Debating the Holocaust

Those who deny the Nazi atrocities are finding a platform in college newspapers and raising a First Amendment ruckus

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David Turner was under siege last week. A junior at Brandeis University in Waltham, Massachusetts, and editor in chief of the weekly Justice, the student newspaper, he had become a pariah on campus. His phone rang around the clock with irate calls from students and alumni denouncing him as a "monster" and an "anti-Semite." His car was defaced and he was threatened with bodily harm. Some 2,000 copies of Justice were stolen and presumably destroyed, and when the issue was reprinted, 200 students rallied in protest and a guard had to be assigned to ensure the paper's safe distribution.

The turmoil was prompted by an advertisement in Justice that attacked the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington as a "false and manipulative" representation; as well, it questioned whether the Nazi gas chambers ever existed and whether the genocide of European Jews ever really occurred. The outcry on the largely Jewish Brandeis campus was understandable but somewhat misdirected; the decision to run the ad had been made by the Justice editorial board, on which the editor in chief has no vote.

Brandeis was not alone. Although campus newspapers at such schools as Harvard, Yale, Berkeley and Wisconsin have rejected Holocaust-denial ads and commentaries, they appeared this fall in student publications at Northwestern, the University of Michigan, Notre Dame and Georgetown, among others. Everywhere, they provoked angry letters to the editors and heated campus debates.

These ads -- and others that have appeared in the collegiate press since the 1991-92 school year -- were placed by the Committee for Open Debate on the Holocaust, which is headed by Bradley R. Smith, 63, a Visalia, California, pamphleteer. Smith, who spends most of his waking hours in Holocaust denial, wants open debate, he says, because the possibility that the Holocaust was a hoax goes unreported. Much of the material on which Smith bases his claims comes from the pseudointellectual journal of the Institute for Historical Review, a Holocaust-denial group in Costa Mesa, California, and the writings of Mark Weber, a former member of the neo-Nazi National Youth Alliance. Says Smith: "I think that journalists feel their career is threatened if they treat revisionist research in an objective way."

Why do college editors and advertising staffs publish Smith's writings? "Hiding the ideas of Holocaust revisionists won't make them go away," says Josh Dubow, editor in chief of the University of Michigan's Daily. "The best way to make them go away is to bring them out in the open and explain why they're wrong." That, he says, was why the Daily, in publishing a letter from Smith this fall, accompanied it with an explanation, as well as an editorial and an op-ed piece disputing Smith's arguments. While publication of the letter stirred anger on the Michigan campus, it was muted compared with the reaction in 1991 when the Daily published a full-page Smith ad and the next day, in an editorial, naively supported its decision on First Amendment grounds. While that amendment guarantees Smith the right to disseminate his views, it does not obligate editors -- or anyone else -- to publish them.

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