The “Töben Case” as seen by Voltaire
22 August 2000 (Corrected 6 September)
For the historian, the sociologist, or the jurist, the case of Australian
revisionist Fredrick Töben is one of the simplest and most instructive.
It is also both appalling and amusing.
One day, moved by curiosity, this German-born Australian left the antipodes
on a journey to Europe in order to confer with an individual who had coined
the phrase « No holes, no “Holocaust” ». From there he went on to Poland,
to Auschwitz, where with his own eyes he observed that, in the effective
absence of any “holes” in the collapsed roof of an alleged homicidal gas
chamber, there was cause to doubt whether such chemical slaughterhouses
had ever existed at that spot, the veritable centre of the “Holocaust”.
Finally, on a pilgrimage to the Germanic lands, he shared his doubts and
asked for explanations, an act which earned him forthwith a stay in prison.

Fredrick Töben at the gates to Auschwitz-Birkenau
Voltaire would have liked this “affaire Calas” (of a less tragic sort).
From it he could have drawn inspiration for a tale entitled: The Emperor’s
New Clothes or The Imposture. It seems right to imagine that, as in
a classical French play, the story should evolve in five stages.
In the first of these stages, our hero from the other hemisphere hears
tell that a certain European emperor, dear to the Jews and thus also to
today’s Germans, is, in the eyes of his court, bedecked in the most extraordinary
attire, whilst in reality he is quite simply naked. It is said that some
ingenious rascals had pretended to create for the emperor garments of an
exceedingly rare cloth, costing a fortune. In the next stage,
our Australian, modern-day Huron of the Voltaire tale Le Huron ou l’Ingénu,
armed with some advice on how to carry out his inquiry arrives in Europe
and prepares to see for himself. Once on location, he gets the impression
that this emperor could well be naked. In a third stage, he proceeds to
inquire of those around him, going so far as to whisper to the courtiers:
“Is your emperor perhaps naked?” For want of a fitting reply, he resolves
to go to the Germanic lands and consult a man of the craft. This latter
person, most certainly a German and perhaps a Jew as well, has a reputation,
the world over, for such good knowledge of the solution to the riddle that
he will not abide any answer other than his own. This individual, prosecutor
of woeful mien, invites the sceptic to come back to see him the next day
in order to get his answer. This our Australian does not fail to do. There,
in the prosecutor’s study, with a stranger present, he is asked to repeat
his question. Which he does. And so it is that, in a fifth and final stage,
the question-man finds himself behind the bars of a German jail.
In the reality of the Töben case, the prosecutor was a man called Heiko
Klein, the stranger was a police officer and the jail was, for seven months,
that of Mannheim.
What followed would equally have inspired Voltaire. It throws a stark
light on the way in which the German justice system works at present and
on the mode of conduct adopted by a large number of Western democracies
as soon as the most hallowed of their taboos, that of the “Holocaust”, appears
to be in peril.
Removed from his jail cell, F. Töben, in handcuffs and duly escorted,
was led into a courtroom. But, given the gravity of his case, he had the
right only to a mock trial. He was, of course, provided with counsel, but
the latter was made to understand that he would do well to keep quiet if
he did not want to join his client in prison. The lawyer kept quiet and
F. Töben was found guilty, sentenced to time served and a heavy fine, and
then released on bail the next day.
In Australia, the authorities were careful not to intervene in favour
of the victim. Indeed they fell little short of applauding the German judges’
decision, most likely envying the German magistrates freedom of action.
In the rest of the Western world, everyone, by and large, fell into tune
with Germany and Australia. The “élites” in place kept silent or approved.
None of them got the idea of decrying an outrage. No petitions in support
of the heretic, no demonstrations. “Amnesty International” considered it
natural and normal that an intellectual, an academic should be so treated.
In effect, precisely because he is a professor, many must be of the opinion
that F. Töben surely ought to know that some questions simply offend decency.
Twenty
years earlier
Twenty years previously, I myself had lived through an experience comparable
to that of my Australian colleague. In the columns of Le Monde (Feb.21,
1979), thirty-four French historians — among whom some, like Fernand Braudel,
enjoyed international renown — had issued a joint declaration rebuking me
for having put a question that propriety should have forbidden me
to conceive.
I had discovered that the existence and operation of the alleged Nazi gas
chambers were, for physical and chemical reasons understandable to a child
of eight, fundamentally impossible. In the late seventies I had therefore
asked Germany’s accusers how, for them, such mass murder by gassing had
been technically possible. The answer took some time in coming, then gushed
forth:
It must not be asked how, technically, such mass murder was possible.
It was technically possible, given that it took place. That is the requisite
point of departure of any historical inquiry on this subject. It is incumbent
upon us to simply state this truth : there is not, there cannot be any debate
on the existence of the gas chambers.
I had the awkwardness to think then that I had just brought off a decisive
victory. My adversaries were taking flight. They showed themselves to be
unable to reply to my arguments except by spin. For me, the myth of the
alleged gas chambers had just breathed its last.
Pressac’s surrender, Spielberg’s triumph
Of course, from a scientific standpoint, those gas chambers had fallen
back into nothingness. The following years were to confirm this. From 1979
to 1995, every attempt to demonstrate their existence would abort: the Rückerls
and Langbeins, the Hilbergs and Brownings, the Klarfelds and Pressacs would
all suffer the most humiliating failures. It is not I who say this but rather
one of their keenest apostles, historian Jacques Baynac. In 1996, in two
long and particularly well-informed articles, this fierce opponent of the
revisionists drafted, with a heavy heart, an assessment of the vain tries
to establish the existence of the Nazi gas chambers (Le Nouveau Quotidien
[of Lausanne], Sept. 2 and 3, 1996). Baynac’s conclusion: the historians
had failed totally and, as a result, recourse was had to the judiciary in
order to silence the revisionists.
In
March 2000, Jean-Claude Pressac was, in a way, to announce his own surrender.
On this point one may read an interview with him published by the French
academic historian (and staunch anti-revisionist) Valérie Igounet in her
book Histoire du négationnisme en France (Paris, Éditions du Seuil,
2000, p. 613-652). The last two pages of the interview are staggering: J.-C.
Pressac states that the “rubbish bins of history” await… the official story
of the concentration camps! This text of a recorded talk, supposedly of
June 15, 1995, must have been somewhat modified afterwards.
But, as is well known, the sphere of science, on the one hand, and that
of the mass media, on the other, are plainly different in nature. In the
latter sphere, while the Nazi gas chambers have had a very
rough time of it, the adjoining myths of the genocide and the six million
have prospered thanks to a thunderous promotion. Hilberg and his like may
have failed in their work as historians but Spielberg, the master of special
effects cinema, triumphs with his holocaustic epics. Today, the kosher version
of Second World War history has force of law and of custom to such a degree
that the nasty “deniers” seem annihilated.
The particular case of F. Töben
Nevertheless, a number of these rebels called revisionists remain alive,
and very much so, to the despair of the thought police and their lackeys
in the prosecution service, the judiciary, and the media. Among these revisionists
stands F.Töben, who, upon leaving prison, did not have the decency to show
the least contrition or, as is said today, repentance. It may be feared
that, for him, the emperor (of the Jews) will stay definitively naked,
and that he will continue going about repeating “No holes, no
‘Holocaust’”, or, in allusion to the non-existent fabric , “No clothes,
no ‘Holocaust.’”
Beginning with the indomitable Paul Rassinier, a good many other revisionists
besides our Australian have endured or still endure a thousand travails.
A few months ago, one of them, in Germany, was driven to suicide. Werner
Pfeifenberger, a professor in Münster, killed himself on May 13, 2000 after
years of an exhausting struggle against his persecutors. On 25 April 1995,
in a Munich square, Reinhold Elstner immolated himself by fire.
What distinguishes the revisionist Töben’s case from that of others is
its simple and swift unwinding, and therefore its illustrative value. One
might call it a synopsis, an all-in-a-nutshell sketch. It is nothing but
the story of a man who, for having made a prosaic remark on a material fact,
finds himself in prison. To whoever cared to listen, he had, in fact, held
forth thus: “At Auschwitz-Birkenau, day after day, a deadly substance was
apparently poured through four openings, specially made in a reinforced
concrete roof, so as to kill, each time, the thousands of persons confined
in the room below. How could such an operation be possible given that manifestly,
as one may remark today, none of those four openings ever existed? Of course,
the roof is now in ruins but, on the surface, no trace of those openings
can be made out and, if one slides down beneath the ruin, one can see also
that the ceiling has never had any openings in it. How do you explain that?”
He received no answer. Then, he sought out a man who, by definition, must
know the answer to his query (and the answer to several others of the same
calibre, -- material and rudimentary). As his only reply, that individual
deemed it necessary to throw the inquirer into jail. But, once out of jail,
what did our impertinent friend do? He repeated his question, but this time
urbi et orbi, and with renewed vigour.
A story edifying in its brevity, and not without spice.
Töben in an Ingénue Role from a Tale by Voltaire
I shall say it again: a Frenchman familiar with Voltaire is tempted to
see in this antipodean a reincarnation, in his own mode, of Candide or the
Huron (the original Ingénu). Under Voltaire’s pen, the ingenuousness,
real or feigned, of those two heroes, wholly of his imagining, ended
up putting them through numerous ordeals -- but it also helped them overcome
adversity, and not without providing some interesting perspectives for the
reader on the beliefs and superstitions to be found at the foundations of
our society and institutions. The story of Fredrick Töben (German as was,
in fact, Candide) would probably have appealed to Voltaire on another score,
that of the execrable intolerance of the Jews and their high priests (See
: Henri Labroue, Voltaire antijuif [Paris, Les Documents
contemporains, 1942].)
Today, in France, the re-editions of some of the works of the “patriarch
of Ferney” are expurgated, for fear of displeasing the Jews. No one can
doubt that, if he came back to this world, Voltaire, following Töben’s example,
would be “put inside” for his disrespectful questions. Even Switzerland,
where in his time Voltaire knew he could find refuge, would today
not fail to lock him.
********
A note to the reader
: Voltaire (1694-1778) was notably the author of Candide ou l’Optimisme
(philosophical tale, 1759), Le Huron ou l’Ingénu (satirical tale,
1767) as well as the Dictionnaire philosophique ou la Raison par alphabet
(1764). He intervened in a series of court cases, such as that of the
Calvinist Jean Calas, to speak out against what he called the crimes of
intolerance or of superstition. He spent his last twenty years at Ferney,
near the Swiss border.
Note on a false
attribution to Voltaire: It is by mistake that the following remark
is attributed to Voltaire: “I disapprove of what you say but I will defend
to the death your right to say it”, sometimes with the adjunct “Monsieur
l’abbé…”. In reality, a London author, in a book published in 1906, wrote
the following, on the subject of the attitude taken by Voltaire in case
of intense disagreement with an adversary: ”I
disapprove of what you say but I will defend to the death your right to
say it was his attitude now.” The author was called Stephen G. Tallentyre
(real name: Evelyn B. Hall) and the book was entitled The Friends of
Voltaire. Source : Paul F. Boller Jr and
John George, They Never Said It: A Book of Fake Quotes, Misquotes, and
Misleading Attributions, New York and Oxford, O.U.P., 1989, p. 124-126.
Such,anyway, is the information that I have drawn from an article in
L’Intermédiaire des chercheurs et curieux (Nov. 1993, p. 1157), kindly
sent to me seven years ago by the Belgian revisionist Pierre Moreau, to
whom I had confided my failure to find the remark in any of Voltaire’s writings.
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