
cheese which was scattered among the priceless papers on the tables for us to
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celebrate at the end of
the week. That would have been unthinkable in any Western archive building.
My German assistant had worked with me in the US National Archives previously.
We spent the first day cataloguing and sifting through all the boxes of glass
plates and identifying which plates were which, earmarking, figuratively
speaking, the glass plates which were on my shopping list to be read copied.
Very rapidly we began coming across glass plates of the most immense historical
significance, sections of the diaries which I knew had never been seen by
anybody else before. I was particularly interested in the Night of the Broken
Glass, November 1938, the Night of the Long Knives, June 1934. I also found the
glass plates containing the missing months leading up to the outbreak of World
War II in 1939, diaries whose historical significance in short need not be
emphasised here.
Given the chaotic conditions in the archives, I took the decision to borrow one
of the plates overnight and bring it back the next day so that we could
photograph its contents. I shall argue about the propriety of this action at a
later data. I removed the plate. Its contents were printed that night by a
photographer hired by the Sunday Times whose name was Sasha, and the glass
plate was restored to its box the next morning without loss or damage.
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The Sunday Times editor,
Andrew Neil, was coincidentally in Moscow at this time, and I showed him one of
the glass plates at his hotel, the Metropol. He stated: "We really need
something spectacular to follow the Andrew Morton book on Princess Diana and
this is it". The next day, Dr Bondarev formally authorized the borrowing
of two more such plates anyway. So it was clear to me that nobody would have
been offended by my earlier action.
I returned to London and over the next few days a contract was formalized by
myself and the Sunday Times under which the newspaper was to pay me £75,000 net
for procuring the diaries, transcribing them and writing three chapters based
on the principal extracts from the Goebbels diaries. The contract with the
Sunday Times contained the usual secrecy clauses. Nobody was to learn of the
nature of the contract or its contents or the price or the existence of the diary.
For reasons beyond my knowledge, the Sunday Times when it came under extreme
pressure from international and British Jewish organisations, subsequently put
it about that I had only been hired to transcribe the diaries, with the
implication that they had obtained them on their own initiative. I was not,
however, just a hired help. This was my project. Which I took to them and which
they purchased, as the documents
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before this court make
plain.
It may be felt that £75,000 would have been a substantial reward for two weeks
work. My response would be that it was for 30 years plus two weeks work. We are
paid for our professional skills and expertise and experience and reputation,
for our track record in short. I returned to London with arrangements to
revisit Moscow in two or three weeks time.
My Lord, the court will find that I have stipulated, in what I believe is known
in legal terms as an admission, that I carried with me two of the glass plates
from the Moscow archives to the Sunday Times in London, informally borrowing
them in the same manner as previously, namely those vital records containing
the 1934, "Night of the Long Knives". The reasons for doing I have
already hinted at earlier, the fear that they would either vanish into the maw
of the German Government, or be resealed by the former Soviet Archives, or be
sold off to some nameless American trophy hunter and thus never see the light
of day again.
I took these two borrowed plates straight from Moscow to Munich to the
Institute of History (the Institut fur Zeitgeschichte), where I knew they had a
microfiche printer and reading machine, together with the institute's Dr
Zirngiebel who was an expert in the archives, we inserted the appropriate
lenses in the microfiche printer
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for a microfiche of this
magnification, and I printed out two copies of each of the 100 or so documents
contained on the two microfiche.
There was no secrecy about this. I at once sent two of those pages upstairs to
the experts in the Institute of History itself, and two more to the German
Federal Archives with the written request that they formally identify these
pages as being in the handwriting of Dr Joseph Goebbels. This was a necessary
part of the agreement with the Sunday Times who were being no less cautious than
I.
The other principal reason that I borrowed these glass plates temporarily from
the Russian Archives was in order to put them to London forensic experts for
the purposes of authentication. I mentioned the use of forensic experts before.
We are doing it again. In the same manner that others had tested the Adolf
Hitler diaries and I had tested the Canaris diaries, the Sunday Times quite
properly wished to have final proof that the glass plates were indeed of
wartime manufacture. We are dealing after all with the KGB archives. Namely,
that the glass was wartime origin and that the photographic emulsion was of
wartime chemicals.
My Lord, the court may marvel at these precautions that we as non-scholars
took, but it seemed perfectly natural to me and to the officers of the Sunday
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Times. After all, not
only were large sums of money involved, but the reputation of myself and the
reputation of a major international newspaper group. We wished to be absolutely
certain.
On my return from Moscow and Munich to London in June 1992, therefore, the two
glass plates were sent their separate ways, heavily wrapped and protected; one
to Agfa photographic laboratory which tested the age of the emulsion in a
non-constructive manner, and the other to the Pilkington Glassworks whose
laboratory specialists carried out similar tests on the age of the glass. Their
reports are part of my discovery, and these confirmed that the tests were
appropriate under the circumstances.
My Lord, if I may just anticipate by a few paragraphs what happened to those
two glass plates subsequently. I returned to Moscow at the end of June.
The glass plates were brought out to Moscow personally by a courier of the
Sunday Times. As soon as the tests on them were complete and handed to me
standing outside the archives building, as my diary records, and within three
minutes I had taken them back into the archives building and replaced them in
the box where they have been for the last 47 years. This is of course a matter
that is very much in contention, my Lord. That is why I have gone into it in
such detail.
What follows is not strictly relevant to the
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glass plates, but it is
relevant to this case and is best inserted here because of its chronology. When
I returned to London with the remaining diaries which the Sunday Times had
requested, an awkward situation had developed. Our secrecy had been compromised
by an astute reporter of The Independent, a Mr Peter Pringle, who was based in
Moscow at the time I was using the archives. He too has submitted a written
witness statement for the Defendants. He stalked me into the KGB archives,
confronted me and learned from Dr Bondarev of my work on the Goebbels Diaries.
The resulting scoop in The Independent sent the press world about its ears.
Before I returned to London on July 4th 199 h entire Fleet Street press and the
broadcast media fell over themselves to print stories about the diaries and my
own participation. In order to blacken the name of the Sunday Times and its
somewhat unpopular editor, I was described with every possible epithet.
It is of relevance to this action, in my submission, my Lord, because the same
organizations which had gone to great lengths to furnish the Defendants here
with the materials they needed to blacken my name and the book "Denying
the Holocaust", now applied heavy pressure to Andrew Neil and The Times
Newspapers Limited to violate their contract with me and to pay me nothing of
the moneys which were due to me under the contract. Under this
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pressure, which Mr Neil
described to me at the time as the worst that he had experienced in his life,
the Sunday Times having in fact paid me the first installment welshed on the
rest of the payments. I was forced to sue them in these same courts for breach
of contract. The financial consequences of this violation of the contract, in
round terms about £65,000, were serious for me.
When I reviewed all the clippings, when I read all the statements made by these
various bodies and boards and campaigns and agencies and organizations attacking
my name, both during my absence in Moscow and upon my return, I could only say,
sadly, from a lengthening experience: "The gang's all here". The same
gang whom I loosely describe as the traditional enemies of free speech, were to
be seen in the following days behind the metal police barricades, police
barricades thrown up outside my apartment, screaming abuse at me and other
leaseholders in our building, spitting, harassing passers by, holding up
offensive placards and slogans, including one reading in a most execrable
taste, "Gas Irving". They can be seen in the newspaper photographs.
From the photographs of this demonstration it appeared that representatives of
every ethnic and other minority were present in these. It was the most disagreeable
experience.
On my second visit to Moscow, as your Lordship will find from the relevant
passages of my diary, I found
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frostier atmosphere. The
boxes which I had so readily been provided with on my previous trip were said
to be missing and not found. For three or four days I was unable to do anything
and then one box was released to me which I devoured rapidly. On the last day
but one it became plain that I had jealous and envious rivals in Munich to
thank for the difficulties that the Russians were now making. Dr Bondarev's
secretary came into the reading room and said there were allegations that I had
stolen the glass plates. I assured her that while I borrowed some heavy glass
plate which had been in my custody was at that time back in the archives and nothing
was missing, which was true. I also voluntarily wrote a statement which was
handed to Dr Bondarev.
Your Lordship will find this document in both Russian and English, in my
handwriting, is in discovery both of myself and of the Defendants as an exhibit
to the report by Professor Tarasov. Professor Tarasov is to be giving evidence
before your Lordship, and I shall examine him with particular pleasure.
Dr Bondarev's secretary came back a few minutes later and said that this
declaration was just what they required. She vouchsafed to me the information
came from Munich.
Your Lordship will see from the information which came from Munich which is in
the Defendants'
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discovery that the
Institut fur Zeitgeschichte faxed to Moscow a particularly hateful letter about
me in an attempt to destroy my relationship with the Russians. However, I
already had all the documents that had been on my shopping list, either in long
hand or by dictating them on to a hand-held dictate recorder or typed on to my
portable typewriter, or as photocopies of a few pages of November 1938, or as
photographic prints obtained from the glass microfiche. I have collected
several hundred pages of the most important Goebbels Diaries entries that have
been missing ever since the end of the war, and I see no reason not to be proud
of this achievement. It is indicative of he general attempt to blacken my name
and to silence me, that when I spoke to a meeting organised by my private
supports' club, I suppose you would call it, the Clarendon Club, on evening of
July 4th 1992, my return from Moscow that day, the hall in Great Portland
Street was subjected to violent demonstrations outside which required a very
large police presence to protect the members of my audience. This will be one
of the photographs in the bundle I shall shortly be submitting to your
Lordship. Later on that year when I addressed a third meeting at a West End
hotel, there were even more violent demonstrations. Such demonstrations do not
occur spontaneously. Somebody has to pay for the printing and the bill posting
and the bus rentals. I might mention
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that on one of the days
that followed I was violently attacked by three men who identified themselves
to me as Jews when I was having a Sunday lunch at a public restaurant in
Mayfair with my family. They had laid an ambush for me.
I only recently learned that on the Monday after my return from Moscow, my long
time publishers, Macmillan Limited, seeing the clamour and coming under
pressure from unnamed members of the Jewish community (I have the internal
memorandum), panicked and issued secret instructions for the destruction of all
remaining stocks of my books without ever informing me that they had done so.
This particularly repulsive act by a publisher, July 6th 1992, reminiscent of
the Nazis in 1933, cost me of course many tens of thousands of pounds in lost
royalties. At the same time as they were taking these secret decisions to
destroy all of my books, at a cost to themselves of hundreds of thousands of
pounds, my editor at Macmillan has continued to write ingratiating letters
expressing interest in the early delivery of my Goebbels' biography. It was
altogether a most unhappy period.
My Lord, I am coming towards the end as you can see. I can add one further
brief example of how different is my attitude of such documents as the Goebbels
Diaries from the attitude of my rivals and the scholars.
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Dr Ralf Gunther Reuth
approached me saying that he was preparing a five-volume abridged edition of
the other Goebbels Diaries for Piper Verlag in Germany at this time and he had
nothing for 1938. There were large gaps in the other years too. I foolishly
allowed him to have photocopies of some of the most important passages which
until that moment had been exclusive to myself and my, as yet, unpublished
Goebbels' biography. The thanks that I received for this generous act were
scant indeed.
I provided copies to the German Federal Archives entirely of the entire
Goebbels diary extracts that I brought back from Moscow. I did that on July 1st
1993. Ten minutes later the Director of the Archives informed me in extreme
embarrassment that on the instructions of the German Federal Minister of the
Interior I was permanently banned from the self-same archives forthwith and in
perpetuity, which is to my knowledge the only time that such a sanction has
ever been applied to an historian. He explained that this decision had been
taken, "in the interests of the German people".
I mention these facts, my Lord, to show that it was not just one single action
that has destroyed my career, but a cumulative, self-perpetuating, rolling
onslaught from every side engineered by the same people who have propagated the
book which is at the centre of the dispute, which is the subject of this
action, my Lord.
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MR JUSTICE GRAY: Thank you very much, Mr Irving. Can I before I ask Mr
Rampton to open the Defendants' case just ask you to go back, if you would, to
page 18 which is where you are dealing with what I think you accept is at the
heart of the action, namely the accusation that you are a "Holocaust
denier".
MR IRVING: Yes.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Towards the end of page 18, in fact perhaps one can
pick it up at the beginning of that last paragraph, you say this: "This
trial is not really about what happened in the Holocaust or how many Jews and
other persecuted minorities were tortured and put to death". Certainly as
I see it, and I believe as he Defendants see it, that is right. This trial is
not concerned with making findings of historical fact. But you then go on to
set out what you say the Defendants need to establish for the purposes of their
plea of justification, and you say that they need to establish, first, that a
particular thing happened or existed; secondly that you were aware of that
particular thing as it happened or existed at the time that you wrote about it
from the records then before me, and then that you wilfully manipulated the
text. There was just one thing I wanted to put to you so that one is clear
about it. You are saying, are you, that it has to be shown that you had actual
knowledge of the particular fact or event?
P-87
MR IRVING: My Lord, I do not have an astute legal brain, but I am trying
to make it easy for the court by establishing very early on what the ground
rules are going to be.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes, that is why I am raising this with because I think
it is a very fundamental question.
MR IRVING: It is a very fundamental point, my Lord, and I am indebted to
you for having appeared to have grasped precisely the point I am trying to
make.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Can I just put to you this and then complete your
answer. The Defendants may be saying that whether or not they can actually
prove that you specifically knew of the particular fact, it was there available
in the historical records. They may be saying, and I believe they are saying,
that you shut your eyes to it.
MR IRVING: That is a different allegation, I would respectfully submit,
my Lord, by saying that what they are saying there is that I am a rotten
historian or a lazy historian or an indolent historian or that I am lethargic.
That is not the words they have used. They have said that I manipulated, that I
distorted. That is why I think I am entitled to press for my narrower
definition, my Lord.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes. That puts it very clearly. Thank you very much
indeed. That completes your opening?
MR IRVING: That completes my opening statement, my Lord.
MR RAMPTON: My Lord, before I read what everybody has anyway,
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I might just respond to
what your Lordship has just said to Mr Irving in this way, by saying your
Lordship has it right. It is not that he is indolent. It is not that he falls
into error. It is that he deliberately perverts the course of this particular
episode in European history, including what happened at Auschwitz.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: So you are putting the case that Mr Irving not only
ought to have known but did in fact know what the historic records showed?
MR RAMPTON: I do not know whether he did or whether he did not, but what
is certain is that he leapt on to the sink of the Auschwitz battleship campaign
without even opening the front of the fire.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes.
MR RAMPTON: My Lord, Mr Irving calls himself an historian.
The truth is, however, that he is not an historian at all but a falsifier of
history. To put it bluntly, he is a liar. Lies may take various forms and may
as often consist of suppression or omission as a direct falsehood or invention,
but in the end all forms of lying converge into a single definition, wilful,
deliberate misstatement of the facts.
Mr Irving has used many different means to falsify history, invention,
misquotation, suppression, distortion, manipulation and not least
mistranslation, but those all these techniques have the same ultimate effect,
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falsification of the truth.
Moreover, the lies which the Defendants in this case will show that Mr Irving
has told, concern an area of history in which perhaps it behoves any writer or
researcher to be particularly careful of the truth, the destruction of the Jews
by the Nazis during World War II, the Holocaust, and Adolf Hitler's role in
that human catastrophy, or, as Mr Irving would have it, alleged catastrophe,
for Mr Irving is nowadays a Holocaust denier. By this I mean that he denies
that the Nazis planned and carried out the systematic murder of millions Jews,
in particular, though by no means exclusively, by the use of homicidal gas
chambers, and in particular, though by no means exclusively, at Auschwitz in
Southern Poland.
This was not, however, always so. In 1977 the first edition of Mr Irving's book
Hitler's War was published. In that edition Mr Irving accepted that the
Holocaust, as generally understood, had occurred. He was not willing, however,
to accept that Adolf Hitler had any real or direct responsibility for what
happened or that he knew anything very much about it until it was too late. Mr
Irving went to considerable lengths to achieve his exoneration of Hitler. At
this stage I take but one example of many to illustrate Mr Irving's
disreputable methods. In late November 1941 a train load of about a thousand
Jews was deported from Berlin to Riga
P-90
in Latvia, as part of a
process which had been initiated earlier that year in accordance with Hitler's
wishes to empty the Reich of its Jews.
On 30th November 1941, as his daily log records, Heinrich Himmler, the head of
the SS, was at the Wolf's lair, Hitler's headquarters in East Prussia. Mr
Irving's account of this visit, so far as it concerns the fait of the Jews, is
as follows. This is in Hitler's War 1977 at page 332: "On November 30th
1941 Himmler was summoned to the Wolf's lair for a secret conference with
Hitler at which fait of Berlin's Jews was clearly raised. At 1.30 p.m. Himmler
was obliged to telephone from Hitler's bunker to Heydrich the explicit order
that Jews were", and this is in the author's italics, "not to be
liquidated". The next day Himmler telephoned SS overall General Oswald
Pohl, overall chief of the concentration camp system with the order: "Jews
are to stay where they are". That is what Mr Irving wrote.
In the introduction to that edition of the book at page 14, anticipating what
the reader would find in the text, Mr Irving wrote this: "The
incontrovertible evidence is that Hitler ordered on November 30th 1941 that
there was to be "no liquidation" of the Jews (without much difficulty
I", that is Mr Irving "found in Himmler's private files his own
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handwriting note on
this)".
Thus the reader was led to believe, first, that as early as 30th November 1941
Hitler had issued an order, faithfully passed on by Himmler to the relevant
authorities, that there was to be no liquidation of any Jews, and that all Jews
were to stay wherever they happen to be; and second that there was
incontrovertible evidence of this in handwritten notes by Himmler which Mr
Irving had found in Himmler's private files. Mr Irving had evidently read
Himmler's notes, and Mr Irving's German was then, as it is now, very good. So
what did the notes actually say? The relevant part of the note for 30th
November 1941 reads as follows: "Judentranport aus Berlin. Keine
Liquidierung".
That is the German entry by Himmler. The unambiguous meaning of those words in
English is: "Jew transport" the word is singular, "Jew transport
from Berlin no liquidation".
Thus so far from being a general prohibition against the liquidation of the
Jews, it was merely an order from Himmler to Heydrich that the particular train
load of Berlin Jews in question was not to be killed on arrival in Riga.
The matter gets worse. What was the evidence that Himmler's order to Heydrich
was derived from
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instructions given to
him by Hitler at a secret conference at which the fait of Berlin's Jews was
clearly raised? The answer is none. This was pure invention by Mr Irving.
Indeed, the fact is, as Mr Irving later discovered, that Himmler did not meet
Hitler until an hour after he telephoned this order to Heydrich.
Thus the matter gets worse still. I repeat Mr Irving's words: "And the
next day Himmler telephoned SS General Oswald Pohl, overall chief of the concentration
camp system, with the order 'Jews are to stay where they are'." What does
Himmler's note of his telephone call to General Pohl on 1st November 1941
actually say? It says this: "Verwaltungsfuhrer des SS haben zu
bleiben".
Does this mean, as Mr Irving
told his English readers, Jews are to stay where they are? No, it does not. It
means administratively leaders of the SS are to stay where they are. Nor is
there in this day's entry in the Himmler log any reference to the Jews
whatsoever.
I repeat, Mr Irving had, as he proudly announced, read the Himmler log and he
has very good German.
One asks the question: Does not this single example condemn Mr Irving as a
liar, whose utterances about this awful episode in European history can never
be taken seriously? In fairness it should be pointed out
P-93
that in the 1991 edition
of Hitler's War Mr Irving corrected, though by implication only, the assertion
that Himmler's order to Heydrich of 30th November 1941 "no
liquidation" applied to Jews generally, and accepted that it applied only
to a single trailer of Jews from Berlin. But did he withdraw his imaginative
assertion that Himmler's instruction to Heydrich was derived from an order
given to him by Hitler, or that Himmler's log for 1st December 1941 read, "Jews
are to stay where they are"? No he did not. He wrote on page 427: "On
November 30th 1941 Himmler was summoned to the Wolf's lair for a secret
conference with Hitler at which the fate of a train load of Berlin Jews was
clearly raised. At 1.30 p.m. Himmler was obliged to telephone from Hitler's
bunker to Heydrich the explicit order that these Jews were not to be
liquidated, and the next day Himmler telephoned SS General Oswald Pohl, overall
chief of the concentration camp system, with the order, 'Jews are to stay where
they are'." Thus was repeated and preserved a monstrous distortion of the
evidence in Mr Irving's own hands. It is true that he printed a facsimile of
Himmler's log for 30th November 1941 in both editions of the book, but he never
printed the entry for 1st December 1941, "administrative leaders of the SS
are to stay where they are." One wonders rhetorically why not?
P-94
So, my Lord, I pass on
to Mr Irving and Holocaust denial. Between the publication of the first edition
of Hitler's War in 1977 and its second edition in 1991, Mr Irving's views about
the Holocaust underwent a sea change. In the 1977 edition he accepted it as an
historical truth in all its essentials, systematic mass murder of Jews in
purpose built extermination factories, but in the 1991 edition all trace of the
Holocaust in this sense has disappeared. Auschwitz, for example, has been
transformed from a monstrous killing machine into a mere slave labour camp.
What are the reasons for this astounding volte-face? The principal reason can
be expressed in one word Leuchter. In 1988 a man of German origin, Ernst
Zundel, was put on trial in Canada for publishing material which, amongst other
things, denied the existence of homicidal gas chambers at Auschwitz. In defence
of this charge Mr Zundel's lawyers recruited a man called Fred Leuchter who
seems to have made his living as some kind of consultant in the design of
execution facilities in the USA. Mr Leuchter was duly despatched to Auschwitz
to seek evidence of the use, or otherwise, of homicidal gas chambers. He took
some samples from various parts of the remains of Auschwitz which he later had
analysed in America and then wrote a report describing his findings and
summarizing his conclusions. These were that there
P-95
were never any homicidal
gas chambers at Auschwitz. Unfortunately for Mr Zundel, Mr Leuchter's report
was declared inadmissible by the Canadian judge on the grounds that Mr Leuchter
had no relevant expertise.
Now it happens that Mr Irving also gave evidence for Mr Zundel at that trial.
In the course of that visit he had read the Leuchter report. Shortly thereafter
he declared himself convinced that Leuchter was right and that there never any
homicidal gas chambers at Auschwitz. So enthused was he by the Leuchter report
that he published it himself in this country, with an appreciative forward
written by him and introduced it to the public at a press conference in London,
at which he declared that the validity of Leuchter's laboratory reports was
unchallengable.
So it was that the Leuchter report became the main weapon in Mr Irving's
campaign to "sink the battleship Auschwitz", as he calls it. The
essence of this campaign is that the Holocaust symbolized by Auschwitz is a
myth legend or lie, deployed by Jews to blackmail the German people into paying
vast sums in reparations to supposed victims of the Holocaust. According to Mr
Irving, the Leuchter report is "the biggest calibre shell that has yet hit
the battleship Auschwitz" and has "totally exploded the legend".
Unfortunately for Mr Irving, the Leuchter report
P-96
is bunk and he knows it.
It was comprehensively debunked in court in Canada. It has been comprehensively
demolished since by people who have written to Mr Irving, and perhaps not least
by Professor van Pelt in his report made for the purposes of this case. This is
not the moment to describe all the many means by which the Leuchter report is
demolished, but one simple example can be given because it is derived from the
internal evidence of the Leuchter report itself, and must have been apparent to
anyone with an open and thoughtful mind.
One of the main reasons that Mr Leuchter advanced in his report for his
conclusion that there were no homicidal gas chambers at Auschwitz, was that it
was to be expected that any residual traces of hydrogen cyanide, the killing
agent in the Zyklon B pellets used by the SS, should be very much higher in
those parts of the remains of Auschwitz which were identified as gas chambers
for killing people than in those parts which are known to have been used for
killing lice.
Leucther's report recorded very small traces of hydrogen cyanide in the gas
chamber remains and relatively large traces in the delicing remains. Therefore,
said Mr Leuchter, the alleged gas chamber remains could obviously never have
been gas chambers at all. But the report itself contained the seeds of its own
destruction, for it revealed that concentration of hydrogen cyanide
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required to kill humans
was approximately 22 times lower than that required to kill lice, 300 parts per
million as against 6,666 parts per million for lice. This was internal evidence
obvious to any interested reader, which Mr Irving certainly was, that the
Leuchter report was rubbish.
So why did Mr Irving ignore this and all other stupidities in the Leuchter
report? Why did he embrace it with such wholehearted enthusiasm? The answer
must be that he wanted it to be true. After all, if the Holocaust never
happened, then Hitler cannot have ordered it or known about it. Thus, as Mr
Irving himself said of the second edition of Hitler's War, "You won't find
the Holocaust mentioned in one line, not even in a footnote. Why should you? If
something didn't happen, then you don't even dignify it with a footnote."
So, finally, my Lord, why has Mr Irving resorted to these lies, distortions and
misrepresentations and deceptions in pursuit of his exoneration of Adolf Hitler
and his denial of the Holocaust? One can often derive a fair picture of a man's
true attitudes and motives from what he says and from the kind of people he
associates with and speaks to. Mr Irving has done a lot of public speaking over
the years. The evidence for the Defendants in this case will show that his
audiences will often consist of radical right-wing neo-facist, neo-Nazi groups
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of people, groups like
the National Alliance, a neo-Nazi, white supremacist organisation in the USA,
the DVU, perhaps the most radical right-wing party in Germany, gatherings of
so-called revisionists, in truth largely Holocaust deniers, the extreme
right-wing British National Party and so on.
What sorts of things has Mr Irving said on these occasions which might be
thought to betray his underlying motives and attitudes? It is not possible in a
relatively short statement of this kind to catalogue all the most telling
instances of this kind, but it is perhaps possible to give the flavour of some
of Mr Irving's thinking by reference to two short examples from the same
speech.
In September 1991 Mr Irving spoke to an audience in Calgary, Alberto. He complained
about pressure from Jewish people and Jewish bodies designed to prevent him
from speaking. He said: "And it's happening now. They're zeroing in on the
university, 'Nazism not welcome here, self-professed moderate facist'". Mr
Irving went on: "I strongly object to that word "moderate". That
remarked provoked some laughter and it may be that it was not meant to be
entirely serious.
On the same occasion, however, he said something which, though somewhat
facetiously worded, conveys a message about his true views and attitudes which
can only
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be taken seriously. It
was this: "I don't see any reason to be tasteful about Auschwitz. It's
baloney. It's a legend. Once we admit the fact that it was a brutal slave
labour camp and large numbers of people did die, as large numbers of innocent
people died elsewhere in the war, why believe the rest of the baloney? I say
quite tastelessly in fact that more women died on the back seat of Edward
Kennedy's car at Chappaquiddick than ever died in a gas chamber in Auschwitz.
Oh, you think that's tasteless. How about this. There are so many Auschwitz
survivors going around, in fact the number increases as the years go past which
is biologically very odd to say the least, because I am going to form an
Association of Auschwitz survivors, survivors of the Holocaust and other liars
for the A-S-S-H-O-L-S", pronounced no doubt "asshols".
This last inspiration was also greeted by laughter, but it was laughter of an
altogether different kind. It was the laughter of mockery, mockery of the
suffering of others, people whom on this and other occasions Mr Irving has
accused of lying about their Holocaust experiences, of forging Auschwitz
tattoos on their arms, of deserving both contempt and the attention of
psychiatrists.
My Lord, this is obviously an important case, but that is not however because
it is primarily concerned
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with whether or not the
Holocaust took place or the degree of Hitler's responsibility for it. On the
contrary, the essence of the case is Mr Irving's honesty and integrity of as a
chronicler -- I shy away from the word "historian" -- of these
matters, for if it be right that Mr Irving, driven by his extremist views and
sympathies, has devoted his energies to the deliberate falsification of this
tragic episode in history, then by exposing that dangerous fraud in this court
the Defendants may properly be applauded for having performed a significant
public service not just in this country, but in all those places in the world
where anti-Semitism is waiting to be fed.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Mr Irving, I would have suggested -- that is the
opening statements out of the way, as it were -- I would have suggested we
might viewed those two videos but we do not have the equipment.
MR IRVING: We do not have the equipment unfortunately. I think we will
have the equipment first thing tomorrow.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Whenever. The fact is we cannot do it now.
MR RAMPTON: No, we cannot, my Lord.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: I am just wondering where we go immediately.
MR RAMPTON: Perhaps the answer might be home.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: If needs be, yes. It seems to me rather difficult to
start on the evidence without knowing whether we are taking Auschwitz
separately and first, or whether it is going to be the other way round. You
have not
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obviously resolved that.
MR RAMPTON: Can we usefully, and I mean usefully, use a little bit of
time now, perhaps your Lordship would adjourn until tomorrow. We can then try
to work out something a little less jelly like than we offered your Lordship
this morning so far as scheduling is concerned.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Certainly.
MR RAMPTON: And give a report tomorrow morning?
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes. I have a fairly short statement from you, Mr
Irving.
MR IRVING: As required under the new rules.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes. We will have to discuss how far one needs to deal
with all the issues in oral evidence.
I hope not by any means all of them. I think I am right in saying that really I
perhaps know rather less of your specific answers to some of the specific
criticisms than I would like and at some stage I would like to be provided with
the answers.
MR IRVING: I appreciate that, my Lord, and I know that -- I intend not
to offer very much answer to the name calling.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: No, I agree with you about that. What is at the heart
of the case is the manipulation allegation and that involves looking, to a
degree anyway, at what the historical documents actually say and mean.
MR IRVING: I am grateful, my Lord. Our documentation on both
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sides is very extensive.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: Yes. If there is nothing else we need to do now, then
perhaps it would be sensible to adjourn. If you could let me know through the
usual channels what you have decided, that would help me, if you reach
agreement.
MR RAMPTON: I know it would. At the moment I do not see a problem with
the existing plan which is to bring Professor van Pelt over for the beginning
of the last week in January.
MR IRVING: There is a problem, my Lord, and that is we have also
arranged for our gentleman to come from California.
We will have to iron that one out.
MR JUSTICE GRAY: This cannot be done in open court. So I will leave it
to you and we will resume at 10.30.
MR IRVING: Thank you very much, my Lord.
(The court adjourned
until the following day)
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