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- <text id=93TT2300>
- <title>
- Dec. 27, 1993: The Arts & Media:Press
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 27, 1993 The New Age of Angels
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ARTS & MEDIA, Page 83
- Press
- Debating The Holocaust
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Those who deny the Nazi atrocities are finding a platform in
- college newspapers and raising a First Amendment ruckus
- </p>
- <p>By Leon Jaroff--Reported by Wendy Cole/New York and Dan Cray/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> David Turner was under siege last week. A junior at Brandeis
- University in Waltham, Massachusetts, and editor in chief of
- the weekly Justice, the student newspaper, he had become a pariah
- on campus. His phone rang around the clock with irate calls
- from students and alumni denouncing him as a "monster" and an
- "anti-Semite." His car was defaced and he was threatened with
- bodily harm. Some 2,000 copies of Justice were stolen and presumably
- destroyed, and when the issue was reprinted, 200 students rallied
- in protest and a guard had to be assigned to ensure the paper's
- safe distribution.
- </p>
- <p> The turmoil was prompted by an advertisement in Justice that
- attacked the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington as
- a "false and manipulative" representation; as well, it questioned
- whether the Nazi gas chambers ever existed and whether the genocide
- of European Jews ever really occurred. The outcry on the largely
- Jewish Brandeis campus was understandable but somewhat misdirected;
- the decision to run the ad had been made by the Justice editorial
- board, on which the editor in chief has no vote.
- </p>
- <p> Brandeis was not alone. Although campus newspapers at such schools
- as Harvard, Yale, Berkeley and Wisconsin have rejected Holocaust-denial
- ads and commentaries, they appeared this fall in student publications
- at Northwestern, the University of Michigan, Notre Dame and
- Georgetown, among others. Everywhere, they provoked angry letters
- to the editors and heated campus debates.
- </p>
- <p> These ads--and others that have appeared in the collegiate
- press since the 1991-92 school year--were placed by the Committee
- for Open Debate on the Holocaust, which is headed by Bradley
- R. Smith, 63, a Visalia, California, pamphleteer. Smith, who
- spends most of his waking hours in Holocaust denial, wants open
- debate, he says, because the possibility that the Holocaust
- was a hoax goes unreported. Much of the material on which Smith
- bases his claims comes from the pseudointellectual journal of
- the Institute for Historical Review, a Holocaust-denial group
- in Costa Mesa, California, and the writings of Mark Weber, a
- former member of the neo-Nazi National Youth Alliance. Says
- Smith: "I think that journalists feel their career is threatened
- if they treat revisionist research in an objective way."
- </p>
- <p> Why do college editors and advertising staffs publish Smith's
- writings? "Hiding the ideas of Holocaust revisionists won't
- make them go away," says Josh Dubow, editor in chief of the
- University of Michigan's Daily. "The best way to make them go
- away is to bring them out in the open and explain why they're
- wrong." That, he says, was why the Daily, in publishing a letter
- from Smith this fall, accompanied it with an explanation, as
- well as an editorial and an op-ed piece disputing Smith's arguments.
- While publication of the letter stirred anger on the Michigan
- campus, it was muted compared with the reaction in 1991 when
- the Daily published a full-page Smith ad and the next day, in
- an editorial, naively supported its decision on First Amendment
- grounds. While that amendment guarantees Smith the right to
- disseminate his views, it does not obligate editors--or anyone
- else--to publish them.
- </p>
- <p> Student editors may be misled by the approach of Smith and other
- Holocaust revisionists, says Lawrence Jeffries of Atlanta's
- Center for Democratic Renewal (CDR) which monitors extremist
- groups. "They don't present themselves in a Heil Hitler sort
- of way," he explains. "They seek to be very intellectual in
- their presentation of these arguments." The CDR's goal, says
- Jeffries, "is to rip the sheets off these people and expose
- them for what they are--anti-Semitic extremists trying to
- redefine what actually happened 50 years ago."
- </p>
- <p> Smith, who solicits donations in his ads, says he targets campus
- publications because he cannot afford the rates of major newspapers.
- But Deborah Lipstadt, an Emory University religion professor,
- suggests other reasons. In the atmosphere of academic freedom
- on most U.S. campuses, she says, students support the principle
- of free expression and are more likely to publish views that
- are repugnant or blatantly false. Also, says Lipstadt, "there
- may be a lot of young people who don't know about the Holocaust.
- They may wonder if there isn't something to these arguments."
- Indeed, a 1992 Roper survey found that 39% of U.S. high school
- students--and 28% of adults--didn't know what the Holocaust
- was.
- </p>
- <p> Georgetown University's media board may well have had those
- statistics in mind when it censured the Voice, the school's
- weekly newsmagazine, for running the Smith ad. It not only required
- the publication to print an apology and donate the $200 received
- for the ad to the Holocaust Museum but, to further their education,
- ordered the three top editors to tour the museum with a Georgetown
- theology professor.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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