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Irish Famine Education And The Holocaust "Straw Man"

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  • Irish Famine Education And The Holocaust "Straw Man"

    IRISH FAMINE EDUCATION AND THE HOLOCAUST "STRAW MAN"
    James Mullin

    American Chronicle
    July 8 2008
    CA

    When I first contacted Dr. Paul Winkler, Executive Director of the New
    Jersey Commission on Holocaust Education, and asked him to consider
    adding the study of the Great Irish Famine to the state curriculum,
    he asked me if I was claiming Genocide. I said I wanted the teachers
    and students to make up their own minds. He agreed with that approach.

    On Feb. 11th, 1996, a full seven months before New Jersey became the
    first state to approve a curriculum on the Irish Famine, the Sunday
    Telegraph of London published an article, "US Schools Say Irish Famine
    was Genocide".

    As expected, the Telegraph article was filled with misrepresentation,
    willful errors, and sentences like: "Hard-line Irish-American
    Nationalists have been increasingly vocal in their demands that the
    Famine be recognized as a Genocide".

    Still, it was surprising to read that, "the issue has divided the
    Irish-American community, with some moderate groups concerned that
    comparing the famine with the Nazi-inspired Holocaust will cause
    offense to Jews." I had not made, nor had I heard of any such
    comparisons; in addition, I had an excellent working relationship
    with the Commission, some of whose members were death camp survivors
    and former hidden children.

    The Holocaust comparison theme appeared again in an October 16th,
    Sunday Times article, "American Pupils Told Irish Famine was Act of
    British Genocide". It said that, "British diplomats in America are
    dismayed at the portrayal of the Irish famine as a genocide comparable
    to the mass extermination of six million Jews by the Nazis." Who was
    responsible for this "portrayal"?

    Since I subscribed to the Irish People, Irish Voice, Irish Echo, (New
    York) Irish Edition, (Philadelphia) and the Irish Democrat, (London)
    and had not read or heard of anyone making any such comparisons,
    I concluded that analogy was a propaganda device called the "straw
    man". Rather than answer to credible evidence of genocidal acts during
    the mass starvation, the British would argue that the "Famine" was
    not a genocide because it was not Holocaust.

    In October, 1996, New York Governor George Pataki signed an education
    law mandating instruction on the mass starvation in Ireland. He was
    attacked in a Sunday Times of London editorial entitled, "An Irish
    Hell, but not a Holocaust".

    Here was the propaganda masterstroke full blown. The Times editorial
    said, "It is true the British government does not come out particularly
    well from the tale...but to compare, as Mr. Pataki has done, its
    policy with that of Hitler toward the Jews is as unhistorical as it is
    offensive. (Not least to the Jews, the tragedy of whose Holocaust is
    necessarily lessened by comparison with an Irish catastrophe that was
    neither premeditated nor man-made.) To mistake these human errors and
    shortcomings for a Nazi-style policy of deliberate racial extermination
    is absurd." So absurd that the "straw man" can be easily knocked over.

    Governor Pataki had not mentioned the Holocaust in his speech on
    signing the bill into law, nor had his subsequent press release. The
    comparison was based on the simple fact that the newly signed Act
    added the words, "the mass starvation in Ireland from 1845 to 1850",
    to state education law which mandated instruction on "human rights
    issues, genocide, slavery and the Holocaust."

    British Ambassador John Kerr then carried the misrepresentation
    to the highest diplomatic levels, by attacking Governor Pataki in
    a letter he released to the press. It said: "It seems to me rather
    insulting to the many millions who suffered and died in concentration
    camps across Europe to imply that their man-made fate was in any way
    analogous to the natural disaster in Ireland a century before. The
    Famine, unlike the Holocaust, was not deliberate, not premeditated,
    not man-made, not genocide."

    On March 10th, 1997, the Washington Times Magazine, Insight, carried a
    full-page editorial, "You say Potato, They say Holocaust", illustrated
    with a photograph of a potato wrapped in barbed wire. It attacked
    Governor Pataki and the whole idea of Irish famine education: "The
    Holocaust was Hitler´s inhuman policy to eradicate Jews in Germany
    and from his Thousand-Year Reich. To equate the potato famine with
    that barbarism makes Pataki a contender for the title of "The Greatest
    Liar in America." The British-fabricated analogy was proving itself
    stronger than the truth because it made better copy.

    On Aug. 26th, 1997, the Boston Globe opposed Irish Famine education in
    a staff-written editorial entitled, "Unnecessary Curriculum Bill". It
    said, "As the Tolman bill is now worded, teachers might be encouraged
    to treat the Irish famine on the same level of moral depravity as
    the Armenian genocide and the Holocaust. That would be a misreading
    of the historical record. While the British approach to the mass
    starvation was often brutal, arrogant and unfeeling. No state-run
    death camps disfigured the Irish countryside." Did tens of thousands
    of homeless, starving people, their ruined hovels and mass graves
    "disfigure the countryside"?

    The argument that classroom discussion of the mass starvation in
    Ireland should be discouraged because British criminality did not match
    the barbarity of the Nazis during the Holocaust, is a pervasive and
    virulent virus imbedded in every dose of propaganda against Famine
    education. The perpetrators hope to convince everyone that because
    the Famine was not the Holocaust, it could not have been genocide.

    Instead of the British being forced to explain massive commodity
    exports and evictions during mass starvation, Irish Famine education
    activists were left to defend a "Famine is Holocaust" argument they
    never made.

    On September 17th, 1997 the Washington Post published "Ireland´s
    Famine Wasn´t Genocide" It was written by Timothy W. Guinnane,
    associate professor of economics at Yale University, and author of
    The Vanishing Irish: Households, Migration, and the Rural Economy in
    Post-Famine Ireland. It said, in part:

    "Several states have mandated that the Great Irish Famine of 1845-1850
    be taught in their high schools as an example of genocide, sometimes
    in courses originally intended for the study of the Holocaust... The
    reinterpretation of the famine as genocide has not been well
    received by scholars who study the Irish famine. Those who view the
    famine as genocide claim either that the government engineered the
    crisis or that its reaction to the blight promoted as many deaths
    as possible. ...But does the government´s inadequate response to
    the famine constitute genocide? The contrast with the Holocaust is
    instructive. The Nazis devoted considerable resources to finding and
    murdering Jews. The regime´s stated intention was the elimination
    of the Jewish people. Nothing like this can be claimed against the
    British government during the Irish famine. The British government´s
    indifference to the famine helped cause thousands of needless deaths,
    but it was indifference nonetheless, and not an active effort at
    systematic murder... To call the famine genocide cheapens the memories
    of both the famine´s victims and the victims of real genocides."

    While the Holocaust is the best documented, most systematic, ruthless
    and brutal genocide of the 20th century, it is not the definition of
    genocide. Since the United States and Britain are parties to the 1948
    Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide,
    the definition that applies is contained in Article II: ´In the
    present Convention, genocide means any of the following acts committed
    with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical,
    racial or religious group, as such: (a) Killing members of the group;
    (b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
    (c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated
    to bring about its phyisica1 destruction in whole or in part; (d)
    Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group; (e)
    Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.´

    Francis A. Boyle, Professor of International Law at the University
    of Illinois, has experience arguing matters of genocide before the
    International Court of Justice in The Hague. He wrote to the New Jersey
    Commission on Holocaust Education on May 2, 1996, saying, in part:

    "Clearly, during the years 1845 to 1850, the British government
    pursued a policy of mass starvation in Ireland with intent to destroy
    in substantial part the national, ethnical, and racial group commonly
    known as the Irish People, as such. In addition, this British policy
    of mass starvation in Ireland clearly caused serious bodily and
    mental harm to members of the Irish People within the meaning of
    Genocide Convention Article II (b). Furthermore, this British policy
    of mass starvation in Ireland deliberately inflicted on the Irish
    People conditions of life calculated to bring about their physical
    destruction in substantial part within the meaning of Article 11(c) of
    the 1948 Genocide Convention. Therefore, during the years 1845 to 1850
    the British government knowingly pursued a policy of mass starvation
    in Ireland that constituted acts of genocide against the Irish People."

    In December, 1848 (one hundred years before the 1948 Genocide
    Convention was signed) Cholera began to spread through many of
    the overcrowded workhouses, pauper hospitals, and crammed jails
    in Ireland. On April 26th, 1849, the Earl of Clarendon, the Lord
    Lieutenant of Ireland, wrote to Prime Minister Russell: "...it is
    enough to drive one mad, day after day, to read the appeals that
    are made and meet them all with a negative...At Westport, and other
    places in Mayo, they have not a shilling to make preparations for the
    cholera, but no assistance can be given, and there is no credit for
    anything, as all our contractors are ruined. Surely this is a state
    of things to justify you asking the House of Commons for an advance,
    for I don't think there is another legislature in Europe that would
    disregard such suffering as now exists in the west of Ireland, or
    coldly persist in a policy of extermination." No advance was granted.

    --Boundary_(ID_0MmikQzHEYzXXWs7cGokWA)--
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