The Detail
Robert FAURISSON
20 December 1997
ON
THE SUBJECT of the Nazi gas chambers, Jean-Marie Le Pen has recently
stated:
"If you take a thousand-page book on the Second World War, the concentration
camps occupy two pages and the gas chambers ten or fifteen lines, and
that's called a detail."
He might have brought up some even harder hitting and more precise
arguments, and referred to Eisenhower, Churchill, de Gaulle, Elie Wiesel,
René Rémond, Daniel Goldhagen, and the very text of the Nuremberg judgement.
° Eisenhower, Churchill, de Gaulle
Three of the best known works on the Second World War are General Eisenhower's
Crusade in Europe (New York, Doubleday [Country Life Press], 1948), Winston
Churchill's The Second World War (London, Cassell, 6 vol., 1948-1954), and
the Mémoires de guerre of General de Gaulle (Paris, Plon, 3 vol., 1954-1959).
In these three works not the least mention of the Nazi gas chambers is to
be found (*).
° Elie Wiesel
The same goes for the autobiographical account in which Elie Wiesel
relates his experience of Auschwitz and Buchenwald (Night, New York, Hill
and Wang, 1960). In volume one of his memoirs he writes: “Let the gas chambers
remain closed to prying eyes, and to imagination” (All Rivers Run to the
Sea, Memoirs, New York, Random, 1995, p. 74).
° René Rémond
In the third volume of his Introduction à l'histoire de notre temps
(Introduction to the History of Our Time), René Rémond, who was then president
of the commission on the history of the deportation within the Comité d'histoire
de la Deuxième Guerre mondiale (Committee on the History of the Second World
War), did not breathe a word of these gas chambers (Le XXe siècle de 1914
à nos jours [The 20th Century from 1914 to Now], Le Seuil, 1974). Fourteen
years later, when he had become president of the Institut d'histoire du
temps présent (Institute of the History of Present Times), he made no more
mention of them than before in a 1,013-page work entitled Notre Siècle,
de 1918 à 1988 (Our Century, from 1918 to 1988, Fayard, 1988).
° Daniel Jonah Goldhagen
Since March 1996, the Jewish-American historian Daniel Jonah Goldhagen
has progressively become the darling of the media the world over, thanks
to his book Hitler's Willing Executioners / Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust
(London, Little, Brown, and Co., “Abacus”, 1997 [1996], xiv-634 pp.; first
published in the US by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., March, 1996). If he does mention
the Nazi gas chambers, it is in order to say little more than that “their
efficiency [has been] greatly overstated” (p. 10) and that they have always
been, and wrongly, “the overwhelming focus of popular and even scholarly
attention” (p. 165). He goes as far as to reckon that “gassing was really
epiphenomenal to the Germans' slaughter of the Jews” (p. 533, n. 81) and
that “the imbalance of attention devoted to the gas chambers needs to be
corrected” (p. 535).
° The Nuremberg Judgement
The Fabius-Gayssot Act of 1990 forbids the “challenging” solely of
the parts of the Nuremberg judgement (30 September and 1 October 1946) relating
to “crimes against humanity”, among which the use of execution gas chambers.
But it can be remarked that, of the 84,000 words of the judgement's French
version, only 520, extremely vague, are devoted to the gas chambers. That
amount represents 1/160th of the text, or 0.62%. In other words, 99.38%
of the judgement does not deal with these gas chambers.
° Why Such Discretion?
As for the various reasons for which Eisenhower, Churchill, de Gaulle,
Elie Wiesel, René Rémond, Daniel Goldhagen, and the very text of the Nuremberg
judgement are so reserved on the subject of the Nazi gas chambers, the revisionists
have explanations which the Fabius-Gayssot Act forbids them to put forth.
(*) Crusade in Europe by Eisenhower (1948)
is a book of 559 pages; the six volumes of The Second World War by Churchill
(1948-1954) total 4,448 pages, and de Gaulle's Mémoires de guerre (three
volumes, 1954-1959), 2,054, making for an overall mass of 7,061 pages
(not including the introductory parts) published from 1948 to 1959,
in which one will find no mention either of Nazi “gas chambers”, a “genocide”
of the Jews, or of the “six million” Jewish victims of the war.
This text, less the final section headed “Why Such Discretion?”, was published
in New Year's Day issues by Rivarol under the title “Avez-vous des textes?”
(Have you any Texts?), p. 2, and, with some slight modifications, by National
Hebdo under the title “Précisions sur le détail” (Precisions on the Detail),
p. 15.
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