http://www.arabnews.com/?page=7&section=0&article=90123&d=17&m=12&y=2006&pix=opinion.jpg&category=Opinion

            Sunday, 17, December, 2006 (27, Dhul Qa`dah, 1427)


                  The Nauseating Holocaust Conference
                  Sir Cyril Townsend, Arab News
                 
                    
                  There are certain things in life that should never happen - 
but they do! In this category I put the nauseating conference that Iran has 
just staged, for two days in a northern superb of its capital, on the Holocaust.

                  The world's historians agree, apart from a tiny minority that 
includes some with a political agenda, that 6 million Jews, and other 
disfavored groups such as Poles and gypsies, were murdered by the Nazi regime 
in Germany during the Second World War.

                  In Europe, in America and in Israel there are museums that go 
into this mass murder in very great detail. Individuals who so died have had 
their names and particulars carefully recorded. Individuals who survived the 
concentration camps have been interviewed at length. Countless books have been 
written, films made and television documentaries shown. What made this mass 
killing so repellent was that industrial and scientific methods were employed 
by the Nazis to achieve their gruesome strategic aims. Rounding up and killing 
such a number of fellow humans is not an easy task, and bodies and belongings 
have to be disposed of. To deny the Holocaust ever took place is like telling 
the Japanese that Hiroshima was not the first target of the atomic bomb on Aug. 
6, 1945.

                  I don't think we really know why President Mahmoud 
Ahmadinejad wanted to stage such a despicable event, although numerous reasons 
have been stated officially. It was an affront to the suffering of mankind. It 
received mass condemnation from continent to continent.

                  My suspicion is that the president is anxious to rally 
further popular support for Iran's nuclear policies as the United Nations 
debates sanctions on his country. He is also refusing to have any serious 
discussions with America over the plight of the Iraqis , which may attract 
criticism in Iran. Many professional Iranians are alarmed at the isolation of 
their country, which damages investment in the economy.

                  It was not unknown for his predecessors to refer in their 
Friday speeches to the destruction of Israel. He has taken this theme further. 
He has described Israel as a "tumor" that he thought should be "wiped off the 
map" or somehow moved to Alaska or Europe. Inevitably such wild remarks are 
seen in the context of the possibility of Iran having nuclear tips for its 
numerous long-range missiles. In December 2005 he said: "They have fabricated a 
legend under the name 'Massacre of the Jews,' and they hold it higher than God 
himself, religion itself and the prophets themselves." A few weeks earlier he 
had told an audience: "Anyone who signs a treaty which recognizes the entity of 
Israel means he has signed the surrender of the Muslim world."

                  I find the words of Mohammad Khatami, his reformist 
predecessor who recently received an honorary degree at St. Andrews University 
in Scotland, much more responsible. He said this year: "We should speak out if 
even a single Jew is killed." He believed the Holocaust should be recognized: 
"even if this historic reality has been misused and there is enormous pressure 
on the Palestinian people." 

                  Iran's Foreign Minister, Manouchehr Mottaki, tried a 
different tack when he welcomed participants to the conference: "The aim of 
this conference is not to deny or confirm the Holocaust. Its main aim is to 
create an opportunity for thinkers who cannot express their views freely in 
Europe about the Holocaust." However the Deputy Foreign Minister Mohammadi 
declared the conference would address issues such as: "Whether the gas chambers 
were actually used by the Nazis." While I think it is a big mistake to have 
laws against Holocaust denial, such as in Austria, Belgium and France, most 
member states of the European Union, including the United Kingdom, do not.

                  It was interesting that Khaled Kasab Mahameed, who is an 
outspoken Palestinian lawyer living in Israel, was not given a visa to attend, 
although he had been invited to speak. He has established the Arab Institute 
for Holocaust Research and Education in Nazareth, the Arab world's first such 
museum. He was hoping to challenge Holocaust deniers during the conference. He 
is convinced that the questioning of "such huge, monstrous horror" harmed the 
Palestinian cause, and that the "study, analysis and acknowledgement" of the 
Holocaust by Arabs is important for a durable peace between the Palestinians 
and the Israelis.

                  It was also interesting that dozens of Iranian students burnt 
pictures of President Ahmadinejad and described the conference as "shameful," 
as he gave a speech on Dec. 11 at a university in Tehran. They chanted "death 
to the dictator." They complained the conference "has brought to our country 
Nazis and racists from around the world" as, indeed, it did.

                  We should not doubt that many millions of Iranians will have 
been furious at the considerable damage done by this grotesque event to the 
image of Iran.
                 
           
     

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