I found this open letter in Le Monde and translated it into English. -- Yoshie

<http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/alsafadi141206.html>
Other Victims of Denial
by Mahmoud Al-Safadi

Mr. President, I write to you following the announcement of your
intention to organize a conference on the Holocaust in Teheran on
11-12 December, and I sincerely hope that this letter will be brought
to your attention.

First of all, allow me to introduce myself: Mahmoud Al-Safadi, a
former prisoner from occupied Jerusalem.  I was released less than
three months ago from the Israeli prison where I had been locked up
for eighteen years for having been a member of the Popular Front for
the Liberation of Palestine and having taken an active part in
resistance to the occupation during the first Intifada.  Since you
were elected president, I have followed your declarations with great
interest -- in particular those relating to the Holocaust.  I respect
your opposition to the American and Western injunctions concerning the
Iranian nuclear program and believe it legitimate that you complain of
the double standard that the world has with regard to the nuclear
development of certain regimes.

But I am furious about your insistence on claiming that the Holocaust
never took place and about your doubts about the number of Jews who
were murdered in the extermination and concentration camps, organized
massacres, and gas chambers, consequently denying the universal
historical significance of the Nazi period.

Allow me to say, Mr. President, with all due respect to you, that you
made these statements without really knowing the Nazi industry of
death.  To have read the works of some deniers seems to be enough for
you --  a little like a man who shouts above a well and hears only the
echo of his own voice.  I believe that a man in your position should
not make such an enormous error, because it could be turned against
him and, worse still, his people.

Like you and millions of people in the world -- among whom, alas, are
innumerable Palestinians and Arabs -- I was also convinced that the
Jews exaggerated and lied about the Holocaust, etc.,  even apart from
the fact that the Zionist movement and Israel use the Holocaust to
justify their policy, first of all against my own people.

My long imprisonment provided me with the occasion to read books and
articles that our ideology and social norms made inaccessible to us
outside the prison.  These documents gave me a thorough knowledge of
the history of the Nazi regime and genocide that it perpetrated.  At
the beginning of the 1990s, by reading articles written by the
Palestinian intellectuals Edward Said and Azmi Bishara, I discovered
facts and positions which contradicted mine and those of many
Palestinians.  Their writings having piqued my curiosity and given
birth inside me to the need to know more, I set about reading accounts
of survivors of the Holocaust and the Nazi occupation.  These
testimonies were written by people of various nationalities, Jews or
non-Jews.

The more I learned, the more I realized that the Holocaust was indeed
a historical fact and the more I became aware of the monumental
dimension of the crime committed by Nazi Germany against the Jews,
other social and national groups, and humanity in general.  I
discovered that Nazi Germany aspired to found a "new world order"
dominated by the "pure Aryan race" thanks to the physical annihilation
of "impure races" and the enslavement of other nations.  I discovered
that various "normal" official institutions -- bureaucracies, judicial
systems, medical and educational authorities, municipalities, railroad
companies, and others -- had taken part and collaborated in the
implementation of this new world order.  From a theoretical point of
view, this objective, just like the victories won at the time by the
Nazi armies of occupation, threatened the existence of the Arabs and
Muslims as well.

Whatever the number of victims -- Jewish and non-Jewish -- the crime
is monumental.  Any attempt to deny it deprives the denier of his own
humanity and sends him immediately to the side of torturers.  Whoever
denies the fact that this human disaster really took place should not
be astonished that others deny the sufferings and persecutions
inflicted on his own people by tyrannical leaders or foreign
occupiers.  Ask yourself, I beg you, the following question: were
hundreds of thousands of testimonies written about death camps, gas
chambers, ghettos, and mass murders committed by the German army, tens
of thousands of works of research based on German documents, numerous
filmed sequences, some of which were shot by German soldiers -- were
all these masses of evidence completely fabricated?

Can all that be summed up simply as an imperialist-Zionist plot?  Are
the confessions of high-ranking Nazis officials about their personal
role in the project of extermination of whole nations only the fruit
of the imagination of some disturbed spirit?

And all these heroic deeds of the people subjected to the German
occupation -- the first among whom were Russians, Polish, and
Yugoslavs -- only lies and gross exaggerations?  Could the struggle of
the Soviets against Nazi Germany be only a phantasm?  The Russians
continue to celebrate their victory over Nazi Germany and remember
millions of their civilian and military compatriots who lost their
lives in this struggle.  Are they lying, too?

I invite you to read historical studies and serious testimonies before
making your public statements.  You divide the world in two camps: the
imperialists-Zionists, who manufactured the myth of the Holocaust, and
the adversaries of imperialism, who know the truth and uncover the
plot.  Perhaps you think that the act of denying the Holocaust places
you at the vanguard of the Muslim world and that this refusal
constitutes a useful tool in the combat against American imperialism
and Western hegemony.  By doing so, you actually do great disservice
to the popular struggles the world over.

At best, you cover your people and yourself with ridicule in the eyes
of political forces who reject imperialism but cannot take your ideas
and arguments seriously, due to the fact that you obsessively deny the
existence of an abundantly documented and studied historical period
whose consequences are still felt and discussed today.

At worst, you discourage and weaken the political, social, and
intellectual forces who, in Europe and in the United States, reject
the policy of confrontation and war carried out by George Bush, but
are forced to conclude that you, too, jeopardize the world by your
declarations denying the genocide and by your nuclear program.

Concerning the struggle of my people for their independence and their
freedom: perhaps do you regard the negation of the Holocaust as an
expression of support for the Palestinians?  There, again, you are
mistaken.  We fight for our existence and our rights and against the
historical injustice which was inflicted on us in 1948.  We will not
win our victory and our independence by denying the genocide
perpetrated against the Jewish people, even though the forces who
occupy our country today and dispossess us are part of the Jewish
people.

--
Yoshie
<http://montages.blogspot.com/>
<http://mrzine.org>
<http://monthlyreview.org/>

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