David John Cawdell Irving (born 24 March 1938) is
an English writer specializing in the
military history of
World War II. He is the author of 30 books on
the subject, including
The Destruction of Dresden
(1963),
Hitler's War (1977),
Uprising! (1981),
Churchill's War (1987), and
Goebbels: Mastermind of the Third Reich (1996).
His work on
Nazi Germany became
controversial because of a perceived sympathy for the Third Reich
and
antisemitism.
He has associated with
far right and neo-Nazi causes, famously seconding British Union of Fascists founder
Oswald Mosley in a debate at University
College London
on immigration during his student days. He
has been described as the most skilful preacher of
Holocaust denial in the world today.
Irving's reputation as an historian was widely discredited after he
brought an unsuccessful
libel case against the
American historian
Deborah Lipstadt
and
Penguin Books in 1996. The court
found that Irving was an active Holocaust denier, antisemite and
racist, who "associates with right-wing extremists who promote
neo-Nazism," and that he had "for his own ideological reasons
persistently and deliberately misrepresented and manipulated
historical evidence."
Irving was arrested during a visit to Austria and convicted of
"glorifying and identifying with the German
Nazi Party", a crime in that country under the
Verbotsgesetz law. He served a prison
sentence there from February to December 2006.
Early life

Irving in 1955
Irving,
along with his twin brother, was born in Hutton, near Brentwood,
Essex
, England. His father, John James Cawdell
Irving, was a commander in the
Royal
Navy, and his mother, Beryl, an illustrator (Beryl Irene
Newington was born at St. Leonards-on-Sea, Sussex, on 24 October
1896, the daughter of Captain Charles Newington, formerly of the
Indian Army, and his wife Frances (née Dolman)).
During the
Second World War, Irving's father was an officer aboard the light
cruiser HMS
Edinburgh
. On 2 May 1942, while escorting Convoy QP-11 in the
Barents
Sea
, the ship was sunk by the German U-boat U-456. Irving's father survived, but
severed all links with his wife and their children after the
incident. Irving described his childhood in an interview with the
American writer
Ron Rosenbaum as:
"Unlike the Americans, we English suffered great deprivations...we
went through childhood with no toys. We had no kind of childhood at
all. We were living on an island that was crowded with other
people's armies". Irving went on to claim to Rosenbaum that his
negationist
views about
World War II dated to his
childhood, particularly due to his objections to the way
Adolf Hitler was portrayed in the British media
during the war. Irving asserted that his "sceptical" views about
the Third Reich were due to his doubts to the cartoonist caricature
of Hitler and the other Nazi leaders that appeared in the British
press during the war. According to his twin, Nicholas, David has
been a provocateur and prankster since his youth.
David and Nicholas Irving also have an older brother, John, who
served as a an officer in the
RAF, was a former
Liberal Democratic Councilor and was chairman of the Racial
Equality Council in Wiltshire. John converted to Islam and is
likely the only Muslim pig farmer in Wiltshire.
Student years
After
completing A-levels at Brentwood
School
, Irving briefly studied chemistry (though never
graduated, due to financial reasons) at Imperial College
London
. He gained notoriety by writing for
Felix, the
student
newspaper, and in 1959 served as editor of the
University of London Carnival
Committee's journal,
Carnival Times. Irving's time as
editor was controversial because of the contents of a "secret
supplement" to the magazine. This supplement contained an article
in which he called Hitler the "greatest unifying force Europe has
known since
Charlemagne", though Irving
deflected criticism by characterizing the
Carnival Times
as "
satirical". Opponents also saw a cartoon
in the supplement as racist and criticised another article in which
Irving wrote that the British press was owned by Jews. Irving has
described his motivation in producing the controversial secret
issue of
Carnival Times as being to prevent the Carnival
from making a profit that would be passed on to what he considered
"a South African subversive organisation" that opposed
apartheid. His actions as editor brought Irving to
the attention of the national press. In the 1 May 1959 edition of
the
Daily Mail, Irving is quoted
by a journalist as having told him: "You can call me a mild fascist
if you like.
I have just come back from (Francisco Franco's) Madrid
...I returned
through Germany
and visited
Hitler's eyrie at Berchtesgaden
. I regard it as a shrine." Irving has
denounced that article as libellous and the "handiwork of an
imaginative
Daily Mail journalist".
He also stated he was
against the formation
of what is now the
European Union.
He later
studied for a degree in political
economy at University College London
, which he dropped out of after two years due to
lack of funds. During his time at university, he seconded
British Union of Fascists founder Oswald Mosley in a debate on
Commonwealth immigration,
and was
heckled.
The Destruction of Dresden
Sometime
after serving in 1959 as editor of the University of London
Carnival Committee's journal, Irving left for West Germany
, where he worked as a steelworker in a Thyssen steel works in the Ruhr area and learned German. He then moved to
Spain
, where he worked as a clerk at an air base.
During his time in Spain, Irving married his first wife, a Spanish
woman with whom he had five children. In 1962, he wrote a series of
37 articles on the
Allied
bombing
campaign,
Wie Deutschlands Städte starben (
How
Germany's Cities Died), for the German boulevard journal
Neue Illustrierte. These were the basis of his first book,
The Destruction of Dresden (1963), in which he examined
the Allied
bombing of
Dresden in February 1945. By the 1960s, a debate about the
morality of the
carpet bombing of
German cities and civilian population had already begun, especially
in the United Kingdom. There was consequently considerable interest
in Irving's book, which was illustrated with graphic pictures, and
it became an international
bestseller.
In the
first edition, Irving's estimates for deaths in Dresden
were between 100,000 and 250,000 — notably higher
than most previously published figures. These figures became
authoritative and widely accepted in many standard reference works.
In later editions of the book over the next three decades, he
gradually adjusted the figure downwards to 50,000–100,000.
According to the evidence introduced by
Richard J. Evans at the libel trial of
Deborah Lipstadt in 2000, Irving based his
estimates of the dead of Dresden on the word of one individual who
provided no supporting documentation, used forged documents, and
described one witness who was a
urologist
as Dresden's Deputy Chief Medical Officer. The doctor has since
complained about being misidentified by Irving, and further, was
only reporting rumours about the death toll. Today, casualties at
Dresden are estimated as 25,000–35,000 dead, probably towards the
lower end of that range.
1963 burglary of Irving's apartment
By
November 1963, Irving was in England when he called the London Metropolitan Police with
suspicions he had been the victim of a burglary, perpetrated by
three men who had gained access to his Mayfair
apartment claiming to be General Post Office
(GPO) engineers. Gerry Gable was
subsequently arrested and held at Hornsey
police station, where on 14 January 1964, along
with Manny Carpel and another, Gable admitted breaking in with
intent to steal private papers. At the trial, counsel for
the defence claimed that this was no ordinary crime, telling the
court, "they hoped to find material they could take to
Special Branch". The case was reported in the
Daily Telegraph, 17 January
1964 and other newspapers. Irving considered this incident
important, and in his video 'Ich komme wieder' he describes this as
the first indication he had that he was under attack for some
reason. Gable was a former member of the
British Communist Party, and would
later run
Searchlight, a magazine devoted
to anti-fascist activities. In a letter from Gable to
London Weekend Television in May
1977, he would later boast of his "top level
security service sources".
Author
After the success of the Dresden book, Irving continued writing,
including some works of
revisionist history. In
1964, he wrote
The Mare's Nest, an account of the German
secret weapons projects and the Allied intelligence countermeasures
against it; translated the
Memoirs of Field Marshal
Wilhelm Keitel in 1965 (edited by
Walter Görlitz); and in 1967 published
Accident: The Death of
General Sikorski.
In the latter book, Irving claimed that the
plane crash which killed Polish government in exile leader
General Władysław
Sikorski in 1943 was really an assassination ordered by
Winston Churchill, so as to enable
Churchill to "betray" Poland to the Soviet Union
. Irving's book inspired the highly
controversial 1967 play
Soldiers by his friend, the German
playwright
Rolf Hochhuth, where
Hochhuth depicts Churchill ordering the "assassination" of General
Sikorski. Also in 1967, he published two more works:
The Virus
House, an account of the
German nuclear energy project,
and
The Destruction of Convoy PQ-17, in which he blamed
the British escort group commander, Commander
Jack Broome for the catastrophic losses of the
Convoy PQ-17. Amid much publicity,
Broome sued Irving for libel in October 1968, and in February 1970,
after 17 days of deliberation before London's High Court, Broome
won. Irving was forced to pay £40,000 in damages, and the book was
withdrawn from circulation.
After
PQ-17, Irving largely shifted to writing
biographies. In 1968, Irving published
Breach
of Security, an account of German reading of messages to and
from the British Embassy in Berlin before 1939 with an introduction
by the British historian D.C. Watt. As a result of Irving's success
with
Dresden, but prior to the conclusion of the Broome
trial, members of Germany's extreme right wing assisted him in
contacting surviving members of Hitler's inner circle. In an
interview with the American journalist
Ron
Rosenbaum, Irving claimed to have developed sympathies towards
them (referring to them as "the Magic Circle"). Many aging former
mid- and high-ranked Nazis saw a potential friend in Irving and
donated diaries and other material. Irving described his historical
work to Rosenbaum as an act of "stone-cleaning" of Hitler, in which
he cleared off the "slime" that he felt had been unjustly applied
to Hitler's reputation.
In 1969,
Irving during a visit to Germany met with Robert Kempner, one of the American
prosecutors at Nuremberg
Upon his return to the United States, Kempner
submitted a memo about Irving to J. Edgar
Hoover, the director of the FBI
Kemper wrote in his memo to Hoover that Irving was
a "young man, who made a nervous and rather mentally dilapiadated
impression", and who expressed many "anti-American and anti-Jewish
statements" Irving had asked Kemper if the "offical record of the
Nuremberg was falsifed", and told him that was planning to go to
Washington
DC
to find evidence that the men convicted at
Nuremberg had been framed Kempner went on to write that "completely
unsolicited, he [Irving] stressed twice very emphatically that
Sirhan Sirhan did the right thing in killing "that big fat-faced
Kennedy". If he, Irving, were an Arab, he said, he would
done the same thing, because of Robert Kennedy's alleged pro-Israel
remarks"
In 1971, he translated the memoirs of General
Reinhard Gehlen, and in 1973 published
The Rise and Fall of the Luftwaffe, a biography of
Luftwaffe Marshal
Erhard Milch. He
spent the remainder of the 1970s working on
Hitler's War and the
War Path,
his two-part biography of Adolf Hitler;
The Trail of the
Fox, a biography of Field Marshal
Erwin Rommel; and a series in the
Sunday Express describing the
Royal Air Force's famous
Dam Busters raid.
In 1975, in his introduction to
Hitler und seine
Feldherren, the German edition of
Hitler's War,
Irving attacked the diary of
Anne Frank
as a forgery, claiming falsely that a New York court had ruled that
the diary was really the work of an American scriptwriter
Meyer Levin "in collaboration with the girl's
father". In fact, Levin had been commissioned by
Otto Frank to serve as his American literary
agent in 1952, whom Frank had then fired and turned over the
literary rights to
The Diary of Anne Frank to
Kermit Bloomgarden. Bloomgarden produced
a successful play version of the diary in 1955, leading Levin to
sue over alleged plagiarism of his unproduced theatrical version of
The Diary of Anne Frank. In 1959, a court ruled against
Levin, leading him to appeal; the case was settled out of court in
1963. Lipstadt argued in her 1993 book
Denying the
Holocaust that those like Irving who claim that Levin was the
real author of
The Diary of Anne Frank are engaging in a
wilful misrepresentation of the facts.
Description of Irving as a historian, rather than a historical
author, is controversial, with some publications continuing to
refer to him as a "historian" or "disgraced historian", while
others insist he is not a historian, and have adopted alternatives
such as "author" or "historic writer". The military historian
John Keegan has praised Irving for his
"extraordinary ability to describe and analyse Hitler's conduct of
military operations, which was his main occupation during the
Second World War".
Donald Cameron Watt,
Emeritus Professor of Modern
History at the London School of Economics
, wrote that he admires some of Irving's work as a
historian, though he rejects his conclusions about the
Holocaust. At the libel proceedings against Irving, Watt
declined Irving's request to testify, appearing only after a
subpoena was ordered. He testified that
Irving had written a "very, very effective piece of historical
scholarship" in the 1960s, which was unrelated to his controversial
work; he also suggested that Irving was "not in the top class" of
military historians.
Revisionism
Hitler's War
In 1977 Irving published
Hitler's
War, the first of his two-part biography of
Adolf Hitler.
Hitler's War had been
first published in
German as
Hitler und seine Feldherren (
Hitler and his
Generals) in 1975. Irving's intention in
Hitler's War
to clean away the "years of grime and discoloration from the facade
of a silent and forbidding monument" to reveal the real Hitler,
whose reputation Irving claimed had been slandered by historians.
In
Hitler's War, Irving tried to "view the situation as
far as possible through Hitler's eyes, from behind his desk". He
portrayed Hitler as a rational, intelligent politician, whose only
goal was to increase Germany's prosperity and influence on the
continent, and who was constantly let down by incompetent and/or
treasonous subordinates. Irving's book faulted the Allied leaders,
most notably
Winston Churchill,
for the eventual escalation of war, and claimed that the
German invasion of the Soviet Union in
1941 was a "
preventive war" forced on
Hitler to avert an alleged impending Soviet attack (supported by
some, notably Soviet
GRU defector
Victor Suvorov, and others; see
Icebreaker). Irving commented that
in light of the "preventive war" that he felt Hitler was forced to
wage, the
Kommissarbefehl
was merely something that Stalin forced on Hitler. He also claimed
that Hitler had no knowledge of
the
Holocaust; while not denying its occurrence, Irving claimed
that
Heinrich Himmler and his
deputy
Reinhard Heydrich were its
originators and architects. Irving made much of the lack of any
written order from Hitler ordering the Holocaust, and for decades
afterward offered to pay £1000 to anyone who could find such an
order. In addition, citing the work of such historians as
Harry Elmer Barnes,
David Hoggan, and Frederick J.P. Veale, Irving
argued that Britain was primarily responsible for the
outbreak of war in 1939.
In a footnote in
Hitler's War, Irving first introduced the
thesis later popularized in the 1980s by
Ernst Nolte that a letter written by
Chaim Weizmann to
Neville Chamberlain on 3 September 1939,
pledging the support of the Jewish Agency to the Allied war effort,
constituted a "Jewish declaration of war" against Germany, thus
justifying German "internment" of European Jews. A major lawsuit
arose from the German edition of
Hitler's War in 1975,
when without Irving's permission the firm Ulstein-Verlag removed
the passages claiming Hitler had no knowledge of the Holocaust,
leading him to sue
Ullstein-Verlag
over abridging his book.
Despite his much-vaunted disdain for
professional historians (most of whom Irving accused of slandering
Hitler), Irving attended a historians' conference in Aschaffenburg
in July 1978 to discuss "Hitler Today - Problems
and Aspects of Hitler Research". Irving spent his time at
the conference attacking all of the historians present for alleged
sloppy research on Hitler, and promoting
Hitler's War as
the only good book ever written on the
Führer.
Ian Kershaw wrote that although Irving's thesis
of Hitler's ignorance of the Holocaust in
Hitler's War was
almost universally rejected by historians, his book was of value in
that it provided a huge stimulus for further research on Hitler's
role in the Holocaust (which had not been widely explored until
then) as a way of rebutting Irving.
Reactions and criticisms
Reaction to
Hitler's War was polarized. Various historians
such as
Gitta Sereny,
Martin Broszat,
Lucy Dawidowicz, Gerard Fleming, Charles W.
Sydnor and
Eberhard Jäckel
wrote either articles or books rebutting what they considered to be
erroneous information in
Hitler's War. Writing in the
Sunday Times, Sereny called Irving's work "closer to
theology or mythology" than history, while Broszat labeled Irving a
"Hitler partisan wearing blinkers".
Lance
Morrow wrote in
Time that Irving's picture of the
"Führer as a somewhat harried business executive too preoccupied to
know exactly what has happening in his branch offices at Auschwitz
and Treblinka" was hard to accept. In an article published in the
Sunday Times under the title "The £1,000 Question" on 10
July 1977, Sereny and the journalist Lewis Chester examined
Irving's sources and found significant differences from what Irving
published in
Hitler's War. In particular, while
interviewing one of Irving's primary informants,
Otto Günsche, the latter stated that "one
must assume that he [Hitler] did know" about the Holocaust.
Some historians, such as
John Keegan and
Hugh Trevor-Roper, praised the
book as well-written and well-researched - although they disputed
Irving's claim that Hitler had no knowledge of the Holocaust, and
Trevor-Roper was strongly critical of Irving's repeating the "stale
and exploded libel" about Churchill ordering the "assassination" of
General Sikorski). Keegan wrote that
Hitler's War was
"Irving's greatest achievement... indispensable to anyone seeking
to the understand the war in the round".
Hugh Trevor-Roper
Trevor-Roper's praise was circumspect. Trevor-Roper commended
Irving's "indefatigable, scholarly industry" and wrote "I have
enjoyed reading his long work from beginning to end", but he also
went on to note that many of the conclusions Irving drew were not
supported by the evidence.
Trevor-Roper objected to Irving's argument
that one entry from Heinrich
Himmler's phone log on 30 November, 1941, ordering Heydrich to
ensure that one train transport of German Jews to Latvia
not be
executed on arrival, proved that Hitler was opposed to
genocide. Trevor-Roper argued that the message concerned
only the people aboard that particular train and was not about all
the Jews in Europe. Trevor-Roper noted the contradiction in
Irving's argument, based on the assumption that it was Hitler who
ordered Himmler to spare the people aboard that train and the claim
that Hitler was unaware in the fall of 1941 that the SS were
rounding up German and Czech Jews to be sent to be shot in Eastern
Europe (the first gassings via
gas vans
started on 8 December 1941) Trevor-Roper commented about Irving's
claim that Hitler was unaware of the mass murders of Jews carried
out by the SS while at the same time intervening to save Jewish
lives that: "One does not veto an action unless one thinks that it
is otherwise likely to occur". Finally, Trevor-Roper complained
about Irving's "consistent bias" for Hitler and that "Mr. Irving's
sympathies can hardly be doubted".
Alan Bullock
The British historian
Alan Bullock
writing in
The New York Review of Books on 26 May 1977
dismissed Irving's depiction of Hitler as a leader too busy with
the war to notice the Holocaust as contrary to all of the
historical evidence.
Eberhard Jäckel
The German historian
Eberhard
Jäckel wrote a series of newspaper articles later turned into
the book
David Irving's Hitler: A Faulty History
Dissected, attacking Irving and maintaining that Hitler was
very much aware of and approved of the Holocaust. Jäckel attacked
Irving for claiming that a note from
Heinrich Himmler's notebook - "Jewish
transport from Berlin, not to be liquidated", dated 30 November
1941 - proved that Hitler did not want to see the Holocaust happen.
Jäckel maintained that the order referred only to that train, and
argued that if Hitler had ordered the people on that train to be
spared, it must stand to reason that he was aware of the Holocaust.
Jäckel went on to argue that because the "Final Solution" was
secret, it is not surprising that Hitler's servants were ignorant
of the Holocaust, and that anyhow, five of Hitler's servants
interviewed by Irving later claimed that they believed that Hitler
was aware of the Holocaust. Jäckel argued on the basis of Hitler's
statements in
Mein Kampf that
the Führer was always committed to genocide of the Jews, and that
because Hitler later attempted to execute the foreign policy he
outlined in
Mein Kampf, it is a reasonable assumption that
Hitler was always committed to genocide, which in Jäckel's opinion
disproves Irving's claim that Hitler was unaware of the
Shoah. Jäckel used Hitler's tendency to involve himself in
minutiae to argue that it is simply inconceivable that Hitler was
unaware of the Holocaust. As evidence against Irving, Jäckel used
Hitler's "Prophecy Speech" of 30 January 1939, where Hitler
declared:
- "I shall once again be your prophet: if international Jewry
with its financial power in and outside of Europe should manage
once more to draw the peoples of the world into world war, then the
result will not be the Bolshevization of the world, and thus the
victory of Jewry, but rather the total destruction of the Jewish
race in Europe."
Likewise, Jäckel used Himmler's
Posen
speeches of 1943 and certain other statements on his part in
1944 referring to an "order" from an unnamed higher authority as
proof that Hitler had ordered the Holocaust.
In the same way,
Jäckel used Hitler's order of 13 March 1941, ordering that the
Einsatzgruppen
be reestablished for Operation Barbarossa, as proof of the
Führer's involvement in the Holocaust. Jäckel also cited the
entry in
Joseph Goebbels's diary on
27 March 1942 - mentioning that the Führer's "Prophecy" of 1939 was
coming true - as a sign that Hitler had ordered the Holocaust, and
accused Irving of dishonesty in claiming that there was no sign in
the Goebbels's diary that Hitler knew of the Holocaust. Finally,
Jäckel noted the frequent references to the "Prophecy Speech" in
Hitler's wartime speeches as a sign that Hitler had ordered the
Holocaust, thereby disproving Irving's claim that Hitler was
ignorant of the "Final Solution".
In response to Jäckel's first article, Irving announced that he had
seen a document from 1942 proving that Hitler had ordered the
Holocaust not to occur, but that the document was now "lost" Jäckel
wrote that he had "easily" discovered the "lost" document, in which
the head of the Reich Chancellery,
Hans
Lammers, wrote to the Justice Minister
Franz Schlegelberger that Hitler
ordered him to put the "Jewish Question" on the "back-burner" until
after the war. Jäckel noted the document concerned was the result
of a meeting between Lammers and Schlegelberger on 10 April 1942
concerning amendments to the divorce law concerning German Jews and
Mischlinge Jäckel noted that in
1942, there was a division of labour between the representatives of
the
Rechtsstaat (Law State) and the
Polizeistaat
(Police State) in Nazi Germany Jäckel argued that for the
representatives of the
Rechtsstaat like the Ministry of
Justice, the "Final Solution" was a bureaucratic process to deprive
Jews of their civil rights and to isolate them, whereas for
representatives of
Polizeistaat like the SS, the "Final
Solution" was genocide. Jäckel argued that Hitler's order to
Lammers to tell Schlegelberger to wait until after the war before
concerning him about the "impracticable" details of the divorce
laws between German Jews and "Aryans" was simply Hitler's way of
putting Schlegelberger off. Jäckel maintained that since Hitler
expected to win the war, and to complete the "Final Solution to the
Jewish Question" by killing every single Jew in the world, Hitler
would have had no interest in amending the divorce law to make it
easier for those in
mixed marriages to
divorce their Jewish or
Mischlinge spouses. Moreover,
Jäckel noted that Hitler disliked dealing with the officials of the
Justice Ministry, and Schlegelberger in particular. Hitler was to
sack him as Justice Minister later in 1942, so it was
understandable that Hitler would not want to see Schlegelberger.
Jäckel ended his essay arguing that the "lost" document in no way
proved that Hitler was unaware of the Holocaust, and accused Irving
of deceitfulness in claiming otherwise.
John Lukacs
The American historian
John Lukacs in a
very unfavourable book review in the 19 August 1977 edition of
National Review called
Hitler's War a worthless book while
Walter Laqueur when reviewing
Hitler's
War in the
The New York Times Book Review of 3 April
1977 accused Irving of selective use of the historical record in
Hitler's favour. Laqueur argued that
Hitler's War read
more like a legal brief written by a defense lawyer who was
attempting to exonerate Hitler before the judgement of history,
than a historical work.
Lukacs called Irving an "amateur historian" whose determination to
defend Hitler had resulted in an "appalling" book.
Lukacs complimented
Irving's industry in tracking down hundreds of people who knew
Hitler, but went on to note personal recollections are not always
the best historical source, and that Irving manufactured battles;
for instance, crediting Field Marshal Ferdinand Schörner with a victory in
April 1945 against the Red Army for the
control of Ostrava
, a battle which did not, in fact, take
place. Lukacs took issue with Irving's language, which he
described as conveying moral judgements that were not supported by
the facts.
Lukacs was very critical of Irving's claims
that Poland had planned to invade Germany in 1939 and likewise,
that the Soviet
Union
was on the verge of attacking the Reich in
1941, in both cases justifying German "preventative wars" against
those states.
Bradley Smith
In a review published in the
German Studies Review, the
American historian Bradley Smith noted that Irving had uncovered
some new documents and was correct in arguing against those Germans
who sought to place all of the blame for the Holocaust onto Hitler,
but went on to note that Irving's determination to tell World War
II from Hitler's point of view had apparently led him to totally
identify himself with Hitler. Smith noted it was often impossible
to tell where Hitler's views ended and where Irving's began.
Martin Broszat
In an article first published in the
Vierteljahrshefte für
Zeitgeschichte journal in 1977,
Martin Broszat wrote that:
"He [Irving] is too eager to accept authenticity for
objectivity, is overly hasty in interpreting superficial diagnoses
and often seems insufficiently interested in complex historical
interconnections and in structural problems that transcend the mere
recording of historical facts, but are essential for their
evaluation".
Broszat argued that in writing
Hitler's War, Irving was
too concerned with the "antechamber aspects" of Hitler's
headquarters, and accused Irving of distorting historical facts in
Hitler's favour. Broszat complained that Irving was focused too
much on military events at the expense of the broader political
context of the war, and that he had offered false interpretations
such as accepting at face value the Nazi claim that the
Action T4 "euthanasia" program was launched in
September 1939 to free up hospital spaces for wounded German
soldiers, when in fact the program was launched in January
1939.
In
particular, Broszat criticized Irving's claim that because of one
telephone note written by Himmler stating "No liquidation" in
regards to a train transport of German Jews passing through
Berlin
to Riga
(whom the SS
intended to have all shot upon arrival) on 30 November 1941 that
this proved that Hitler did not want to see the Holocaust
happen. Broszat argued that this was not proof that Hitler
had given any such order to Himmler to stop the killings of Jews,
but rather that the comment "No liquidation" referred only to that
particular train, and was mostly likely related to concerns about
questions American reporters were asking about the fate of German
Jews being sent to Eastern Europe.
Broszat questioned whether Hitler had
given Himmler any order about the train, given that the phone call
Himmler made from the Wolfsschanze
to Heydrich in Prague took place at about 11:
30 A.M., and the records show that Hitler did not get up until
about 2: 00 P.M on 30 November 1941.
Likewise, Broszat criticized Irving for accepting the "fantastic"
claims of the SS
Obergruppenführer Karl Wolff that he did not know about the
Holocaust (Irving's argument was that if Wolff did not know about
the Holocaust, how could Hitler have known), despite the fact that
Wolff was convicted of war crimes in 1963 on the basis of
documentary evidence implicating him in the Holocaust. Broszat
accused Irving of seeking to generate a highly misleading
impression of a conference between Hitler and the Hungarian Regent,
Admiral
Miklós Horthy in April
1943 by re-arranging the words to make Hitler appear less brutally
anti-Semitic than what the original notes showed. Along the same
lines, Broszat maintained that the picture of World War Two drawn
by Irving was done in a such way to engage in moral equivalence
between the actions of the Axis and Allied states, leading to
Hitler's "fanatical, destructive will to annihilate" being
downgraded to being "...no longer an exceptional phenomenon". The
criticism by Broszat was considered to be especially damaging to
Irving because Broszat had based his critique largely by examining
the same primary sources Irving had used for
Hitler's
War.
Charles Sydnor
Another equally scathing review was published by the American
historian Charles Sydnor who argued that
Hitler's War was
marred by Irving's efforts to present Hitler in the most favorable
light possible. Sydnor commented that Irving wrongly and bizarrely
presented SS massacres in Poland in September 1939 as the
legitimate response to the British rejection of Hitler's peace
offer of October 1939 , and that Irving seemed to imply that
Hitler's anti-Semitism was justified by the Anglo-American
strategic bombing offensive against German cities. Sydnor noted
numerous errors in
Hitler's War such as Irving's claim
that
Andreas Hofer was shot by the
French in 1923 for opposing the French occupation of the
Ruhr (Irving probably had
Albert Leo Schlageter in mind), and
that the 1945 film
Kolberg, which dealt with the theme of
a
Prussian fortress besieged by the French
in 1806, was set in the
Seven Years'
War.
Sydnor also speculated about just what
motivated the East German government to allow Irving entry into the
German
Democratic Republic
to search
for information about Hitler, commenting "That the East Germans
assisted Mr. Irving in an effort that would culminate in a
revisionist interpretation of Hitler is a fact of real interest -
and some amusement if one speculates on the question of who may
have been taken in by whom."
Sydnor was highly critical of Irving's unreferenced statement that
the Jews who fought in the
Warsaw
Ghetto Uprising of 1943 were well supplied with weapons from
Germany's allies.
In the same light, concerning Irving's claim
that Hitler was ignorant of the Holocaust prior to October 1943,
Sydnor commented that Hitler had received a SS report in November
1942 which contained a mention of 363,211 Russian Jews executed by
the Einsatzgruppen
between August-November 1942.
Similarly, Sydnor charged Irving with misquotation such as having
Hitler say on 25 October 1941 "...with the Jews too I've found
myself remaining inactive", thereby implying that Hitler wanted to
be "inactive" against the Jews for the rest of the war, when the
documents show Hitler's remarks to be "Even with regard to the Jews
I've found myself remaining inactive", and that Hitler's remark was
referring to the past when Hitler was criticizing himself for his
past "inactivity" against the Jews.
Likewise, Sydnor argued that Irving's statement that all previous
Hitler biographies were compromised by their hostility towards
der Führer is not supported by an examination of said
biographies.
Sydnor remarked that Irving's statement that
the Einsatzgruppen
were in charge in the death camps seems to indicate that he was
not familiar with the history of the Holocaust as the
Einsatzgruppen were in fact mobile death squads who had
nothing to do with the death camps. Moreover, Syndnor noted
that Irving falsely claimed that the
Einsatzgruppen
operating in Poland in 1939 were under the authority of SS General
Udo von Woyrsch, when in fact the
Einsatzgruppen were divided into two groups, one of which
reported to Heydrich and another to
Theodor Eicke (General Woyrsch commanded a
group reporting to Heydrich). Sydnor commented acidly in light of
Irving's claim of Hitler's ignorance of the massacres of Poles that
Eicke commanded
Einsatzgruppe III and the SS Death's Head
Regiment Brandenburg during the Polish campaign from Hitler's
headquarters train
"Amerika".
Continuing on the theme of the
Einsatzgruppen, Sydnor criticized Irving for his statement
that the Babi
Yar
massacre of September 1941 was the first massacre
carried out by the Einsatzgruppen in 1941, when in fact
the Einsatzgruppen had been staging massacres of Soviet
Jews since the beginning of Operation Barbarossa in June
1941. Sydnor charged Irving with offering a false
interpretation of Hitler's reaction to
Konrad Morgen's report of October 1944 about
widespread corruption in the SS as marking Hitler's moral outrage
at the Holocaust; Sydnor asserted that Hitler's outrage had nothing
to do with the murder of the Jews, and everything to do with the
revelation of SS corruption.
Concerning Irving's claim that General
Friedrich Olbricht was engaged in
an orgy on the night of 20 July 1944 in
reaction to the news of Hitler's apparent assassination, Sydnor
noted that Irving does not explain how General Olbricht could have
been engaged in directing a putsch at the Bendlerblock
on the night of 20 July while at the same time
engaging in an orgy at his home. Sydnor accused Irving of
selective quotation from the memoirs of
Joachim von Ribbentrop, noting that
Irving quoted the passage: "How things came to the destruction of
the Jews, I just don't know...But that he [Hitler]
ordered
it, I refuse to believe, because such an act would be wholly
incompatible with the picture I always had of him", but did not
quote the next sentence where Ribbentrop wrote: "On the other hand,
judging from his [Hitler's] last will, one must suppose that he at
least knew about it, if, in his fanaticism against the Jews, he
didn't also order it". Finally, Sydnor argued that Irving's account
of the final days of Hitler appeared to comprise little more than a
rehashing of
Hugh Trevor-Roper's
1947 book,
The Last Days of Hitler, only with Hitler as an
object of sympathy, rather than scorn.
Lucy Dawidowicz
In her 1981 book
The Holocaust and Historians, the
American historian
Lucy Dawidowicz
called Irving an apologist for the Third Reich with minimal
scholarly standards. Dawidowicz wrote that she believed that the
term revisionist was inappropriate for Irving because revisionism
is a legitimate historical method whereas Irving was not entitled
to call himself a historian, revisonist or otherwise, and only
deserved the label apologist.
Dawidowicz maintained that the "No
liquidation" message in Himmler's phone log refers not to the
German Jews being deported to be shot in Riga
, but rather
to a Dr. Jekelius, whom Himmler believed to the son of Soviet
Foreign Commissar Vyacheslav
Molotov, who was also travelling on that train, and whom
Himmler wanted to see arrested, but not executed.
Gordon A. Craig
The American historian
Gordon A.
Craig complained that of Irving's
double standard in
Hitler's War of crediting all of the
German victories to the
Führer while blaming all of the
German defeats in the war on Hitler's unworthy and incompetent
generals. Craig wrote that in his opinion some of Irving's language
was inappropriate, such as Irving's remark that "Hitler was cheated
of the ultimate winter victory", and that Irving totally ignored
Hitler's own incompetence as a military leader. Craig charged that
it was simply wrong on the part of Irving to write that Hitler in
October 1941 was in a state of pain over German losses on the
Eastern Front with Hitler supposedly thinking "What would be left
of Germany and the flower of her manhood?". As a way of rebuttal to
this picture of Hitler, Craig quoted Hitler's remark later in 1941
when told of heavy German losses, "But that's what the young people
are there for!". Like many other historians, Craig was critical of
Irving using the "no liquidation" comment in Himmler's telephone
logbook from 30 November 1941 to prove that Hitler was opposed to
the Holocaust. Citing
Lucy
Dawidowicz, Craig argued the phrase "no liquidation" referred
only to Dr. Jekelius Finally to prove that Hitler was aware of the
Holocaust, Craig quoted Hitler's remark to the Czech foreign
minister in January 1939 that "We are going to destroy the
Jews!...The day of reckoning has come!", plus the broad hints that
Hitler dropped in his speeches of 30 January 1941; 30 January,
1942; 24 February 1942; 30 September, 1942, and 8 November 1942
that he knew of the Holocaust Finally, Craig cited Himmler's remark
of May 1944 where he stated he had orders from an unnamed higher
authority (who Craig argued could only be Hitler) for the "Final
Solution"
Because of the controversy
Hitler's War generated, it was
a best-seller in 1977.
Irving's work of the late 1970s and early 1980s
Just months after the initial release of
Hitler's War,
Irving published
The Trail of the Fox, a biography of
Field Marshal Erwin Rommel. In it, Irving attacked the
members of the
20 July Plot to
assassinate Hitler, branding them "traitors", "cowards", and
"manipulators", and uncritically presented Hitler and his
government's subsequent revenge against the plotters, of which
Rommel was also a victim. Irving painted the men and women involved
in the plot in the blackest of colours, and argued that their fate
after 20 July was fully deserved. Irving challenged the popular
notion that Rommel was one of the leaders of the rebellion: Rommel
stayed loyal to Hitler until the end, Irving claimed, and the real
blame for his forced suicide lay with his associates, who schemed
against him so they could save their own lives and because they
were jealous of Rommel's medals. In particular, Irving accused
Rommel's friend and Chief of Staff General
Hans Speidel of framing Rommel in the attempted
coup. One reviewer of
The Trail of the Fox noted that
Irving celebrated German victories in
North
Africa with more gusto than one would expect from a British
author, and that Irving had an evident dislike for the "criminals"
Colonel
Claus von
Stauffenberg, General
Ludwig Beck
and
Carl Friedrich
Goerdeler.The British historian
David Pryce-Jones in a book review of
The Trail of the Fox in the 12 November 1977 edition of
The New York Times
Book Review accused Irving of taking everything Hitler had
to say at face value.
In 1978, Irving released
The War Path, the companion
volume to
Hitler's War which covered events leading up to
the war and which was written from a similar point of view. Again,
professional historians such as D.C. Watt noted numerous
inaccuracies and misrepresentations. Despite the criticism, the
book sold well, as did all of Irving's books to that date.
The
financial success of his books enabled Irving to buy a home in the
prestigious Mayfair
district of London, own a Rolls-Royce car, and to enjoy a very
affluent lifestyle. In addition, Irving, despite being
married, became increasing open with his affairs with other women,
all of which were detailed in his self-published diary. Irving's
affairs were to cause his first marriage to end in divorce in 1981.
In 1982, Irving began a common-law relationship with a Danish
model, Bente Hogh.
In the 1980s Irving started researching and writing about topics
other than Nazi Germany, but with less success. He began his
research on his three-part biography of
Winston Churchill. In 1981, he published
two books. The first was
The War Between the Generals, in
which Irving offered an account of the Allied High Command on the
Western Front in 1944-45, detailing the heated conflicts Irving
alleges occurred between the various generals of the various
countries and presenting rumours about their private lives. The
second book was
Uprising!, about the
1956 revolt in Hungary, which
Irving characterized as "primarily an anti-Jewish uprising",
supposedly because the
Communist regime
was itself controlled by Jews.
Irving's depiction of Hungary
's Communist regime as a Jewish dictatorship oppressing Gentiles sparked charges of anti-Semitism. In addition, there were
complaints that Irving had grossly exaggerated the number of people
of Jewish origin in the Communist regime and had ignored the fact
that
Hungarian Communists who did
have a Jewish background like
Mátyás Rákosi and
Ernő Gerő had totally repudiated
Judaism and sometimes expressed anti-Semitic
attitudes themselves. Critics such as
Neal Ascherson and
Kai
Bird took issue with some of Irving's language that seemed to
evoke anti-Semitic imagery, such as his remark that Rákosi
possessed "the tact of a
kosher
butcher".
Hitler Diaries
In 1983, Irving played a major role in the
Hitler Diaries controversy. Irving had long
been an avid collector of Nazi memorabilia, and in October 1982
purchased 800 pages of documents relating to Hitler, only to
discover that many of the documents were forgeries.
Irving was an early
proponent of the argument that the diaries were a forgery, and went
so far as to crash the press conference held by Hugh Trevor-Roper at the Hamburg
offices of Der
Stern magazine on 25 April 1983 to denounce the diaries as
a forgery and Trevor-Roper for endorsing the diaries as genuine
(Trevor-Roper had called the press conference to announce his
withdrawal of his endorsement, arguably rendering Irving's attack
on him irrelevant). Irving's performance at the
Der Stern press conference where he violently
harangued Trevor-Roper until ejected by security led him to be
featured prominently on the news; the next day, Irving appeared on
Today television show as a featured guest. Irving had
concluded that the alleged Hitler diaries were a forgery because
the diaries come from the same dealer in Nazi memorabilia that
Irving had purchased his collection from in 1982.
At the press
conference in Hamburg
, Irving announced "I know the collection from which
these diaries come. It is an old collection, full of
forgeries. I have some here". Irving was proud of the "trail of
chaos" he had caused at the Hamburg press conference and the
attendant publicity it had brought him, and in particular took a
great deal of pride in his humiliation of Trevor-Roper, whom Irving
strongly disliked for his criticism of Irving's methods and
conclusions. Irving also noted internal inconsistencies in the
supposed Hitler diaries such as diary entry for 20 July 1944 which
would have been unlikely given that Hitler's right hand been badly
burned by the bomb planted in his headquarters by Colonel
Claus von Stauffenberg earlier that
day.
However, a week later on 2 May, Irving reversed himself and claimed
the diaries were genuine; at the same press conference, Irving took
the opportunity to promote his translation of the memoirs of
Hitler's physician Dr.
Theodor
Morell.
Robert Harris
in his book
Selling Hitler suggested that an additional
reason for Irving's change of mind over the authenticity of the
alleged Hitler diaries was that the fake diaries contain no
reference to the Holocaust, thereby buttressing Irving's claim in
Hitler's War that Hitler had no knowledge of the
Holocaust. Subsequently Irving reversed himself again when the
diaries were revealed as a forgery. At a press conference held to
withdraw his endorsement of the diaries, Irving proudly claimed
that he was the first to call the diaries a forgery, to which a
reporter replied that he was also the last to call the diaries
genuine. In his later accounts of his role in the Hitler Diaries
matter, Irving has always mentioned his role as proponent of the
theory that the diaries were fake, while ignoring his change of
opinion about their authenticity.
Churchill
By the mid-1980s, Irving had not had a successful book in years,
and was behind schedule in writing the first volume of his
Churchill series, the research for which had strained his finances.
He finished the manuscript in 1985, but the book wasn't published
until 1987, when it was released as
Churchill's War, Volume
I. In it, Irving writes a revisionist portrayal of Churchill
as a corrupt, racist
alcoholic servile to
Zionist forces. Irving also accused
Churchill of "selling out the
British
Empire" and "turning Britain against its natural ally,
Germany".
Ernst Nolte
In 1986, Irving was one of the few
English language authors to endorse the
controversial thesis of the German philosopher
Ernst Nolte who, in a 1986 article named
Die
Vergangenheit, die nicht vergehen will ("The Past That Does
Not Want to Go Away"), claimed that because the President of the
World Zionist
Organization Chaim Weizmann wrote
a letter to the British Prime Minister
Neville Chamberlain pledging the full
support of his organization to the British war effort on 3
September 1939, that this constituted a "Jewish declaration of war"
against Germany, and thus the German government was fully justified
in "interning" the Jews of Europe in
concentration camps. Nolte in his turn,
had received his notion of Weizmann's letter to Chamberlain as a
"Jewish declaration of war" from Irving, who had first introduced
this theory in
Hitler's War. Nolte commented that since
Irving had made that point in
Hitler's War, he felt that
proved that the point was historically valid. Many other historians
attacked Nolte's argument (and those, like Irving, who supported
Nolte's views) as misleading, intentionally or not, and as coming
very close to justifying the Holocaust. Nolte in his turn has been
a great admirer of Irving and has often cited Irving's work in his
writings.
Göring
In 1989, Irving published his biography of
Hermann Göring, in which he largely
portrayed the
Reichsmarschall as an
overweight
drug addict largely
concerned with his own wealth and personal pleasures rather than
his duties within the Third Reich. Irving downplayed Göring's role
in the Holocaust, describing instead Göring's jovial personality
and offering a wealth of lesser-known facts about his life. Irving
also recounts various incidents and produces documents as evidence
that Göring disapproved of the persecution of Jews and other Nazi
crimes.
Goebbels
In 1992, Irving signed a contract with
Macmillan for a biography of
Joseph Goebbels entitled
Goebbels:
Mastermind of the Third Reich.
Following charges that Irving had
selectively "edited" a recently discovered complete edition of
Goebbels's diaries in Moscow
, Macmillan
cancelled the book deal. The decision by
Sunday Times (who had bought the rights to
serialized extracts from the diaries before Macmillan published
them) in July 1992 to hire Irving as a translator of Goebbels's
diary was protested by historian Peter Pulzer, who argued that
Irving, because of his views about the Third Reich, was not the
best man for the job.
Andrew Neil, the
editor of the
Sunday Times,
called Irving "reprehensible", but defended hiring Irving because
he was only a "transcribing technician". Pulzer argued that it
absurd to describe Irving as a "mere technician" translating the
diaries from
German into English,
asserting that a translator working on a "set of documents others
had not seen, you took on the whole man".
During his time in Moscow, Lipstadt claimed in her book
Denying
the Holocaust, Irving was given access to two
microfiche plates containing 90 pages of
previously unknown pages of Goebbels's diaries. Though Irving was
only supposed to translate the diaries, she charged, he stole the
plates, smuggled them out of Russia, and copied them without
permission. Lipstadt expressed concern that Irving may have
destroyed or damaged the plates, thereby depriving the world of
knowledge of what was on those plates. In the 2000 ruling on
Irving's libel case against Lipstadt, the judge ruled that Lipstadt
had failed to prove these charges.
In 1995,
St. Martin's Press of New York City
agreed to publish the Goebbels biography. By
this time, Irving's financial state was such that he very much
needed this book deal to be completed in order to pay down the
massive arrears on his mortgage. In March 1996, following
widespread protests over allegations of antisemitism in
Goebbels: Mastermind of the Third Reich, St. Martin's
cancelled the contract, and left Irving in a situation where he was
desperate for both publicity and the need to re-establish his
reputation as a historian.
Holocaust denial
Drift towards Holocaust denial
Over the years, Irving's stance on the Holocaust has changed
significantly. Until 1988, when he started to espouse
Holocaust denial openly, Irving never
sought to deny the reality of the Holocaust and for this reason
many Holocaust deniers were ambivalent about him. They admired
Irving for the pro-Nazi slant in his work and the fact that he
possessed a degree of mainstream credibility that they lacked, but
were annoyed that he did not openly deny the Holocaust. In 1980,
Lucy Dawidowicz noted that although
Hitler's War was strongly sympathetic to the Third Reich,
because Irving argued that Hitler was unaware of the Holocaust as
opposed to the denying the Holocaust, that his book was not part of
the "anti-Semitic canon". In 1980, Irving received his invitation
to speak at a Holocaust-denial conference, which he refused under
the grounds that his appearance there would damage his reputation.
In a letter, Irving stated his reasons for his refusal as: "This is
pure
Realpolitik on my part. I am
already dangerously exposed, and I cannot take the chance of being
caught in Flak meant for others!" Though Irving refused at this
time to appear at conferences sponsored by the
Institute for Historical
Review (I.H.R), he did grant the institute the right to
distribute his books in the United States.
Robert Jan van Pelt suggests that the
major reason for Irving wishing to keep his distance from Holocaust
deniers in the early 1980s was his desire to found his own
political party called Focus. Typical of the ambiguity felt at the
time was a letter written in 1984 by the
French Holocaust denier
Robert Faurisson in the
Journal of
Historical Review, the official journal of the
Institute for Historical
Review (I.H.R). In an open letter entitled "A Challenge to
David Irving", Faurisson praised Irving as a historian but
criticised him for maintaining that the Holocaust had taken place,
and challenged him to take up the cause of Holocaust denial. In his
letter, Faursisson proclaimed his admiration for Irving, but argued
he would be a better historian if he denied the Holocaust. It has
been alleged by the
Anti-Defamation League that the
original draft of Faurisson's open letter was more critical of
Irving, but
Willis Carto persuaded
Faurisson to tone down the criticism, lest it alienate Irving (who
had spoken at an I.H.R.-sponsored conference in September 1983)
from the I.H.R. It is not known what Irving's response to
Faurisson's letter was.
Until 1988, Irving seemed torn between a desire to be taken
seriously as a historian and a desire to associate with those he
seemed to share an ideological affinity with. In the first edition
of
Hitler's War, Irving footnotes, "I cannot accept the
view… [that] there exists no document signed by Hitler, Himmler or
Heydrich speaking of the
extermination of the Jews". In 1982, Irving made an attempt to
unify all of the various neo-Nazi groups in Britain into one party
called Focus, in which he would play a leading role. Irving
described himself as a "moderate fascist" who through his
leadership of Focus would become the future fascist
Prime Minister of Britain. The
effort failed due to fiscal problems. One of the main writers for
Irving's magazine
Focal Point in the 1980s was
John Tyndall, the leader of the
British National Party. At
the time, Irving told the
Oxford Mail of having "links at
a low level" with the
National
Front. Irving described
Spotlight, the main journal of
the
Liberty Lobby, as "an excellent
fortnightly paper". At the same time, Irving put a copy of Hitler's
"Prophecy Speech" of 30 January 1939, promising the "annihilation
of the Jewish race in Europe" if "Jewish financiers" started
another world war, onto his wall.
Following the failure of Focus, in September 1983, Irving for the
first time attended an I.H.R conference. Van Pelt has argued that
with the failure of Irving's political career, he felt freer to
associate with Holocaust deniers. At the conference, Irving did not
deny the Holocaust, but did appear happy to share the stage with
Robert Faurisson and Judge
Wilhelm Stäglich, and claimed to be
impressed with the allegations of Friedrich Berg that
mass murder via
diesel
gas fumes at the
Operation
Reinhard death camps was impossible. At that conference, Irving
repeated his claims that Hitler was ignorant of the Holocaust
because he was "so busy being a solider". In a speech at that
conference, Irving stated: "Isn't it right for Tel Aviv to claim
now that David Irving is talking nonsense and
of course
Adolf Hitler must have known about what was going in Auschwitz and
Treblinka, and then in the same breath to claim that,
of
course our beloved
Mr. Begin
didn't know what was going on in
Sebra and Chatilla". In the same
speech, Irving stated that he operated in such a way as to bring
himself maximum publicity. Irving stated that: "I have at home...a
filing cabinet full of documents which I don't issue all at once. I
keep them: I issue them a bit at a time. When I think my name
hasn't been in the newspapers for several weeks, well, then I ring
them up and I phone them and I say: 'What about this one,
then?'"
A major theme of Irving's writings since the 1980s was his belief
that it had been a great blunder on the part of Britain to declare
war on Germany in 1939, and that ever since then and as a result of
that decision, Britain had slipped into an unstoppable decline.
Irving also took the view that
Rudolf
Hess should be awarded the
Nobel
Peace Prize for his flight to Britain in 1941, and that Hitler
often tried to help the Jews of Europe. At an IHR conference in
September 1983, Irving proclaimed Hitler to be the "biggest friend
the Jews had in the Third Reich". In a June 1992 interview with the
Daily Telegraph, Irving
stated his belief that "Marriage is a detour" that prevents men
from getting ahead in life, and praised Hitler for understanding
this. In the same interview, Irving claimed to have heard from
Hitler's naval adjutant that the
Führer had told him that
he could not marry because Germany was "his pride". Irving then
claimed to have asked the naval adjutant when Hitler made that
remark, and upon hearing that the date was 24 March 1938, Irving
stated in response "Herr Admiral, at that moment I was being born".
Irving used this alleged incident to argue that there was some sort
of mystical connection between himself and Hitler.
In 1985,
the German-Canadian Holocaust denier Ernst Zündel was brought to trial in
Toronto
for publishing false statements. At the
time, Zündel wrote to Irving asking him to come to Toronto to act
as a defense witness. Irving wrote back he willing to do so, but
warned Zündel that "in
some respects my evidence may be
disadvantageous, but on balance it would help". Zündel decided not
to use Irving as a defense witness.
In a 1986 speech in
Australia Irving
argued that photographs of Holocaust survivors and dead taken in
the spring of 1945 by Allied soldiers were proof that the Allies
were responsible for the Holocaust, not the Germans. Irving stated:
In the same speech, Irving claimed that the Holocaust was not the work of Nazi leaders, but rather of "nameless criminals". Irving claimed that:

Victims of the Holocaust.
In a 1986 speech, Irving claimed that the death toll of the
Holocaust had been caused by the Allied bombing of Germany, which
led to the breakdown of sanitary conditions inside the camps, and
that to the extent that Germans were responsible for the
Shoah, it was the work of "nameless criminals" who driven
mad by Allied bombing murdered Jews without the approval or
knowledge of the Nazi leaders
By the mid-1980s, Irving associated himself with the
Holocaust-denying
Institute for Historical
Review, began giving lectures to groups such as the far-right
German
Deutsche Volksunion, and
publicly denied that the Nazis systematically exterminated Jews in
gas chambers during World War II. Irving was a frequent speaker for
the DVU in the 1980s and the early 1990s, but the relationship
ended in 1993 apparently because of concerns by the DVU that
Irving's espousal of Holocaust denial might lead to the DVU being
banned. He also alleged that parts of
The Diary of Anne Frank might
have been forged by her surviving father.
In 1986, Irving visited Toronto, where he was met at the airport by
Ernst Zündel. According to Zündel,
Irving "...thought I was 'Revisionist-Neo-Nazi-Rambo-Kook!'", and
asked Zündel to stay away from him. Zündel and his supporters
obliged Irving by staying away from his lecture tour, which
consequently attracted little media attention, and was considered
by Irving to be a failure. Afterwards, Zündel sent Irving a long
letter in he offered to draw publicity to Irving, and so ensure
that his future speaking tours would be a success. As a result,
Irving and Zündel become friends, and Irving agreed in late 1987 to
testify for Zündel at his second trial for denying the Holocaust.
In addition, the publication in 1987 of the book
Der
europäische Bürgerkrieg 1917–1945 by
Ernst Nolte, in which Nolte strongly implied
that maybe Holocaust deniers were on to something, encouraged
Irving to become more open in associating with Zündel.
The Zündel trial
In
January 1988, Irving travelled to Toronto
, Canada
to assist
Douglas Christie, the defence
lawyer for Ernst Zündel at his
second trial for denying the
Holocaust. Working closely with
Robert Faurisson, who was also assisting
the defence, Irving contacted Warden Bill Armontrout of the
Missouri State Penitentiary who recommended that Irving and
Faurisson get into touch with
Fred
A. Leuchter, a
"self-proclaimed execution expert" living in Boston
.
Irving and Faurission then flew to Boston to meet with Leuchter,
who agreed to lend his alleged technical expertise on the behalf of
Zündel's defense. Irving argued that an alleged expert on gassings
like Leuchter could prove that the Holocaust was a "myth" After
work on the second Zündel trial, Irving declared based on his
exposure to Zündel's and Leuchter's theories that he was now
conducting a "one-man
intifada"
against the idea that there had been a Holocaust. Subsequently,
Irving claimed to the American journalist
D.D. Guttenplan
in a 1999 interview that Zündel had convinced him that the
Holocaust had not occurred.
In the 1988 Zündel trial, Irving repeated and defended his claim
from
Hitler's War that until October 1943 Hitler knew
nothing about the actual implementation of the
Final Solution. He also expressed his
evolving belief that the Final Solution involved "
atrocities", not systematic murder:
Irving testified for Zündel between April 22-26, 1988, where he endorsed Richard Harwood's book Did Six Million Really Die? as "over ninety percent...factually accurate".
As to what evidence further led Irving to believe that the
Holocaust never occurred, he cited the
Leuchter report by self-styled execution
expert
Fred A. Leuchter, which claimed there was no
evidence for the existence of homicidal gas
chambers at the Auschwitz concentration camp
. In
Errol
Morris' 1999 documentary about Leuchter,
Mr. Death:
The Rise and Fall of Fred A. Leuchter,
Jr., Irving said, "The big point [of the Leuchter report]:
there is no significant residue of
cyanide
in the brickwork. That's what converted me. When I read that in the
report in the courtroom in Toronto, I became a hard-core
disbeliever". In addition, Irving was influenced to embrace
Holocaust denial by the American historian
Arno J. Mayer's
1988 book
Why Did the Heavens Not Darken?, which did not
deny the Holocaust, but claimed that most of those who died at
Auschwitz were killed by disease; Irving saw in Mayer's book an
apparent confirmation of Leuchter's and Zündel's theories about no
mass murder at Auschwitz.
After the trial, Irving published Leuchter's report as
Auschwitz The End of the Line: The Leuchter Report in the
United Kingdom in 1989 and wrote its foreword. Leuchter's book had
been first published in the United States by Zündel's
Samisdat Publishers in 1988 as
The
Leuchter Report: The End of a Myth: An Engineering Report on the
Alleged Execution Gas Chambers at Auschwitz, Birkenau and
Majdenek. In his foreword to the British edition of Leuchter's
book, Irving wrote that "Nobody likes to be swindled, still less
where considerable sums of money are involved". The alleged swindle
was the
reparations
money totating 3 billion DM paid by the Federal Republic of Germany
to Israel between 1952-1966 for the
Holocaust. Irving
described the reparations as being "essentially in atonement for
the 'gas chambers' of Auschwitz", which Irving called a "myth" that
would "not die easily". In his foreword, Irving praised the
"scrupulous methods" and "integrity" of Leuchter.
For
writing the foreword to Auschwitz The End of the Line, on
20 June 1989 Irving together with Leuchter was condemned in an
Early Day Motion of the House of
Commons
as "Hitler's heirs". The motion went on to
describe Irving as a "Nazi propagandist and longtime Hitler
apologist" and
Auschwitz The End of the Line as a "fascist
publication". In response to the House of Commons motion, Irving in
a press statement challenged the MPs who voted to condemn him that:
"I will enter the "gas chambers" of Auschwitz and you and your
friends may lob in Zykon B in accordance with the well known
procedures and conditions. I guarantee that you won't be satisfied
with the results!".
In a pamphlet Irving published in London on 23 June 1989 Irving
made the "epochal announcement" that there was no mass murder via
gas chambers at the Auschwitz death camp. Irving labeled the gas
chambers at Auschwitz a "hoax", and writing in the third person
declared that he "has placed himself [Irving] at the head of a
growing band of historians, worldwide, who are now sceptical of the
claim that at Auschwitz and other camps were 'factories of death',
in which millions of innocent people were systematically gassed to
death". Boasting of his role in criticizing the Hitler diaries as a
forgery in 1983, Irving wrote "now he [Irving] is saying the same
thing about the infamous 'gas chambers' of Auschwitz, Treblinka and
Majdanek. They did not exist – ever – except perhaps as the
brainchild of Britain's brilliant wartime Psychological Warfare
Executive". Finally, Irving claimed "the survivors of Auschwitz are
themselves testimony to the absence of an extermination programme".
Echoing the criticism of the House of Commons, on 14 May 1990 a
leader in
The Times described
Irving as a "man for whom Hitler is something of a hero and almost
everything of an innocent and for whom Auschwitz is a Jewish
deception".
The Holocaust denial lecture circuit
Interior of the gas chamber of Auschwitz I camp.
In a 1990 speech, Irving stated: "I say the following thing:
there were no gas chambers in Auschwitz.
There have been only mock-ups built by the Poles in the years
after the war".
In the
early 1990s, Irving was a frequent visitor to Germany
, where he
spoke at neo-Nazi rallies. The chief themes of Irving's
German speeches were that the Allies and Axis states were equally
culpable for war crimes, that the decision of
Neville Chamberlain to declare war on
Germany in 1939, and that of
Winston
Churchill to continue the war in 1940 had been great mistakes
that set Britain on a path of decline, and the Holocaust was just a
"propaganda exercise".
In June 1990, Irving went on a much
publicized tour of East
Germany
entitled "An Englishman Fights for the Honour of
the Germans", where Irving accused the Allies of using "forged
documents" to "humilate" the German people Irving's self-proclaimed
mission was to guide "promising young men" in Germany in the "right
direction" (Irving has often stated his belief that women exist for
a "certain task", namely reproduction, and should be "subservient
to men"; leading as Deborah Lipstadt noted to a lack of interest in
guiding young German women in the "right direction"). As a
foreigner, Irving was a popular figure with German neo-Nazis.
In
January 1990, Irving gave a speech in Moers
where he
asserted that only 30,000 people died at Auschwitz between 1940-45,
all of natural causes, which was equal—so he claimed—to the typical
death toll from one Bomber Command raid on German cities.
Furthermore, Irving claimed that there were no gas chambers at that
death camp. In that speech, Irving said: "I say the following
thing: there were no gas chambers in Auschwitz. There have been
only mock-ups built by the Poles in the years after the war".
On 21
April 1990 Irving repeated the same speech in Munich
, which led
to his conviction for Holocaust denial in Munich on 11 July
1991. The court fined Irving DM 7,000. Irving
appealed the judgement, and received a fine of
DM 10,000 for repeating the same remarks in the courtroom on 5
May 1992. During his appeal in 1992, Irving called upon those
present in the Munich courtroom to "fight a battle for the German
people and put an end to the blood lie of the Holocaust which has
been told against this country for fifty years". Irving went on to
call the Auschwitz death camp a "tourist attraction" whose origins
Irving claimed went back to an "ingenious plan" devised by the
British Psychological Warfare Executive in 1942 to spread
anti-German
propaganda that it was the
policy of the German state to be "using 'gas chambers' to kill
millions of Jews and other undesirables". During the same speech,
Irving denounced the judge as a "
senile,
alcoholic cretin". Following his
conviction for Holocaust denial, Irving was banned from visiting
Germany.

The main gate of Auschwitz
II-Birkenau.
In 1992 during his appeal for his conviction for Holocaust
denial, Irving called Auschwitz a "tourist attraction".
Expanding upon his thesis in
Hitler's War about the lack
of a written
Führer order for the Holocaust, Irving argued
in the 1990s that the absence of such an order meant that there was
no Holocaust. In a speech delivered in Toronto in November 1990
Irving claimed that Holocaust survivors had manufactured memories
of their suffering because "there's money involved and they can get
a good compensation cash payment out of it". During the same 1990
speech in Toronto, Irving claimed that "more people died on the
back seat of Senator
Edward Kennedy's
motor car in
Chappaquiddick than died
in the gas chamber of Auschwitz". In that speech, Irving used the
metaphor of a cruise ship named Holocaust, which Irving claimed had
"...luxury wall to wall fitted carpets and a crew of thousands…
marine terminals established in now virtually every capital in the
world, disguised as Holocaust memorial museums".
Irving went on to
assert that the "ship" was due for rough sailing because recently
the Soviet
government
had allowed historians access to "the index cards of all the people
who passed through the gates of Auschwitz", and claimed that this
would lead to "a lot of people [who] are not claiming to be
Auschwitz survivors anymore" (Irving's statement about the index
cards was incorrect; what the Soviet government had made available
in 1990 were the death books of Auschwitz, recording the weekly
death tolls). Irving claimed on the basis of what he called
the index books that, "Because the experts can look at a tattoo and
say 'Oh yes, 181, 219 that means you entered Auschwitz in March
1943" and he warned Auschwitz survivors "If you want to go and have
a tattoo put on your arm, as a lot of them do, I am afraid to say,
and claim subsequently that you were in Auschwitz, you have to make
sure a) that it fits in with the month you said you went to
Auschwitz and b) it is not a number which anyone used
before".
In his 1991 revised edition of
Hitler's War he had removed
all references to
death camps and the
Holocaust.
In a speech given in Hamburg
in 1991, Irving stated that in two years time
"...this myth of mass murders of Jews in the death factories of
Auschwitz, Majdanek
and Treblinka
...which in fact never took place" will be disproved
(Auschwitz, Majdanek, and Treblinka were all well known Vernichtungslager).
Two days
later, Irving repeated the same speech in Halle
before a group of neo-Nazis, and praised Rudolf Hess as "that great German martyr, Rudolf
Hess". At another 1991 speech, this time in Canada, Irving
called the Holocaust a "hoax", and again predicted that by 1993 the
"hoax" would have been "exposed". In that speech, Irving declared,
"Gradually the word is getting around Germany. Two years from now
too, the German historians will accept that we are right. They will
accept that for fifty years they have believed a lie". During that
speech given in October 1991, Irving expressed his contempt and
hatred for Holocaust survivors by proclaiming that:

A mass grave in Treblinka opened in
March 1943 to allow the bodies to be removed for burning.
In the background can be seen dark colored material believed
to be ash from cremated bodies.
In a 1991 speech, Irving claimed that in two years time,
"...this myth of mass murders of Jews in the death factories of
Auschwitz, Majdanek and Treblinka...which in fact never took place"
will be disproven.
In
November 1992, Irving was to be a featured speaker at a world
anti-Zionist congress in Stockholm
that was cancelled by the Swedish
government. Also scheduled to attend were fellow
Holocaust-deniers
Robert Faurisson
and
Fred A. Leuchter, and Louis Farrakhan, together with
representatives of the militant Palestinian group Hamas, the Lebanese
militant Shiite group
Hezbollah, and the right-wing Russian
antisemitic group Pamyat. In a 1993 speech, Irving claimed that
had been only 100,000 Jewish deaths at Auschwitz, "but not from gas
chambers. They died from epidemics". Irving went on to claim that
most of the Jewish deaths during World War II had been caused by
Allied bombing.
Irving claimed that "The concentration camp
inmates arrived in Berlin
or Leipzig
or in Dresden
just in time for the RAF bombers
to set fire to those cities. Nobody knows how many Jews died
in those air raids". In a 1994 speech, Irving lamented that his
predictions of 1991 had failed to occur, and complained of the
persistence of belief in the "rotting corpse" of the "profitable
legend" of the Holocaust. In another 1994 speech, Irving claimed
that there was no German policy of genocide of Jews, and that only
600,000 Jews died in concentration camps in World War II, all due
to either Allied bombing or disease. At the same time, Irving
started to appear more frequently at the annual conferences hosted
by the
Institute for
Historical Review. In a 1995 speech, Irving claimed that the
Holocaust was a myth invented by a "world-wide Jewish cabal" to
serve their own ends. Irving also spoke on other topics at the IHR
gatherings.
A frequent theme was the claim that Winston Churchill had advance knowledge of
the Japanese
plans to attack Pearl Harbour
, and refused to warn the Americans in order to
bring the United States into World War II.
At the same time, Irving maintained an ambivalent attitude to
Holocaust denial depending on his audience. In a 1993 letter,
Irving lashed out against his former friend Zündel, writing that:
"In April 1988 I unhesitatingly agreed to aid your defence as a
witness in Toronto.
I would not make the same mistake
again. As a penalty for having defended you then, and for
having continued to aid you since, my life has come under a
gradually mounting attack: I find myself the worldwide victim of
mass demonstrations, violence, vituperation and persecution".
(emphasis in the original) Irving went to claim his life had been
wonderful until Zündel had gotten him involved in the Holocaust
denial movement; van Pelt argues that Irving was just trying to
shift responsibility for his actions in his letter. In an interview
with Australian radio in July 1995, Irving claimed that at least
four million Jews died in World War II. In 1995, Irving stated in
another speech that "I have to take off my hat to my adversaries
and the strategies they have employed—the marketing of the very
word Holocaust: I half expected to see a little TM after it".
Likewise, depending on his audience, Irving during the 1990s has
either used the absence of a written
Füherebefehl (Füherer
order) for the "Final Solution" to argue that Hitler was unaware of
the Holocaust, or that the absence of a written order meant there
was no Holocaust.
In October 2007 Irving threatened to sue
The Jewish Chronicle for
describing him as a "Holocaust denier".
The Jewish
Chronicle responded by printing their solicitor's name and
address on its front page.
Racism and antisemitism
Irving has expressed
racist and antisemitic
sentiments, both publicly and privately. Irving has often expressed
his belief in the theory of a sinister Jewish conspiracy ruling the
world, and that the belief in the reality of Holocaust was
manufactured as part of the same alleged conspiracy. Irving uses
the label "traditional enemies of the truth" to describe Jews, and
in a 1963 article about a speech by Sir
Oswald Mosley wrote that "Yellow Star did not
make a showing". In 1992, Irving stated that "...the Jews are very
foolish not to abandon the gas chamber theory while they still have
time" and claimed he "foresees a new wave of antisemitism" the
world over due to Jewish "exploitation of the Holocaust myth".
During an interview with the American writer
Ron Rosenbaum, Irving stated his belief that
Jews were his "traditional enemy".
Several of these statements were cited by the judge's decision in
Irving's lawsuit against Penguin Books and Deborah Lipstadt. For
instance, in his diary entry for 17 September 1994, Irving wrote
about a ditty he composed for his young daughter "when halfbreed
children are wheeled past":
I am a Baby Aryan
Not Jewish or Sectarian
I have no plans to marry an
Ape or Rastafarian.
Christopher Hitchens writes
that after having dinner in his Washington apartment, Irving sang
the rhyme to his daughter once they were alone in the building's
elevator. In one interview cited in the lawsuit, Irving also stated
that he would be "willing to put [his] signature" to the "fact"
that "a great deal of control over the world is exercised by
Jews".
And from a speech in 1992, given to the
Clarendon Club:
In 2007,
The Guardian reported
that Irving said, "The Jews are the architects of their own
misfortune, but that is the short version A–Z. Between A–Z there
are then 24 other characters in intervening steps".
Libel suit
In
November 1994, Irving had his first encounter with Deborah Lipstadt at DeKalb College in Atlanta
, where Lipstadt was lecturing on Holocaust
denial. Irving stormed into the lecture hall, did his best
to disrupt Lipstadt's lecture by challenging her to a debate, waved
about a large amount of money in his hands, and announced he had
$1,000 to give right here and now to the first person who could
find a written order from Hitler for the Holocaust. Lipstadt
ignored Irving, despite his repeated attempts to draw her into a
debate. After Lipstadt's lecture had ended, Irving announced that
Lipstadt's refusal to debate him or produce a written order from
Hitler for the Holocaust despite his promise to pay $1,000 on the
spot proved that her criticism of him in
Denying the
Holocaust was invalid, and he proceeded to hand out free
copies of his Göring biography to Lipstadt's students.
On 5 September 1996, Irving filed a libel suit against Lipstadt and
her British publisher Penguin Books for publishing a British
edition of Lipstadt's book,
Denying the Holocaust, which
had first been published in the United States in 1993. At the same
time, Irving also sued
Gitta Sereny for
libel for an article she had written about him entitled "Spin Time
for Hitler" in
The Observer newspaper on 21 April 1996. As
of 2008,
the
claim has yet to be heard in a court. In letters of 25 October
and 28 October 1997 Irving threatened to sue
John Lukacs for libel if he published his book,
The Hitler of History without removing certain passages
highly critical of Irving's work. The American edition of
The
Hitler of History was published in 1997 with the alleged
libelous passages included, but because of Irving's legal threats,
no British edition of
The Hitler of History was published
until 2001. As a result of the threat of legal action by Irving,
when the British edition of
The Hitler of History was
finally published in 2001 the passages containing the criticism of
Irving's historical methods were expunged by the publisher.
In her book,
Denying the Holocaust, Lipstadt called Irving
a Holocaust denier, falsifier, and bigot, and said that he
manipulated and distorted real documents. Irving claimed to have
been libeled under the grounds that Lipstadt had called him a
Holocaust denier when in his opinion there was no Holocaust to
deny, as well as suggestions that Irving had falsified evidence or
deliberately misinterpreted it. Though the author was American,
Irving filed his suit in the English High Court, where the
burden of proof in libel cases is on the
defendant, unlike the U.S. where the burden is on the plaintiff. He
was able to file the lawsuit in the UK because the book was
published there (before 1996, if Irving had wished to sue Lipstadt,
he would have had to launch his legal action in an American court;
British libel law applies only to alleged acts of libel committed
in Britain). As explained by the trial judge,
Mr Justice Gray:
4.7 ... the burden of proving the defence of
justification rests upon the publishers.
Defamatory words are presumed under English law to be
untrue.
It is not incumbent on defendants to prove the truth of
every detail of the defamatory words published: what has to be
proved is the substantial truth of the defamatory imputations
published about the claimant.
As it is sometimes expressed, what must be proved is
the truth of the sting of the defamatory charges made.
Irving approached Penguin and offered to drop them from his lawsuit
if they would pull the book from publication in the UK, deny all of
Lipstadt's conclusions and make a charitable donation in the name
of Irving's daughter (who is disabled); he made clear he would not
settle the lawsuit with Professor Lipstadt if Penguin settled with
him. The publisher rejected his terms and the case went to
trial.
Defence
Lipstadt hired the British solicitor
Anthony Julius to present her case, while
Penguin Books hired Kevin Bays and Mark Bateman, libel specialist
from media firm Davenport Lyons. They briefed the libel barrister,
Richard Rampton QC and Penguin also briefed junior barrister
Heather Rogers. The Defendants (with Penguin picking up the tab)
also retained Professor
Richard J.
Evans, historian and Professor of Modern
History at Cambridge University
, as an expert witness. Also working as
an expert witnesses was the American Holocaust historian
Christopher Browning, the German
historian
Peter Longerich and the
Dutch architectural expert
Robert Jan van Pelt. The latter wrote a
report attesting to the fact that the death camps were designed,
built and used for the purpose of
mass
murder, while Browning testified for the reality of the
Holocaust. Longerich testified about Irving's links to neo-Nazi
groups in Britain, the United States, France, Australia, Germany
and Austria.
Evans and his two assistants spent more than two years examining
Irving's work, while gathering evidence to support the claim that
Irving had misrepresented evidence to support his prejudices. Evans
suggested that in his view, Irving had knowingly used forged
documents as sources, and that for this reason, Irving could not be
regarded as a historian. Evans' report was the most comprehensive,
in-depth examination of Irving's work:
Evans later described in 2001 to the Canadian
columnist Robert Fulford his impression of Irving after being cross-examined by him as: "He [Irving] was a bit like a dim student who didn't listen. If he didn't get the answer he wanted, he just repeated the question".
Longerich testified to the meaning of the often euphemistic
language used by German officials during the war regarding the
"
Final Solution of the Jewish
Question", and argued that from 1941 onwards, the term
"resettlement in the East" was a metaphor for deportation to the
death camps. During his exchanges with Irving, Longerich insisted
that the term "resettlement" was a euphemism for extermination and
nothing more, and used
Heinrich
Himmler's
Posen speeches in
October 1943 as proof of the Nazi state's genocidal policy. Irving
by contrast argued for a literal interpretation of the phrase
"resettlement in the East".
During his testimony and a cross-examination by Irving, Browning
countered Irving's suggestion that the last chapter of the
Holocaust has yet to be written (implying there were grounds for
doubting the reality of the Holocaust) by replying: "We are still
discovering things about the
Roman
Empire. There is no last chapter in history". Browning
countered Irving's argument that the lack of a written
Führer order proves the Holocaust did not occur by arguing
that, although no such order was ever written down, Hitler had
almost certainly made statements to his leading subordinates
indicating his wishes in regards to the Jews of Europe during the
war, thus rendering the need for a written order irrelevant.
Browning testified that several leading experts on Nazi Germany
believe that there was no written
Führer order for the
"Final Solution of the Jewish Question", but no historian doubts
the reality of the Holocaust. Browning went on to assert that
Irving was attempting to falsely equate doubts about the existence
of a written
Führer order with doubts about the Holocaust.
Browning used to support his thesis the example of Hitler's secret
speech to his
Gauleiters on 12 December 1941, in which
Hitler strongly alluded to genocide as the "Final Solution".
Browning testified that the
Madagascar
Plan of 1940-41 was "fantastic" and "bizarre", but countered
Irving's suggestion that this proves the alleged impossibility of
the Holocaust by stating: "...I do think they took it seriously. It
is fantastic, but of course, Auschwitz is fantastic, too". Browning
testified that the Madagascar Plan was not "Hitler's pipe dream" as
Irving claimed, and that:
Browning
categorically rejected Irving's claim that there was no reliable
statistical information on the size of the pre-war Jewish
population in Europe or on the killing processes, and argued that
the only reason historians debate whether five or six million Jews
were killed in the Holocaust is due to a lack of access to archives
in the former Soviet
Union
. Likewise, Browning argued that it is
possible to become soaked in human blood after shooting people at
close range based on his research for his 1992 book
Ordinary
Men, and dismissed Irving's argument that accounts of German
personnel being soaked in blood were improbable because it is not
possible to have a blood splattered uniform after shooting people
at close range.
Browning responded to Irving's claim that
because Browning had done work for the Yad Vashem
center in Jerusalem
that made him an "Israeli
agent" and thereby compromised his scholarly
abilities by stating:
Irving seemed anxious for Browning's approval, and Browning later
recalled that Irving behaved like the two of them were on "a joint
journey of exploration and discovery".
Claimant
In the trial, Irving represented himself. He called the American
Kevin B. MacDonald, an
evolutionary psychologist, to
testify on his behalf. Irving made much of the statement by the
American historian
Arno J. Mayer, who Irving went to pains to point out
was both a
Marxist and a man who would have
been considered Jewish in
Nazi racial
theory, in his 1988 book
Why Did the Heavens Not
Darken?, that most of the people who died at Auschwitz were
the victims of disease rather than murder. In response, Peter
Longerich argued that Mayer did not deny the Holocaust in his book,
and that he was simply wrong about more Jews dying of "natural" as
opposed to "unnatural" causes of death at Auschwitz.
During the trial,
Richard J.
Evans was cross-examined by Irving.
The cross-examination of Evans by Irving was noted for the high
degree of personal antogonism between the two men. Such was the
degree of antogonism that Irving challenged Evans on very minor
points, such as Evans doubting that a 1938 German plebiscite which
the Nazi regime received 98.8% of the vote was fair or not A
subject that much engaged Irving and Evans in a debate was a 1942
memo by the Chief of the Reich Chancellory
Hans Lammers to the
Reich Justice
Minister
Franz Schlegelberger
in which Lammers wrote that Hitler ordered him to put the "Jewish
Question" on the "back-burner" until after the war Evans chose to
accept the interpretation of the memo put forward by
Eberhard Jäckel in the 1970s. Irving
who chose to interpret the memo literally and taunted Evans by
saying "It is a terrible problem, is it not that we are faced with
this tantalizing plate of crumbs and morsels of what should have
provided the final smoking gun, and nowhere the whole way through
the archieves do we find even one item that we do not have to
interpret or read between the lines of, but we do have in the same
chain of evidence documents which...quite clearly specifically show
Hitler intervening in the other sense?". In response, Evans stated
"No, I do not accept that at all. It is because you want to
interpret euphemisims as being literal and that is what the whole
problem is. Every time there is an euphemism, Mr. Irving...or a
camouflage piece of statement or language about Madagascar, you
want to treat it as the literal truth, because it serves your
purpose of trying to exculpate Hilter. That is part of...the way
you manipulate and distort the documents"
Irving also
subpoenaed the diplomatic
historian Donald Cameron Watt and the military historian
John Keegan to testify in his case against
Lipstadt; both men had refused an earlier invitation to testify for
Irving on their own and appeared to be very reluctant on the stand.
Rather than focus on the defence's evidence against him, or on
whether or not Lipstadt had defamed him, Irving seemed to focus
mainly on his "right to
free speech". In
his closing statement, Irving claimed to have been a victim of an
international, mostly Jewish,
conspiracy for more than three
decades.
Ruling

Irving unsuccessfully represented
himself and his work during the trial.
The Court found that Lipstadt did not libel Irving when she
called him a Holocaust denier in her book.
In presenting his ruling, Mr. Justice Gray concluded that he found
the following claims against Irving to be "
substantially true":
Irving lost subsequent attempts at appeal, the appeal finally being
rejected by
Lord Justice
Sedley.
A 2001 episode of
PBS'
NOVA (titled "Holocaust on Trial")
focused on the case, and showed re-enactments of events in the
courtroom. Irving was played by British actor
John Castle.
Aftermath
Not only did Irving lose the case, but in light of the evidence
presented at the trial a number of his works that had previously
escaped serious scrutiny were brought to public attention. He was
also liable to pay all of Penguin's substantial costs of the trial.
When he did not meet these Davenport Lyons moved to make him
bankrupt on behalf of their client. He was forced into
bankruptcy in 2002.
Criticism by historians
Irving was once highly regarded for his expert knowledge of German
military archives. Much of his scholarship was disputed by
historians to the point that his standing as a historian was
challenged from his earliest publications. Contentious in large
part for advancing interpretations of the war considered favourable
to the German side and for association with far-right groups that
advanced these views, by 1988 he began advocating the view that the
Holocaust did not take place as a systematic and deliberate
genocide, and quickly grew to be one of the most prominent
advocates of Holocaust denial, costing him what scholarly
reputation he had outside those circles. A marked change in
Irving's reputation can be seen in the surveys of the
historiography of the Third Reich produced by
Ian Kershaw. In the first edition of Kershaw's
book
The Nazi Dictatorship in 1985, Irving was called a
"maverick" historian working outside of the mainstream of the
historical profession By the time of the fourth edition of
The
Nazi Dictatorship in 2000, Irving was described only as a
historical writer who had in the 1970s engaged in "provocations"
intended to provide an "exculpation of Hitler's role in the Final
Solution"
Reaction to Irving's work (1960s–1970s)
In a review of 1977, the British historian
Hugh Trevor-Roper wrote that "no praise
can be too high for his [Irving's] indefatigable, scholarly
industry". Trevor-Roper followed up his praise by expressing severe
doubts about Irving's methodology. Trevor-Roper argued that :"He
[Irving] seizes on a small, but dubious particle of 'evidence';
builds upon it, by private interpretation, a large general
conclusion; and then overlooks or re-interprets the more
substantial evidence and probability against it. Since this
defective method is invariably used to excuse Hitler or the Nazis
and to damage their opponents, we may reasonably speak of a
consistent bias, unconsciously distorting the evidence". Finally,
Trevor-Roper commented: "When a historian relies mainly on primary
sources, which we can not easily check, he challenges our
confidence and forces us to ask critical questions. How reliable is
his historical method? How sound is his judgment? We ask these
questions particularly of a man like Mr. Irving, who makes a virtue
of—almost a profession—of using arcane sources to affront
established opinions". Trevor-Roper ended by writing "He may read
his manuscript diaries correctly. But we can never be quite sure,
and when he is at most original, we likely to be least sure".
The British historian
A. J. P.
Taylor called Irving in 1978 an
author of "unrivaled industry' and "good scholarship" regarding
research in the archives. Taylor criticized Irving's double
standard with historical judgements, using as an example Irving's
claim that the lack of a written
Führer order proves that
Hitler did not know about the Holocaust while at the same time
claiming that the lack of a written order "proved" that Churchill
ordered the "murder" of General Sikorski (In
Accident,
Irving claimed that there was a written order for Sikorski's
"murder", but that Churchill had it destroyed). The British
historian
Paul Addison in 1979
described Irving as a "colossus of research", but criticized him
for his view of "Churchill as wicked as Hitler" and "a schoolboy in
judgment". In a book review published in the
Frankfurter Allgemeine
Zeitung on 18 June 1979, the German historian
Andreas Hillgruber for the most part
offered a highly unfavorable judgment of Irving's work. Despite his
criticism, Hillgruber ended his review with the comment that
Irving's work "amounts to an indubitable and in no way small merit
of Irving".
Reactions to Irving (1980s–1990s)
1980s
In a review of Irving's 1988 book
Churchill's War,
David Cannadine criticised Irving's
"double standard on evidence", accusing Irving of "demanding
absolute documentary proof to convict the Germans (as when he
sought to show that Hitler was not responsible for the Holocaust),
while relying on circumstantial evidence to condemn the British (as
in his account of the Allied
bombing
of Dresden)".
Writing in 1989 about Irving's Göring biography, the
German-Canadian historian Peter Hoffmann declared: Hoffman went on
to write that though Irving had at one time played a useful role in
the historical profession by making outrageous assertions that at
least had the benefit of inspiring historians to undertake research
to rebut him, the time for that had now passed, and that Irving was
simply irrelevant to the study of the Third Reich.
In a
feuilleton published in the
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung on 18 October 1989 the
German historian
Rainer Zitelmann
praised Irving for having "struck a nerve" with his provocative
style and aggressive assertions. Zitelmann found much to be praised
about Irving's claim that the lack of a written
Führer
order for the Holocaust suggests that Hitler was unaware of the
Holocaust, and argued that if that was true, then historians should
stop holding the Holocaust against Hitler. Zitelmann ended his
article with the claim that "Irving must not be ignored. He has
weaknesses [but he is] one of the best knowers of sources…[and has]
contributed much to research". The British historian
John Charmley commented that "Irving's
sources, unlike the conclusions which he draws from them, are
usually sound", and that Irving "has been unjustly ignored".
1990s
In 1990, the American historian Peter Baldwin called Irving a
historian who "…has made a career of seeking to shift culpability
for the worst atrocities from Hitler and to draw also the Allies
into proximity with the outrages of the war" In his 1994 book,
A World At Arms, the American historian
Gerhard Weinberg described Irving as
"notoriously unreliable", and criticized those historians who used
Irving to support their arguments
Prominent British historian Sir
John
Keegan wrote in 1996 in his book
The Battle for
History, "Some controversies are entirely bogus, like David
Irving's contention that Hitler's subordinates kept from him the
facts of the Final Solution, the extermination of the Jews". In an
20 April 1996 review in
The
Daily Telegraph of
Goebbels: Mastermind of the Third
Reich, Keegan wrote that Irving "knows more than anyone alive
about the German side of the Second World War", and claimed that
Hitler's War was "indispensable to anyone seeking to
understand the war in the round".
During Lipstadt's libel trial, Keegan—whom he had subpeonaed to
appear as a witness—lambasted Irving by saying: "I continue to
think it perverse of you to propose that Hitler could not have
known until as late as October 1943 what was going on with the
Jewish people" and, when asked if it was perverse to say that
Hitler did not know about the Final Solution, answered "that it
defies common sense". In an article in
The Daily Telegraph
of 12 April 2000, Keegan spoke of his experience of the trial,
writing that Irving had an "all-consuming knowledge of a vast body
of material" and exhibited "many of the qualities of the most
creative historians", that his skill as an archivist could not be
contested, and that he was "certainly never dull". However,
according to Keegan, "like many who seek to shock, he may not
really believe what he says and probably feels astounded when taken
seriously".
In the 1990s, Irving featured on his Web site a translation of a
letter by the prominent German historian
Hans Mommsen, praising Irving's skill as a
researcher. Mommsen, who had written the letter in 1977,
unsuccessfully attempted to have it removed, but did succeed in
forcing Irving to feature a second letter from him written in 1998
in which Mommsen completely disavowed his 1977 letter under the
grounds that he did not wish to be associated with Irving's recent
statements about the Holocaust.
In a six-page essay in
The New York Review of
Books published on 19 September 1996 the American
historian
Gordon A. Craig, a leading scholar of German history
at Stanford
University
, noted Irving's claims that the Holocaust never
took place and that Auschwitz
was merely "a labor camp with an unfortunately high
death rate". Though "such obtuse and quickly discredited
views" may be "offensive to large numbers of people", Craig argued
that Irving's work is "the best study we have of the German side of
the Second World War" and that "we dare not" disregard his views.
Craig called Irving a "useful irritant"; a
devil's advocate historian who
promoted what Craig considered to be a twisted and wrong-headed
view of history, with a great deal of élan, but his advocacy of
these views forced historians to make a fruitful
epistemological examination about the
current state of knowledge about the
Third
Reich. In his 2000 book
The Holocaust Industry,
Norman Finkelstein quoted Craig's
testament to Irving's value in part thus: "His book
Hitler's
War remains the best study we have of the German side of the
Second World War and, as such, indispensable for all students of
that conflict..."
The
Hungarian-American historian
John Lukacs in his 1997 book
The
Hitler of History has labeled Irving an apologist for Hitler
who consistently mishandled historical evidence in Hitler's favor.
Lukacs maintains that over the years, Irving's treatment of Hitler
has gone from a barely concealed admiration to a
Great Man treatment of Hitler. Lukacs
argues that Irving's picture of Hitler is defective because of his
tendency to confuse asserting that Hitler was a great warlord as
being the same thing as proving Hitler was a military genius, which
leads to a total neglect of the crucial question of why Hitler took
particular decisions at particular times. Lukacs condemned Irving
as a historical writer for his "twisting" of evidence (i.e.
labeling
Adolf Eichmann's statement
before an Israeli court in 1961 that he heard from Himmler that
Hitler had given a verbal order for the Holocaust as mere
"hearsay"). Lukacs described Irving in the 1997 American edition of
The Hitler of History as the most influential of Hitler's
apologists, and found it "regrettable" that many professional
historians cite Irving as a source. Lukacs called Irving's
historical opinions objectionable and inexcusable, and complained
that too many of Irving's opinions were supported by footnotes that
referred either to sources that did not exist or said something
different from what Irving wrote.
Some of the examples Lukacs cited in
support of his claim was Irving's contemptuous statement mocking
the Polish cavalry for charging German tanks (a legend discredited
even in the 1970s when Irving wrote Hitler's War),
asserting with no source that Hitler refused a lavish banquet
prepared for him in Warsaw
in 1939
out of the desire to eat the same rations as the ordinary German
soldier, for crediting a statement again with no source to Hitler
in August 1940 that he would let Churchill live in peace after
defeating Britain, for falsely claiming Operation Typhoon
, the German drive onto Moscow
in 1941, was
forced on him by his General Staff, and for putting his own words
in a speech of Hitler in September 1943 implying Churchill was a
decadent homosexual (not something that
was in Hitler's speech). Lukacs asserted too many of the crucial
statements by Irving in Hitler's War such as his claim
that Hitler foresaw Operation
Uranus, the Soviet counter-offensive at the Battle of
Stalingrad
, or his claim that the Hungarian leader Major
Ferenc Szálasi wanted to fight
to the bitter end in 1944-45 (when he wished for a German-Soviet
compromise peace) were completely dishonest and untrue statements
supported by references to non-existent documents.
American writer
Ron Rosenbaum
questioned Irving about a memoir in his possession that was alleged
to have been written by
Adolf
Eichmann in the 1950s. The precise authenticity of the
Eichmann Memoirs is in doubt, but parts of the book,
according to the German Federal Archives, appeared to be genuine
(through the book was apparently the result of an interview between
Eichmann and an Argentine journalist in the 1950s).
Irving had received
the alleged memoir during a visit to Argentina
in December 1991, when it was presented to him
after he had spoken at a neo-Nazi rally and was quite proud of his
find. In
The Eichmann Memoirs, Eichmann claimed to
have heard from Himmler that Hitler had given a verbal order
authorizing the Holocaust, thereby contradicting Irving's claim in
Hitler's War that Hitler was unaware of the Holocaust.
Irving's
response to the claim that Hitler ordered the Holocaust in The
Eichmann Memoirs was to claim that Eichmann wrote his memoirs
in 1956 at the time of the Suez War, and
was fearful that Cairo
, Egypt
might fall
to Israel
.
Irving told Rosenbaum that his philosophy of history is a strictly
empirical one, and that: "I tried to apply the three criteria that
Hugh Trevor-Roper thought were indispensable to reading documents.
Three questions you ask of a document: Was it genuine? Was it
written by somebody who was in a position to know what he's writing
about? And why does this document exist? The third one is the
crucial one with the Eichmann papers. He's writing in 1956 at the
time of the Suez crisis; we know because he refers to it". Irving's
reasoning is that if Cairo was taken by the Israeli Defence Forces,
then the Israelis might discover the "
rat-line", as undercover smuggling
networks for Nazis were known, that had allowed Eichmann to escape
to Argentina, and that therefore Eichmann had written his memoirs
as a potential defence in the event of being captured by the
Israelis. In this way, Irving argued that
The Eichmann
Memoirs were genuine but that the claim that Hitler ordered
the Holocaust was false—made only to reduce Eichmann's
responsibility for the Holocaust. Also in the same interview,
Irving claimed wanting acceptance as a scholar by other historians
and bemoaned having to associate with what he called the lunatic
fringe
anti-Semitic groups; he claimed
he would disassociate himself from these groups full of "cracked"
people as soon as he was accepted by the historians' community.
Rosenbaum sarcastically wrote in his book
Explaining
Hitler that if Irving wanted to be considered a historian, he
was going about it in a rather strange way by denying the Holocaust
at neo-Nazi rallies.
Persona non grata

Irving as he was deported from Canada
in 1992
After Irving denied the Holocaust in two 1989 speeches given in
Austria, the Austrian government issued an arrest warrant against
him and barred him from entering the country. This case came up
again in 2005 when Irving was arrested and brought to trial (see
next section). In early 1992 a German court found him guilty of
Holocaust denial under the
Auschwitzlüge section of the
law against
Volksverhetzung
(a failed appeal by Irving would see the fine rise from 10,000 DM
to 30,000 DM), and he was subsequently barred from entering
Germany. Other governments followed suit, including Austria, Italy
and Canada, where he was arrested in November 1992 and deported
back to the United Kingdom. In an administrative hearing
surrounding those events, he was found by the hearing office to
have engaged in a "total fabrication" in telling a story of an exit
from and return to Canada which would, for technical reasons, have
made the original deportation order invalid. He was also barred
from entering Australia in 1992, a ban he made four unsuccessful
legal attempts to overturn.
On 27
April 1993 Irving was ordered to attend court to be examined on
charges relating to the Loi
Gayssot in France
.
The law, however, does not permit
extradition and Irving simply refused to travel
to France.
Then, in February 1994, Irving spent 10 days of a three month
sentence in London's
Pentonville
prison for
contempt of court
following a legal wrangling over publishing rights.
Irving's legal
troubles continued as a Mannheim
court indicted him for defaming the dead; because
of this action, he would be fined 20,000 DM in
mid-1997.
Early in
September 2004, Michael Cullen, the
deputy prime
minister of New
Zealand
, announced that Irving would not be permitted to
visit the country, where he had been invited by the National Press Club to
give a series of lectures under the heading "The Problems of
Writing about World War II in a Free Society". The National
Press Club defended its invitation of Irving, saying that it
amounted not to an endorsement of his views, but rather an
opportunity to question him. The intended visit provoked an outcry
among Jewish groups, who were not appeased by Irving's promise not
to speak about the Holocaust.
Irving had visited New Zealand twice before in the 1980s. His
intended 2004 visit was refused on the grounds that he had been
convicted of offences by a German court, and that at various times
had been deported from, and/or refused entry to, Canada, the United
States, Italy, and South Africa. "Mr. Irving is not permitted to
enter New Zealand under the Immigration Act because people who have
been deported from another country are refused entry", government
spokeswoman Katherine O'Sullivan had told
The Press earlier.
Irving rejected the
ban and attempted to board a Qantas flight
for New Zealand from Los
Angeles
on 17 September 2004. He was not allowed on
board. "As far as I'm concerned, the legal battle now begins", he
was quoted as saying.
Arrest and imprisonment in Austria
On 11
November 2005, the Austrian police in the southern state of
Styria
, acting
under a 1989 warrant, arrested
Irving. Four days later, he was charged by state prosecutors
with the speech crime of "trivialising the Holocaust". His
application for bail was denied on the grounds that he would flee
or repeat the offence. He remained in jail awaiting trial. On 20
February 2006 Irving pleaded guilty to the charge of "trivialising,
grossly playing down and denying the Holocaust".
Sentencing
Before Irving's sentencing hearing, he stated through his lawyer
that he had changed his views and his ways. At the trial, Judge
Liebtreu quoted numerous statements of Irving's, including "there
were no gas chambers at Auschwitz" and "it makes no sense to
transport people from
Amsterdam, Vienna and
Brussels 500 kilometres to Auschwitz simply to liquidate them when
it can be more easily done 8 km from the city where they live".
Irving informed Judge Liebtreu that he "regretted the
formulation".
Towards the end of the hearing, Irving again publicly recanted,
saying that "I've changed my views. I spoke then about Auschwitz
and gas chambers based on my knowledge at the time, but by 1991
when I came across the Eichmann papers, I wasn't saying that any
more and I wouldn't say that now. The Nazis did murder millions of
Jews. ..I made a mistake by saying there were no gas chambers, I am
absolutely without doubt that the Holocaust took place. I apologise
to those few I might have offended though I remain very proud of
the 30 books I have written". However, Irving continued to insist
that Hitler knew nothing of the
death
camps, and that "The figure of six million killed Jews is just
a symbolic number".
Michael Klackl, the prosecuting attorney, stated:
The judge, Peter Liebtreu, summarized:
At the end of the one-day hearing, Irving was sentenced to three
years' imprisonment in accordance with the Austrian Federal Law on
the prohibition of National Socialist activities (officially
Verbotsgesetz, "Prohibition Statute") for having denied
the existence of gas chambers in Nazi concentration camps in
several lectures held in Austria in 1989. Irving sat motionless as
Liebtreu asked Irving if he had understood the sentence, to which
Irving replied "I'm not sure I do" before being bundled out of the
court by Austrian police. Later, Irving declared himself shocked by
the severity of the sentence. He reportedly had already purchased a
plane ticket home to London.
After the sentencing, Liebtreu told the audience that "The court
did not consider the defendant to have genuinely changed his mind.
The regret he showed was considered to be mere lip service to the
law".
On 28 February, Irving once again questioned the Holocaust, asking
"Given the ruthless efficiency of the Germans, if there was an
extermination programme to kill all the Jews, how come so many
survived?"
He claimed that the number of people gassed
in Auschwitz
was relatively small, and that his earlier claims
that there had been no gassing at all had been a "methodological
error". According to Irving, "You could say that millions
died, but not at Auschwitz". Within hours, the Austrian government
reacted by barring Irving from further communication with the
media.
Time in prison
While in jail Irving wrote an account of his imprisonment and the
Austrian justice system, which has now appeared online:
Banged Up.
Deborah Lipstadt, upon hearing of
Irving's sentence to three years' imprisonment, said, "I am not
happy when
censorship wins, and I don't
believe in winning battles via censorship... The way of fighting
Holocaust deniers is with history and with truth".
Concerning the Austrian 'Prohibition Statute,' the Austrian Federal
Ministry for Foreign Affairs insisted that it conforms with
international law and international human rights standards, and
that it is not contrary to
Article
10 of the
European Convention on Human
Rights 1950, that being a statute "...necessary in a
democratic society (inter alia)... for the
prevention of disorder or crime,... [and]... for the protection of
the rights of others".
Release
Both Irving, hoping to have the verdict overturned, and the
Austrian prosecutor, calling for a longer sentence, served appeals
on 22 April 2006. The
Austrian
Supreme Court considered Irving's appeal but ultimately ruled
against him in September 2006. The appeal over the length of
sentence was heard and concluded on 20 December. The court replaced
two-thirds of Irving's jail sentence with probation. Since he had
already served the balance of his sentence in jail, he was released
from prison.On 21 December 2006, Irving was technically "expelled"
from Austria; he was banned from ever returning to the country
again. Upon Irving's arrival in the UK he reaffirmed his position,
stating that he felt "no need any longer to show remorse" for his
Holocaust views.
Controversy
His imprisonment caused some controversy and has been criticized on
the grounds of free speech issues. The German historian
Hans-Ulrich Wehler supported Irving's
imprisonment under the grounds that "The denial of such an
unimaginable murder of millions, one third of whom were children
under the age of 14, cannot simply be accepted as something
protected by the freedom of speech". By contrast
Deborah Lipstadt argued that Irving should
not be imprisoned for expressing views that she finds odious and
wrong. Others have stated that "nothing could be more fatal to our
rights to speak and to write than for us to deny others the right
to deny our dearest beliefs". Opponents of Irving's imprisonment
argue that free speech should be applied to everyone regardless of
their viewpoints and that it is a slippery slope to imprison
someone due to the lack of factual accuracy or unpopularity of
their opinions. It has also been argued that by imprisoning Irving
the Austrian courts made a martyr out of Irving and did more damage
than good, and that it would have been better to simply "let him go
home and let him continue talking to six people in a basement", and
"let him fade into obscurity where he belongs".
Post-release
Irving
appeared in Hungary
in 2007, where on 15 March he took part in and gave
a speech for a far-right nationalist
rally.
On 18 May 2007, he was expelled from the 52nd Warsaw International
Book Fair in Poland because books he brought there were deemed by
the organizers as promoting Nazism and antisemitism, which is in
violation of Polish law.
Irving
and BNP leader Nick Griffin were invited to speak at a forum
on free speech at the Oxford Union
on 26 November 2007, along with Anne Atkins and Evan
Harris. The debate took place after Oxford Union members
voted in favour of it, but was disrupted by protesters.
Snubbed by Norwegian arts festival
In
October 2008 a controversy erupted in Norway
over
Irving's invitation to The Norwegian Festival of
Literature taking place between 26–31 May 2009 in Lillehammer
. The festival is the largest literature
festival in the Nordic countries. Several of the country's most
distinguished authors protested the invitation. (see
article on Festival for details)
In a matter of days after the controversy had started, the
invitation was withdrawn. This led author
Stig Sæterbakken, who had invited
Irving, to resign from his position as director of program content
for the festival in protest of the decision. The head of the
festival, Randi Skeie, deplored what had taken place, stating
"Everything is fine as long as everyone agrees, but things get more
difficult when one doesn't like the views being put forward".
Involvement in Williamson controversy
As
Bishop Richard Williamson
came under pressure from the Vatican
to retract his statements denying the Holocaust as
genocide and support revisions, he contacted Irving for
guidance. Irving advised Williamson to admit to "mass
killings" at Treblinka
, Sobibor
, and Belzec
from the
spring of 1942 to October 1943. Irving further argued
that the issue had been played up to distract public attention from
Israel
's actions
against Hamas in Gaza
and the
resulting loss of civilian Palestinian life. Irving indicated
that, "There is much dispute over numbers and methods of killing",
but he "should not dispute that there were such killings".
Views condemned by the Spanish foreign minister
In September 2009 Irving was interviewed by the Spanish newspaper
El Mundo, the first in a
six-part series of interviews that offered a retrospective on the
start of World War II. The article ran for one and a half pages,
with Irving answering 31 questions about the war ranging from
historical causes to Hitler's role in the Holocaust. The article
featured a profile of Irving's career in which his views were
identified as "more or less pro-Nazi", and the newspaper staff also
wrote an editorial disavowing Irving's "vicious anti-Semitic
discourse" but defending his right to be heard, citing freedom of
expression.
The Israeli ambassador to Spain,
Raphael
Schutz, complained about the interview although he did not try
to stop its publication. The day after the article was published,
Spanish Foreign Minister
Miguel Ángel Moratinos issued a
public statement saying he regretted that any space was given to
Irving's views.
2009 book tour
Around October 20, 2009, New York State Assemblyman
Dov Hikind and twelve other elected officials of
New York State and New York City publicly sent a letter to
Kenneth Chenault, CEO of
American Express Company asserting that
Irving's "activities" placed his company that sold tickets for his
book tour events in violation of American Express's advertised
standards for Card Merchants. American Express rescinded the
companies' Merchant Agreements the next day.
A man was
stabbed during an appearance by Irving at an invitation-only event
held at the Ritz Carlton Hotel in
Manalapan,
Florida
on October 27, 2009.
On November 13, hackers broke into Irving's website and email
account. They posted the lists of people who had purchased tickets
to the book tour on
Wikileaks then
destroyed the original files. The Catholic Kolping Society in New
York canceled a booking of their auditorium made under a false name
when they discovered it was intended to be used by Irving. Irving
had been selling tickets to the event without disclosing the
location, which was to be kept secret. A talk at an
American Legion hall in New Jersey was
subsequently canceled as well.
Bibliography
Books
- The Destruction
of Dresden (1963) ISBN 0-7057-0030-5
- The Mare's Nest (1964)
- The Virus House (1967)
- The Destruction of Convoy PQ17 (1967)
- Accident — The Death of General
Sikorski (1967) ISBN 0-7183-0420-9
- Breach of Security (1968) ISBN 0-7183-0101-3
- The Rise and Fall of the Luftwaffe (1973), a
biography of Erhard Milch ISBN
0-316-43238-5
- Hitler's War
(1977)
- The Trail of the Fox (1977), a biography of
Erwin Rommel ISBN 0-525-22200-6
- The War Path (1978) ISBN 0-670-74971-0
- The War Between the Generals
(1981)
- Uprising! (1981), ISBN
0-949667-91-9
- The Secret Diaries of Hitler's Doctor
(1983) ISBN 0-02-558250-X
- The German Atomic Bomb: The History of Nuclear
Research in Nazi Germany (1983) ISBN 0-306-80198-1
- Der Morgenthau Plan 1944-45 (in German
only) (1986)
- War between the Generals (1986) ISBN
0-86553-069-6
- Hess, the Missing Years (1987) Macmillan,
ISBN 0-333-45179-1
- Churchill's War (1987) ISBN
0-947117-56-3
- Destruction of Convoy PQ-17 (1968), reprint
(1989) ISBN 0-312-91152-1
- Göring (1989), biography of Hermann Göring ISBN 0-688-06606-2
- Das Reich hört mit (in German only) (1989)
- Hitler's War (1991), revised edition, incorporating
The War Path
- Apocalypse 1945, The Destruction of Dresden,
updated and revised edition, (1995)
- Der unbekannte Dr. Goebbels (in German only)
(1995)
- Goebbels — Mastermind of the Third
Reich biography of Joseph
Goebbels(1996) ISBN 1-872197-13-2
- Nuremberg: The Last Battle (1996) ISBN
1-872197-16-7
- Churchill's War Volume II: Triumph in
Adversity (1997) ISBN 1-872197-15-9
- Rommel: The Trail of the Fox, Wordsworth
Military Library; Limited edition (1999) ISBN 1-84022-205-0
- Hitler's War and the War Path (2002) ISBN
1-872197-10-8
Translations
- The Memoirs of Field-Marshal Keitel (1965)
- The Memoirs of General Gehlen (1972)
Monographs
- The Night the Dams Burst (1973)
- Von Guernica bis Vietnam (in German only) (1982)
- Die deutsche Ostgrenze (in German only) (1990)
- Banged Up (online only) (2008)
Collected articles in German
- Und Deutschlands Städte starben nicht (1963)
- Nürnberg: Die letzte Schlacht (1979)
- Wie krank war Hitler wirklich? (1980)
See also
Notes
- David Irving is not a historian in the academic sense of the
term. While some media refer to him as a "historian" ( ), and Judge
Charles Gray commented that "his knowledge of World War 2 is
unparalleled", and refer to him as a "military historian" ( )
others have chosen not to consider him as one: *"In 1969, after
David Irving's support for Rolf Hochhuth, the German playwright who
accused Winston Churchill of murdering the Polish wartime leader
General Sikorski, 'The Daily Telegraph issued a memo to
all its correspondents. 'It is incorrect,' it said, 'to describe
David Irving as a historian. In future we should describe him as an
author.'" *"It may seem an absurd semantic dispute to deny the
appellation of 'historian' to someone who has written two dozen
books or more about historical subjects. But if we mean by
historian someone who is concerned to discover the truth about the
past, and to give as accurate a representation of it as possible,
then Irving is not a historian. Those in the know, indeed, are
accustomed to avoid the term altogether when referring to him and
use some circumlocution such as 'historical writer' instead. Irving
is essentially an ideologue who uses history for his own political
purposes; he is not primarily concerned with discovering and
interpreting what happened in the past, he is concerned merely to
give a selective and tendentious account of it in order to further
his own ideological ends in the present. The true historian's
primary concern, however, is with the past. That is why, in the
end, Irving is not a historian." Irving vs. (1) Lipstadt and (2)
Penguin Books, Expert Witness Report by Richard J. Evans
FBA, Professor of Modern History, University of Cambridge, 2000,
Chapter 6. *"State prosecutor Michael Klackl said: 'He's not a
historian, he's a falsifier of history.'" *"...Irving has never
examined and interpreted facts for the simple reason that he is not
a historian. He twists or suppresses evidence to fit a foregone
conclusion—the opposite of what any reputable historian
does."
- Shermer, Michael; Grobman, Alex (2002). Denying
History. p. 49.
- Discredited: * *"One of Britain's most prominent speakers on
Muslim issues is today exposed as a supporter of David Irving...
Bukhari contacted the discredited historian, sentenced this year to
three years in an Austrian prison for Holocaust denial, after
reading his website." *"David Irving, the discredited historian and
Nazi apologist, was last night starting a three-year prison
sentence in Vienna for denying the Holocaust and the gas chambers
of Auschwitz." *"Conclusion on meaning 2.15 (vi): that Irving is
discredited as an historian." David
Irving v. Penguin Books and Deborah Lipstadt/II. *"DAVID
Irving, the discredited revisionist historian and most outspoken
British Holocaust denier, has added further fuel to the controversy
over his early release from an Austrian jail by recanting his court
statement of regret over his views." *"Discredited British author
David Irving spoke in front of some 250 people at a small theatre
on Szabadság tér last Monday." *"Yet Irving, a discredited
right-wing historian, was described by a High Court judge after a
long libel trial as a racist anti-semite who denied the Holocaust."
*"'The sentence against Irving confirms that he and his views are
discredited, but as a general rule I don't think that this is the
way this should be dealt with,' said Antony Lerman, director of the
London-based Institute for Jewish Policy Research. 'It is better to
combat denial by education and using good speech to drive out bad
speech.'" *"Deborah Lipstadt is Dorot Professor of Modern Jewish
and Holocaust Studies and director of The Rabbi Donald A. Tam
Institute for Jewish Studies at Emory University. She is the author
of two books about the Holocaust. Her book Denying the
Holocaust: The Growing Assault on Truth and Memory led to the
2000 court case in which she defeated and discredited Holocaust
denier David Irving." *"After the discredited British historian
David Irving was sentenced to a three-year jail term in Austria as
a penalty for denying the Holocaust, the liberal conscience of
western Europe has squirmed and agonised." *"...is a disciple of
discredited historian and Holocaust denier David Irving." *"If the
case for competence applies to those who lack specialist knowledge,
it applies even further to those who have been discredited as
incompetent. For example, why ought we include David Irving in a
debate aiming to establish the truth about the Holocaust, after a
court has found that he manipulates and misinterprets history?"
*"Ironically, Julius is also a celebrated solicitor famous for his
defence of Schuchard's colleague, Deborah Lipstadt, against the
suit for of libel brought by the discredited historian David Irving
brought when Lipstadt accused him of denying the Holocaust."
*"David Irving, the discredited historian and Nazi apologist, was
on Monday night starting a three-year prison sentence in Vienna for
denying the Holocaust and the gas chambers of Auschwitz." *"Irving,
a discredited historian, has insisted that Jews at Auschwitz were
not gassed." *"The two best-known present-day Holocaust deniers are
the discredited historian David Irving, jailed last year in Austria
for the offence, and the Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, who wants Israel wiped off the map." *"[Irving]
claimed that Lipstadt's book accuses him of falsifying historical
facts in order to support his theory that the Holocaust never
happened. This of course discredited his reputation as a historian.
.. On 11 April, High Court judge Charles Gray ruled against Irving,
concluding that he indeed qualified as a Holocaust denier and
anti-Semite and that as such he has distorted history in order to
defend his hero, Adolf Hitler." *"In Britain, which does not have a
Holocaust denial law, Irving had already been thoroughly
discredited when he unsuccessfully sued historian Deborah Lipstadt
in 1998 for describing him as a Holocaust denier." *"Holocaust
denier and discredited British historian David Irving, for example,
asserts. .. that Auschwitz gas chambers were constructed after
World War II." *"Holocaust denier: An Austrian court hears
discredited British historian David Irving's appeal against his
jail sentence for denying the Nazi genocide of the Jews."
*"DISCREDITED British historian David Irving began serving three
years in an Austrian prison yesterday for denying the Holocaust, a
crime in the country where Hitler was born."
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
41.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
40.
- Rosenbaum, Ron (1999). Explaining Hitler. p. 227.
- interview
- article
- Waterhouse, Rosie "The week when Goebbels exploded: 'I regard payment
from the Sunday Times as being in two forms: . . . cash and . . .
prestige. My reputation is . . . more important than the money':
From Brentwood to Berchtesgaden. Rosie Waterhouse traces the
disturbing story of the 'revisionist' David Irving", The
Independent on Sunday, article dated 11 July 1992, link
checked 24 May 2009
- Wyden, Peter The Hitler Virus: The Insidious Legacy of
Adolf Hitler, New York: Arcade Publishing, 2001 page 159
- Real History and the 1942 North Russian Convoys
- http://www.fpp.co.uk/Legal/PQ17Libel/Background220170.html
http://fpp.co.uk/Legal/PQ17Libel/Background220170.html
- Mosley packs them in.Pi magazine, 22 February 1961.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. pp.
225–226.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
43.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
225.
- Evans, Richard J (2001). Lying About Hitler. p.
170.
- David Irving's World of Real History.
- Fighting the Holocaust deniers
- Rosenbaum, Ron (1999). Explaining Hitler. p. 232.
- Rosenbaum, Ron (1999). Explaining Hitler. pp.
227–229.
- Lipstadt, Deborah (2005). History on Trial. p.
293.
- Lipstadt, Deborah (2005). History on Trial. pp.
293–294.
- Lipstadt, Deborah (2005). History on Trial. p.
294.
- Lipstadt, Deborah Denying the Holocaust, New York:
Free Press, 1993 page 232.
- Lipstadt, Deborah (1993). Denying the Holocaust p.
231.
- e.g. The Guardian
- Philippe Naughton and agencies in Vienna. "Irving jailed for three years, despite Holocaust
U-turn", The
Times, 20 February 2006.
- The trial of David Irving—and my part in his downfall, by John
Keegan, Defence Editor, Daily Telegraph (UK) ISSUE 1783 Wednesday
12 April 2000
- "History needs David Irvings" by Donald Cameron Watt, The
Evening Standard, 11 April 2000.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
128.
- Lukacs, John (1997). The Hitler of History. p.
178.
- Craig, Gordon (1982). The Germans. p. 72.
- Evans, Richard J (1989). In Hitler's Shadow. p.
166.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
46.
- Lipstadt, Deborah (1993). Denying the Holocaust. p.
111.
- Craig, Gordon (1982). The Germans. pp. 72–73.
- Craig, Gordon (1982). The Germans. pp. 73–74.
- Kerhshaw, Ian The Nazi Dictatorship, London: Edward
Arnold 1985 page 95
- Lipstadt, Deborah (1993). Denying the Holocaust. p.
161
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
45.
- Syndnor, Charles "The Selling of Adolf Hitler: David Irving's
Hitler's War" pages 169–99 from Central European History
Issue # 2, Volume 12, June 1979 page 173.
- Pelt, Robert Jan van (2002). The Case for Auschwitz.
p. 20.
- Evans, Richard J (2001). Lying About Hitler. p.
41.
- Jäckel, Eberhard (1993). David Irving's Hitler. p.
21.
- Jäckel, Eberhard (1993). David Irving's Hitler. p.
22.
- Jäckel, Eberhard (1993). David Irving's Hitler. p.
23.
- Jäckel, Eberhard (1993). David Irving's Hitler. p.
24.
- Jäckel, Eberhard (1993). David Irving's Hitler. pp.
26–27.
- Jäckel, Eberhard (1993). David Irving's Hitler. p.
28.
- Jäckel, Eberhard (1993). David Irving's Hitler. pp.
30–31.
- Jäckel, Eberhard (1993). David Irving's Hitler. pp.
31–32.
- Jäckel, Eberhard (1993). David Irving's Hitler. p.
34.
- Jäckel, Eberhard (1993). David Irving's Hitler. p.
36.
- Jäckel, Eberhard (1993). David Irving's Hitler. p.
37.
- Jäckel, Eberhard (1993). David Irving's Hitler. pp.
36–38.
- Jäckel, Eberhard (1993). David Irving's Hitler. pp.
37–38.
- Jäckel, Eberhard (1993). David Irving's Hitler. p.
38.
- Lukacs, John "Caveat Lector" pages 946-950 from National
Review, Volume XXIX, Issue # 32, 19 August 1977, page 946
- Lukacs, John "Caveat Lector" pages 946-950 from National
Review, Volume XXIX, Issue # 32, 19 August 1977, page 947
- Smith, Bradley "Two Alibies for the Inhumanities: A. R. Butz,
"The Hoax of the Twentieth Century" and David Irving, "Hitler's
War"" pages 327-335 from German Studies Review, Volume 1,
Issue # 3. October 1978
- Broszat, Martin "Hitler and the Genesis of the 'Final
Solution': An Assessment of David Irving's Theses" pages 390-429
from Aspects of the Third Reich edited by H.W. Koch pages
392-393.
- Broszat, Martin "Hitler and the Genesis of the 'Final
Solution': An Assessment of David Irving's Theses" pages 390-429
from Aspects of the Third Reich edited by H.W. Koch pages
393 & 413-419
- Broszat, Martin "Hitler and the Genesis of the 'Final
Solution': An Assessment of David Irving's Theses" pages 390-429
from Aspects of the Third Reich edited by H.W. Koch page
394.
- Broszat, Martin "Hitler and the Genesis of the 'Final
Solution': An Assessment of David Irving's Theses" pages 390-429
from Aspects of the Third Reich edited by H.W. Koch pages
413-415
- Broszat, Martin "Hitler and the Genesis of the 'Final
Solution': An Assessment of David Irving's Theses" pages 390-429
from Aspects of the Third Reich edited by H.W. Koch pages
414-415
- Broszat, Martin "Hitler and the Genesis of the 'Final
Solution': An Assessment of David Irving's Theses" pages 390-429
from Aspects of the Third Reich edited by H.W. Koch pages
420-421
- Broszat, Martin "Hitler and the Genesis of the 'Final
Solution': An Assessment of David Irving's Theses" pages 390-429
from Aspects of the Third Reich edited by H.W. Koch pages
427-428.
- Broszat, Martin "Hitler and the Genesis of the 'Final
Solution': An Assessment of David Irving's Theses" pages 390-429
from Aspects of the Third Reich edited by H.W. Koch page
395.
- Sydnor, Charles "The Selling of Adolf Hitler: David Irving's
Hitler's War" pages 169-99 from Central European History
Issue # 2, Volume 12, June 1979 pages 172-173.
- Sydnor, Charles "The Selling of Adolf Hitler: David Irving's
Hitler's War" pages 169-99 from Central European History
Issue # 2, Volume 12, June 1979 page 173.
- Syndnor, Charles "The Selling of Adolf Hitler: David Irving's
Hitler's War" pages 169-99 from Central European History
Issue # 2, Volume 12, June 1979 pages 178.
- Syndnor, Charles "The Selling of Adolf Hitler: David Irving's
Hitler's War" pages 169-99 from Central European History
Issue # 2, Volume 12, June 1979 pages 175.
- Sydnor, Charles "The Selling of Adolf Hitler: David Irving's
Hitler's War" pages 169-99 from Central European History
Issue # 2, Volume 12, June 1979 pages 179.
- Syndnor, Charles "The Selling of Adolf Hitler: David Irving's
Hitler's War" pages 169-99 from Central European History
Issue # 2, Volume 12, June 1979 pages 182-183.
- Sydnor, Charles "The Selling of Adolf Hitler: David Irving's
Hitler's War" pages 169-99 from Central European History
Issue # 2, Volume 12, June 1979 pages 184.
- Sydnor, Charles "The Selling of Adolf Hitler: David Irving's
Hitler's War" pages 169-99 from Central European History
Issue # 2, Volume 12, June 1979 pages 175-176.
- Sydnor, Charles "The Selling of Adolf Hitler: David Irving's
Hitler's War" pages 169-99 from Central European History
Issue # 2, Volume 12, June 1979 page 176.
- Sydnor, Charles "The Selling of Adolf Hitler: David Irving's
Hitler's War" pages 169-99 from Central European History
Issue # 2, Volume 12, June 1979 pages 176-177.
- Syndnor, Charles "The Selling of Adolf Hitler: David Irving's
Hitler's War" pages 169-99 from Central European History
Issue # 2, Volume 12, June 1979 page 177.
- Sydnor, Charles "The Selling of Adolf Hitler: David Irving's
Hitler's War" pages 169-99 from Central European History
Issue # 2, Volume 12, June 1979 pages 186
- Sydnor, Charles "The Selling of Adolf Hitler: David Irving's
Hitler's War" pages 169-99 from Central European History
Issue # 2, Volume 12, June 1979 pages 189-190.
- Sydnor, Charles "The Selling of Adolf Hitler: David Irving's
Hitler's War" pages 169-99 from Central European History
Issue # 2, Volume 12, June 1979 page 193.
- Sydnor, Charles "The Selling of Adolf Hitler: David Irving's
Hitler's War" pages 169-99 from Central European History
Issue # 2, Volume 12, June 1979 page 185.
- Syndnor, Charles "The Selling of Adolf Hitler: David Irving's
Hitler's War" pages 169-99 from Central European History
Issue # 2, Volume 12, June 1979 page 196.
- Craig, Gordon (1982). The Germans. p. 73.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
47.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
52.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
51.
- Ascherson, Neal "A Bucketful of Slime" from The Observer, 29 March
1981
- Evans, Richard J (2001). Lying About Hitler. p.
19.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
48.
- Harris, Robert (1986). Selling Hitler. pp.
320–323.
- Pelt, Robert Jan van (2002). The Case for Auschwitz.
p. 22.
- Lipstadt, Deborah (2005). History on Trial. p.
19.
- Harris, Robert (1986). Selling Hitler. pp.
338-339.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
56.
- Lipstadt, Deborah (1993). Denying the Holocaust. p.
213.
- Lukacs, John (1997). The Hitler of History. p.
229.
- Evans, Richard J (1989). In Hitler's Shadow. pp.
166–167.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
55.
- Lipstadt, Deborah (1993). Denying the Holocaust. p.
180.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
283.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. pp.
56–57.
- Pelt, Robert Jan van (2002). The Case for Auschwitz.
p. 21.
- Dawidowicz, Lucy "Lies About the Holocaust" pages 31-37 from
Commentary, Volume 70, Issue # 6, page 35
- Pelt, Robert Jan van (2002). The Case for Auschwitz.
pp. 34–35.
- Lipstadt, Deborah (1993). Denying the Holocaust. p.
161.
- Evans, Richard J (1989). In Hitler's Shadow. p.
167.
- Pelt, Robert Jan van (2002). The Case for Auschwitz.
pp. 22–23.
- Pelt, Robert Jan van (2002). The Case for Auschwitz.
p. 23.
- Lipstadt, Deborah (1993). Denying the Holocaust. p.
162.
- Lipstadt, Deborah (1993). Denying the Holocaust. pp.
161–162.
- Pelt, Robert Jan van (2002). The Case for Auschwitz.
p. 35.
- Pelt, Robert Jan van (2002). The Case for Auschwitz.
p. 40.
- Lipstadt, Deborah (1993). Denying the Holocaust. p.
8.
- Pelt, Robert Jan van (2002). The Case for Auschwitz.
p. 41.
- Pelt, Robert Jan van (2002). The Case for Auschwitz.
p. 42.
- "An 'Expert' on Executions Is Charged With
Fraud", The New York Times, 24 October 1990.
"A self-proclaimed execution expert and manufacturer of death
machinery was charged today in a Middlesex County District Court
with fraudulently practicing engineering. The man, Frederick A.
Leuchter Jr., holds a bachelor's degree in history and is not
licensed to practice engineering in Massachusetts, state officials
said".
- Lipstadt, Deborah (1993). Denying the Holocaust. p.
179.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
54.
- Pelt, Robert Jan van (2002). The Case for Auschwitz.
p. 44.
- Mr. Death: Transcript
- Pelt, Robert Jan van (2002). The Case for Auschwitz.
pp. 47–48.
- Lipstadt, Deborah (1993). Denying the Holocaust. p.
260.
- Lipstadt, Deborah (1993). Denying the Holocaust. pp.
179–180.
- Brinks, Jan Hermann Children of a New Fatherland,
London: I.B. Tauris, 2000 page 107.
- Pelt, Robert Jan van (2002). The Case for Auschwitz.
p. 48.
- Pelt, Robert Jan van (2002). The Case for Auschwitz.
p. 55.
- Shermer, Michael; Grobman, Alex (2002). Denying
History. p. 50.
- Lipstadt, Deborah (1993). Denying the Holocaust. p.
221.
- Rosenbaum, Ron (1999). Explaining Hitler. p. 233.
- Pelt, Robert Jan van (2002). The Case for Auschwitz.
p. 57.
- Rosenbaum, Ron (1999). Explaining Hitler. p. 222.
- Pelt, Robert Jan van (2002). The Case for Auschwitz.
p. 56.
- Shermer, Michael; Grobman, Alex (2002). Denying
History. pp. 49–50.
- Shermer, Michael; Grobman, Alex (2002). Denying
History. p. 51.
- Shermer, Michael; Grobman, Alex (2002). Denying
History. p. 56.
- JC Reporters, David Irving: Call me a denier and I'll sue the
JC, The Jewish Chronicle, 2007-11-18,
Retrieved on 2007-12-24.
- Rosenbaum, Ron (1999). Explaining Hitler. p. 234.
- David
Irving vs Penguin Books and Deborah Lipstadt
- Hitchens, Christopher. "Churchill Take
a Fall", The Atlantic Monthly, April
2002.
- Taylor, Matthew. "Discredited Irving plans comeback tour."
Guardian Unlimited. 29 September
2007. 15 January 2008.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
39.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. pp.
39–40.
- Pelt, Robert Jan van (2002). The Case for Auschwitz.
p. 63.
- Evans, Richard J (2001). Lying About Hitler. p.
27.
- Sereny, Gitta "Spin Time for Hitler" page 1 from The
Observer, 21 April 1996
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. pp.
103–104.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
236.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
236–238.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
210.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
211.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
212.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. pp.
212–213.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. pp.
211–212.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
213.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. pp.
213–214.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
167.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
167–168.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
223.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
226.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. pp.
230–233.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. pp.
230–232.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. pp.
232–233.
- Guttenplan, D.D. (2001). The Holocaust on Trial. p.
233.
- Paragraph 13.167
- In 1969, after David Irving's support for Rolf Hochhuth, the German
playwright who accused Winston Churchill of murdering the Polish
wartime leader General Sikorski, The Daily
Telegraph issued a memo to all its correspondents. It
said: "It is incorrect to describe David Irving as a historian. In
future we should describe him as an author". Ingram, Richard.
"Irving was the author of his own downfall",
The Independent, 25 February 2006. The same point was made
during Irving vs. (1) Lipstadt and (2) Penguin Books: "It may seem
an absurd semantic dispute to deny the appellation of 'historian'
to someone who has written two dozen books or more about historical
subjects. But if we mean by historian someone who is concerned to
discover the truth about the past, and to give as accurate a
representation of it as possible, then Irving is not a historian.
Those in the know, indeed, are accustomed to avoid the term
altogether when referring to him and use some circumlocution such
as 'historical writer' instead. Irving is essentially an ideologue
who uses history for his own political purposes; he is not
primarily concerned with discovering and interpreting what happened
in the past, he is concerned merely to give a selective and
tendentious account of it in order to further his own ideological
ends in the present. The true historian's primary concern, however,
is with the past. That is why, in the end, Irving is not a
historian". Irving vs. (1) Lipstadt and (2) Penguin Books, "Expert Witness Report by Richard J. Evans FBA,
Professor of Modern History, University of Cambridge", 2000,
Chapter 6. During Irving's criminal trial in Austria, State
Prosecutor Michael Klackl said: "He's not a historian, he's a
falsifier of history". Traynor, Ian. "Irving jailed for denying Holocaust", The
Guardian, 21 February 2006.
- Kershaw, Ian The Nazi Dictatorship, London: Edward
Arnold 1985 page 150.
- Kerhshaw, Ian The Nazi Dictatorship, London: Edward
Arnold 1985 page 268.
- Lipstadt, Deborah (2005). History on Trial. p.
22.
- Evans, Richard J (2001). Lying About Hitler. p.
10.
- Lukacs, John (1997). The Hitler of History. p.
236.
- Taking a Holocaust Skeptic Seriously
- Lukacs, John (1997). The Hitler of History. p.
181.
- Baldwin, Peter "The Historikerstreit in Context" pages
3-37 from Reworking the Past edited by Peter Baldwin,
Boston: Beacon Press, 1990 page 23.
- Weinberg, Gerhard A World At Arms, Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1994 page 1067.
- Day 16 of David Irving vs Penguin Books and Deborah
Lipstadt
- The trial of David Irving - and my part in his
downfall
- Craig, Gordon "The Devil in the Details" pages 8-14 from
The New York Review of Books, 19 September 1996
- Finkelstein, Norman. The Holocaust Industry, Verso:New
York, Second paperback edition 2003, page 71, 71-2n.
- Lukacs, John (1997). The Hitler of History. p.
26.
- Lukacs, John (1997). The Hitler of History. p.
132.
- Lukacs, John (1997). The Hitler of History. pp.
229–230.
- Lukacs, John (1997). The Hitler of History. pp.
230–231.
- Lukacs, John (1997). The Hitler of History. p.
231.
- Rosenbaum, Ron (1999). Explaining Hitler. p. 224.
- Rosenbaum, Ron (1999). Explaining Hitler. p. 225.
- "In early 1992, German authorities fined him 10,000 marks
(about $6,000) after he violated a federal law against public
expression of the "Auschwitz Lie". Appealing the fine, an
unrepentant Irving declared, "there were no gas chambers at
Auschwitz, I will not change my opinion". (His fine was
subsequently tripled.) In 1993, he was banned from the country. His
criminal convictions in Germany led Canadian authorities to deny
him entrance as well; he was deported from Canada in 1992 after he
admitted having lied to a Canadian customs official". David
Irving: Propagandists' Poster Boy, Anti-Defamation League. Retrieved 18
April 2007.
- Duff, Oliver. " David Irving: An anti-Semitic racist who has
suffered financial ruin", The Independent, 21 February
2006.
- Irving goes on denying Holocaust
- Holocaust denier Irving is jailed
- Holocaust denier verdict upheld – BBC News
- Holocaust Denier Freed, Gets Probation –
Salon
- "Holocaust denier to be released, BBC News, 20
December 2006.
- "Hungarian protests turn violent"
- "Union debate row speakers arrive "
- "Angry scenes greet Oxford debate"
-
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/28/world/europe/28bishop.html
- Siemaszko, Corky. "American Express says Holocaust denier David
Irving's no 'merchant,' thanks to Assemblyman Hikind". New
York Daily News. October 21, 2009. Retrieved 2009-11-24.
References
- — The author was a major expert witness at the trial, and this
book presents both his view of the trial, and much of his expert
witness report, including his research on the Dresden death
count.
- — Van Pelt was another expert witness at the trial, focussing
on Auschwitz.
- "Two Alibies for the Inhumanities: A. R. Butz, "The Hoax of
the Twentieth Century" and David Irving, "Hitler's
War"" by Bradley Smith pages 327-335 from German Studies
Review, Volume 1, Issue # 3. October 1978.
- "Caveat Lector Review of Hitler's War" by John Lukacs
pages 946-950 from National Review, Volume XXIX, Issue #
32, 19 August 1977.
- "David Irving: The Big Oops" pages 221–236 from Explaining
Hitler: The Search for the Origins of His Evil by Ron Rosenbaum New York: Random House, 1998.
ISBN 0-679-43151-9
- "Hitler and the Genesis of the 'Final Solution': An Assessment
of David Irving's Theses" pages 73–125 from Yad Vashem
Studies by Martin Broszat,
Volume 13, 1979; reprinted pages 390-429 in Aspects of the
Third Reich edited by H.W. Koch, London: Macmillan, 1985, ISBN
0-333-35272-6; originally published as "Hitler und die Genesis der
"Endlösung". Aus Anlaß der Thesen von David Irving", pages 739-775
from Vierteljahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte, Volume 25,
1977.
- "David Irving and the 1956 Revolution" by András Mink pages
117-128 from Hungarian Quarterly, Volume 41, Issue #160,
2000.
- Felix Müller. Das Verbotsgesetz im Spannungsverhältnis zur
Meinungsfreiheit. Eine verfassungsrechtliche Untersuchung; Verlag
Österreich, 2005, 238 Seiten, br., ISBN 3-7046-4685-7
- Schiedel, Heribert. Irving sitzt in Österreich in
Jungle World, 23 November 2005. ISSN 1613-0766
- Wikisource:David
Irving vs Penguin Books and Deborah Lipstadt
External links
Irving v. Penguin Books Limited and Deborah E. Lipstadt
trial