ONLINE EDITION
Table of Contents:
Acknowledgments and Introduction
Chapter 1: Capitalizing The Holocaust
Chapter 2: Hoaxers, Hucksters, and History
Chapter 3: The Double Shakedown
Conclusion
See Norman G. Finkelsteins Website at:
http://www.normanfinkelstein.com
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Colin Robinson of Verso conceived the idea of this book. Roane Carey molded
my reflections into a coherent narrative. At every stage in the book's production
Noam Chomsky and Shifra Stern provided assistance. Jennifer Loewenstein
and Eva Schweitzer criticized various drafts. Rudolph Baldeo provided
personal support and encouragement. I am indebted to all of them. In these
pages I attempt to represent my parents' legacy. Accordingly, the book is
dedicated to my two siblings, Richard and Henry, and my nephew, David.
INTRODUCTION
This book is both an anatomy and an indictment of the Holocaust industry. In
the pages that follow, I will argue that "The Holocaust" is an ideological
representation of the Nazi holocaust.
1
Like most ideologies, it bears a
connection, if tenuous, with reality. The Holocaust is not an arbitrary but rather
an internally coherent construct. Its central dogmas sustain significant political
and class interests. Indeed, The Holocaust has proven to be an indispensable
ideological weapon. Through its deployment, one of the world's most
formidable military powers, with a horrendous human rights record, has cast
itself as a "victim" state, and the most successful ethnic group in the United
States has likewise acquired victim status. Considerable dividends accrue from
this specious victimhood — in particular, immunity to criticism, however
justified. Those enjoying this immunity, I might add, have not escaped the
moral corruptions that typically attend it. From this perspective, Elie Wiesel's
performance as official interpreter of The Holocaust is not happenstance.
Plainly he did not come to this position on account of his humanitarian
commitments or literary talents.
2
Rather, Wiesel plays this leading role because
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he unerringly articulates the dogmas of, and accordingly sustains the interests
underpinning, the Holocaust.
The initial stimulus for this book was Peter Novick's seminal study,
The
Holocaust in American Lfe,
which I reviewed for a British literary journal.
3
In
these pages the critical dialogue I entered in with Novick is broadened; hence,
the extensive number of references to his study. More a congeries of
provocative aper,cus than a sustained critique,
The Holocaust in American Life
belongs to the venerable American tradition of muckraking. Yet like most
muckrakers, Novick focuses only on the most egregious abuses. Scathing and
refreshing as it often is,
The Holocaust in American Lfe is
not a radical critique.
Root assumptions go unchallenged. Neither banal nor heretical, the book is
pitched to the controversial extreme of the mainstream spectrum. Predictably, it
received many, though mixed, notices in the American media.
Novick's central analytical category is "memory." Currently all the rage in the
ivory tower, "memory" is surely the most impoverished concept to come down
the academic pike in a long time. With the obligatory nod to Maurice
Halbwachs, Novick aims to demonstrate how "current concerns" shape
"Holocaust memory." Once upon a bme, dissenting intellectuals deployed
robust political categories such as "power" and "interests," on the one hand, and
"ideology," on the other. Today, all that remains is the bland, depoliticized
language of «concerns» and "memory." Yet given the evidence Novick
adduces, Holocaust memory
is
an ideological construct of vested interests.
Although chosen, Holocaust memory, according to Novick, is "more often than
not» arbitrary. The choice, he argues, is made not from «calculation of
advantages and disadvantages» but rather "without much thought for . . .
consequences."
4
The evidence suggests the opposite conclusion.
My original interest in the Nazi holocaust was personal. Both my father and
mother were survivors of the Warsaw Ghetto and the Nazi concentration
camps. Apart from my parents, every family member on both sides was
exterminated by the Nazis. My earliest memory, so to speak, of the Nazi
holocaust is my mother glued in front of the television watching the trial of
Adolf Eichmann (1961) when I came home from school. Although they had
been liberated from the camps only sixteen years before the trial, an
unbridgeable abyss always separated, in my mind, the parents I knew from
that.
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Photographs of my mother's family hung on the living-room wall. (None from
my father's family survived the war.) I could never quite make sense of my
connection with them, let alone conceive what happened. They were my
mother's sisters, brother and parents, not my aunts, uncle or grandparents. I
remember reading as a child John Hersey's
The Wall
and Leon Uris's
Mila 18,
both fictionalized accounts of the Warsaw Ghetto. (I still recall my mother
complaining that, engrossed in
The Wall,
she missed her subway stop on the
way to work.) Try as I did, I couldn't even for a moment make the imaginative
leap that would join my parents, in all their ordinariness, with that past.
Frankly, I still can't.
The more important point, however, is this. Apart from this phantom presence,
I do not remember the Nazi holocaust ever intruding on my childhood. The
main reason was that no one outside my family seemed to care about what had
happened. My childhood circle of friends read widely, and passionately debated
the events of the day. Yet I honestly do not recall a single friend (or parent of a
friend) asking a single question about what my mother and father endured. This
was not a respectful silence. It was simply indifference. In this light, one cannot
but be skeptical of the outpourings of anguish in later decades, after the
Holocaust industry was firmly established.
I sometimes think that American Jewry "discovering" the Nazi holocaust was
worse than its having been forgotten. True, my parents brooded in private; the
suffering they endured was not publicly validated. But wasn't that better than
the current crass exploitation of Jewish martyrdom? Before the Nazi holocaust
became The Holocaust, only a few scholarly studies such as Raul Hilberg's
The
Destruction of the European Jews
and memoirs such as Viktor Frankl's
Man's
Search for Meaning
and Ella Lingens-Reiner's
Prisoners of Fear
were
published on the subject.
5
But this small collection of gems is better than the
shelves upon shelves of shlock that now line libraries and bookstores.
Both my parents, although daily reliving that past until the day each died, lost
interest by the end of their lives in The Holocaust as a public spectacle. One of
my father's lifelong friends was a former inmate with him in
Auschwitz
, a
seemingly incorruptible left-wing idealist who on principle refused German
compensation after the war. Eventually he became a director of the Israeli
Holocaust museum, Yad Vashem. Reluctantly and with genuine
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disappointment, my father finally admitted that even this man had been
corrupted by the Holocaust industry, tailoring his beliefs for power and profit.
As the rendering of The Holocaust assumed ever more absurd forms, my
mother liked to quote (with intentional irony) Henry Ford: "History is bunk."
The tales of "Holocaust survivors"—all concentration camp inmates, all heroes
of the resistance — were a special source of wry amusement in my home. Long
ago John Stuart Mill recognized that truths not subject to continual challenge
eventually "cease to have the effect of truth by being exaggerated into
falsehood."
My parents often wondered why I would grow so indignant at the falsification
and exploitation of the Nazi genocide. The most obvious answer is that it has
been used to justify criminal policies of the Israeli state and US support for
these policies. There is a personal motive as well. I do care about the memory
of my family's persecution. The current campaign of the Holocaust industry to
extort money from Europe in the name of "needy Holocaust victims" has
shrunk the moral stature of their martyrdom to that of a Monte Carlo casino.
Even apart from these concerns, however, I remain convinced that it is
important to preserve — to fight for — the integrity of the historical record. In
the final pages of this book I will suggest that in studying the Nazi holocaust
we can learn much not just about "the Germans" or "the Gentiles" but about all
of us. Yet I think that to do so, to truly
learn
from the Nazi holocaust, its
physical dimension must be reduced and its moral dimension expanded. Too
many public and private resources have been invested in memorializing the
Nazi genocide. Most of the output is worthless, a tribute not to Jewish suffering
but to Jewish aggrandizement. The time is long past to open our hearts to the
rest of humanity's sufferings. This was the main lesson my mother imparted. I
never once heard her say: Do not compare. My mother
always
compared. No
doubt historical distinctions must be made. But to make out
moral
distinctions
between "our" suffering and "theirs" is itself a moral travesty. "You can't
compare any two miserable people," Plato humanely observed, "and say that
one is happier than the other." In the face of the sufferings of
African-Americans, Vietnamese and Palestinians, my mother's credo always
was: We are all holocaust victims.
Norman G. Finkelstein
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April 2000
New York City
Footnotes
1
In this text,
Nazi holocaust
signals the actual historical event,
The Holocaust
its ideological representation.
2
For Wiesel's shameful record of apologetics on behalf of Israel, see Norman
G. Einkelstein and Ruth Bettina Birn,
A Nation on Trial: The Goldhagen Thesis