LIES, DAMN LIES, AND FREEDOM OF SPEECH
by Al Pope, Yukon News
Yukon News (Yukon)
October 16, 2006 Monday
Final Edition
Last week, the French National Assembly voted 106-19 in favour of a
bill to recognize the Turkish slaughter of Armenians during and after
the First World War as genocide, and to make denial of that genocide
punishable by a fine of up to 45,000 Euros.
The bill doesn't become law unless passed by the senate, but it's
already got Turkey very nervous about its ongoing bid to enter the
European Community.
During the First World War, the Ottoman Empire embarked on a program
of what we have since come to know as "ethnic cleansing" against its
Armenian subjects.
Turkish soldiers burned entire towns and villages, slaughtering at
least 300,000 people.
Then they began a "resettlement program," in which Armenians were
forced to march in their tens of thousands to starvation camps in
the Syrian desert.
The Turkish government doesn't entirely deny that these events
took place.
The Ottomans even went so far as to indict three of their own
commanders for crimes against the Armenians -- though the indictment
is a blatant whitewash for the Young Turks, who largely perpetrated
the atrocities.
What they do say is, and what is almost always said in these cases,
is that the slaughter was mutual, that the Armenians were allied
with Russia against the Ottomans, and that war crimes were committed
against Turks in about equal proportion to those committed by Turks.
No one but the Turkish government seems inclined to endorse this view
of events.
On the surface of it, it would appear that there's ample precedent
for a law banning denial of a genocide.
France, Canada, and dozens of other countries have laws against denial
of the Nazi Holocaust, even though Holocaust deniers cast themselves
simply as historians whose view of the events of the Second World
War differ from historical orthodoxy.
Paradoxically, laws against holocaust denial exist almost exclusively
in countries that also enjoy the constitutional guarantee of freedom
of speech.
What makes this one particular slaughter, the Nazi Holocaust, so
sacrosanct that democracies are willing to abandon one of their first
principals to protect the official history?
It's perfectly legal to dispute the number of witches burned alive by
the Christians, the number of aboriginal victims of the Indian Wars,
the number of Ukrainians starved to death by Stalin.
In France you may legally make the claim that French troops never
murdered Algerian civilians, that Joan of Arc never died at the stake,
that there was no Reign of Terror, no Robespierre, no Guillotine,
no Napoleon.
It would be ridiculous, but it would not be against the law.
It's perfectly legal for the United States to reject sound studies
showing that their war in Iraq is responsible for 600,000 deaths,
and here in Canada even the prime minister may claim that it is no
crime for warplanes to target apartment buildings and ambulances.
But there is a difference, and the Holocaust is a special case.
There is a good reason why almost every country that was involved in
the Second World War has banned Holocaust denial.
It's not to spare the feelings of the survivors, or to maintain the
former Axis powers in a permanent state of guilt.
Holocaust denial is banned because of the motives of the deniers,
which are without exception purely vicious and have nothing to do
with history.
There is no reasonable historical dispute about the existence of the
Nazi death camps, about their utter barbarity, or about the fact that
millions died there.
Holocaust denial is not history, it's hate.
Its perpetrators aren't historians, they're neo-Nazis and anti-Semites
with an axe to grind.
They deliberately twist history in order to enlist new recruits into
violent ultra-right-wing groups.
To stop them, legislators around the world have taken the extraordinary
step of banning the publication of Nazi lies.
Does France have a strong anti-Armenian movement that uses genocide
denial to advance its cause?
Do right-wing extremists congregate around the belief that an
international Armenian conspiracy suppresses historical truth in
order to advance its program of world domination?
Is Europe plagued by outbreaks of neo-Young-Turk Skinhead violence?
No. What France has is half a million Armenian voters, and an election
year coming up.
Afraid of the voting power of that block, the deputies of the National
Assembly are willing to criminalize dissent.
Nazism is a tenacious and dangerous political movement, which has
never gone away, and Holocaust denial is one of its tools.
We place this limit on the right of freedom of speech to protect our
society against the persistent menace of Nazism.
It's a questionable tactic, and may simply play into the Nazis' hand,
permitting them to masquerade as free-speech advocates.
At any rate, it's a law to be watched constantly for signs of abuse,
and not a policy to be expanded to fit every case, however horrific
the context.
It's not to correct history that we round up the Holocaust deniers;
it's to protect ourselves today.
In the absence of a comparable threat, there's no excuse for
governments interfering in the business of historians.
The world is full of liars.
War criminals, in particular, are always liars, because they have
to be.
What the French deputies have failed to recognize is that in a free
society you can't ban lies.
All you can do is tell the truth and try to make it stick.
Al Pope won the 2002 Ma Murray Award for Best Columnist in BC/Yukon.
His novel, Bad Latitudes, is available in bookstores.
by Al Pope, Yukon News
Yukon News (Yukon)
October 16, 2006 Monday
Final Edition
Last week, the French National Assembly voted 106-19 in favour of a
bill to recognize the Turkish slaughter of Armenians during and after
the First World War as genocide, and to make denial of that genocide
punishable by a fine of up to 45,000 Euros.
The bill doesn't become law unless passed by the senate, but it's
already got Turkey very nervous about its ongoing bid to enter the
European Community.
During the First World War, the Ottoman Empire embarked on a program
of what we have since come to know as "ethnic cleansing" against its
Armenian subjects.
Turkish soldiers burned entire towns and villages, slaughtering at
least 300,000 people.
Then they began a "resettlement program," in which Armenians were
forced to march in their tens of thousands to starvation camps in
the Syrian desert.
The Turkish government doesn't entirely deny that these events
took place.
The Ottomans even went so far as to indict three of their own
commanders for crimes against the Armenians -- though the indictment
is a blatant whitewash for the Young Turks, who largely perpetrated
the atrocities.
What they do say is, and what is almost always said in these cases,
is that the slaughter was mutual, that the Armenians were allied
with Russia against the Ottomans, and that war crimes were committed
against Turks in about equal proportion to those committed by Turks.
No one but the Turkish government seems inclined to endorse this view
of events.
On the surface of it, it would appear that there's ample precedent
for a law banning denial of a genocide.
France, Canada, and dozens of other countries have laws against denial
of the Nazi Holocaust, even though Holocaust deniers cast themselves
simply as historians whose view of the events of the Second World
War differ from historical orthodoxy.
Paradoxically, laws against holocaust denial exist almost exclusively
in countries that also enjoy the constitutional guarantee of freedom
of speech.
What makes this one particular slaughter, the Nazi Holocaust, so
sacrosanct that democracies are willing to abandon one of their first
principals to protect the official history?
It's perfectly legal to dispute the number of witches burned alive by
the Christians, the number of aboriginal victims of the Indian Wars,
the number of Ukrainians starved to death by Stalin.
In France you may legally make the claim that French troops never
murdered Algerian civilians, that Joan of Arc never died at the stake,
that there was no Reign of Terror, no Robespierre, no Guillotine,
no Napoleon.
It would be ridiculous, but it would not be against the law.
It's perfectly legal for the United States to reject sound studies
showing that their war in Iraq is responsible for 600,000 deaths,
and here in Canada even the prime minister may claim that it is no
crime for warplanes to target apartment buildings and ambulances.
But there is a difference, and the Holocaust is a special case.
There is a good reason why almost every country that was involved in
the Second World War has banned Holocaust denial.
It's not to spare the feelings of the survivors, or to maintain the
former Axis powers in a permanent state of guilt.
Holocaust denial is banned because of the motives of the deniers,
which are without exception purely vicious and have nothing to do
with history.
There is no reasonable historical dispute about the existence of the
Nazi death camps, about their utter barbarity, or about the fact that
millions died there.
Holocaust denial is not history, it's hate.
Its perpetrators aren't historians, they're neo-Nazis and anti-Semites
with an axe to grind.
They deliberately twist history in order to enlist new recruits into
violent ultra-right-wing groups.
To stop them, legislators around the world have taken the extraordinary
step of banning the publication of Nazi lies.
Does France have a strong anti-Armenian movement that uses genocide
denial to advance its cause?
Do right-wing extremists congregate around the belief that an
international Armenian conspiracy suppresses historical truth in
order to advance its program of world domination?
Is Europe plagued by outbreaks of neo-Young-Turk Skinhead violence?
No. What France has is half a million Armenian voters, and an election
year coming up.
Afraid of the voting power of that block, the deputies of the National
Assembly are willing to criminalize dissent.
Nazism is a tenacious and dangerous political movement, which has
never gone away, and Holocaust denial is one of its tools.
We place this limit on the right of freedom of speech to protect our
society against the persistent menace of Nazism.
It's a questionable tactic, and may simply play into the Nazis' hand,
permitting them to masquerade as free-speech advocates.
At any rate, it's a law to be watched constantly for signs of abuse,
and not a policy to be expanded to fit every case, however horrific
the context.
It's not to correct history that we round up the Holocaust deniers;
it's to protect ourselves today.
In the absence of a comparable threat, there's no excuse for
governments interfering in the business of historians.
The world is full of liars.
War criminals, in particular, are always liars, because they have
to be.
What the French deputies have failed to recognize is that in a free
society you can't ban lies.
All you can do is tell the truth and try to make it stick.
Al Pope won the 2002 Ma Murray Award for Best Columnist in BC/Yukon.
His novel, Bad Latitudes, is available in bookstores.