If my father had been murdered and someone came along
and told me that he had died peacefully in his sleep,
and that person claimed I was a liar, although I had
witnessed my father's murder, I would get a tad upset,
too.

If someone told you that the deaths and mayhem during
Partition had never happened, what would you say? 

Would you accept it as just another opinion?

-Frank

--- Biju Chacko <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Hi,
> 
> Somehow, I'm not very comfortable about this. To me,
> freedom of speech
> is meaningless unless it protects the right to say
> things that are
> objectionable.
> 
> As has been attributed to Voltaire: "I disapprove of
> what you say, but
> I will defend to the death your right to say it."
> 
> -- b
> 
> 
> http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4446646.stm
> 
> Austria holds 'Holocaust denier'
> David Irving
> Irving maintains his conclusions come from serious
> research
> British revisionist historian David Irving is being
> held in Austria
> under laws against denying the Holocaust.
> 
> An interior ministry spokesman said police in the
> province of Styria
> acted on a warrant issued in 1989 to arrest him last
> Friday.
> 
> Mr Irving was on his way to give a lecture in the
> capital, Vienna.
> 
> In his books, Mr Irving has argued that the scale of
> the extermination
> of the Jews by the Nazis in World War II has been
> exaggerated.
> 
> He also claimed that Nazi leader Adolf Hitler knew
> nothing of the Holocaust.
> 
> He told a libel hearing in London in 2000 that there
> had been no gas
> chambers at the Auschwitz camp.
> 
> He lost the case and the judge branded him "an
> active Holocaust denier".
> 
> 'Anti-Semitic'
> 
> A spokesman for the Austrian interior ministry,
> Rudolf Gollia, told
> the BBC that Mr Irving was first taken to the town
> of Graz, but was
> now in custody in Vienna.
> 
> Anti-Nazi groups in the UK congratulated the
> Austrian government.
> 
> The chairman of the Holocaust Educational Trust,
> Lord Greville Janner,
> said he hoped the move would "lead to a successful
> prosecution".
> 
> The head of the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust said
> denial was not a
> matter of opinion.
> 
> "Austrian law demands incisive action to protect its
> citizens from a
> repeat of the past," he added.
> 
> Mr Irving was previously arrested in Austria in
> 1984.
> 
> This time, the historian was stopped near the town
> of Hartberg while
> reportedly on his way to address a students' club in
> Vienna.
> 
> Mr Irving came into the spotlight in 2000 when he
> sued US academic
> Deborah Lipstadt for describing him as a "Holocaust
> denier" in her
> 1994 work Denying the Holocaust: The Growing Assault
> on Truth and
> Memory.
> 
> Giving his verdict, the British judge said Mr Irving
> was "an active
> Holocaust denier; that he is anti-Semitic and racist
> and that he
> associates with right-wing extremists who promote
> neo-Nazism".
> 
> 



                
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