| An article in the New York Times
concerning my involvement in the "Faurisson affair" was headlined
"French Storm in a Demitasse." If the intent was to imply that these
events do not even merit being called "a tempest in a teapot," I am
inclined to agree. Nevertheless, torrents of ink have been spilled in
Europe, and some here. Perhaps, given the obfuscatory nature of the
coverage, it would be useful for me to state the basic facts as I
understand them and to say a few words about the principles that
arise.
In the fall of 1979, I was asked by Serge Thion, a libertarian
socialist scholar with a record of opposition to all forms of
totalitarianism, to sign a petition calling on authorities to insure
Robert Faurisson's "safety and the free exercise of his legal rights."
The petition said nothing about his "holocaust studies" (he denies the
existence of gas chambers or of a systematic plan to massacre the Jews
and questions the authenticity of the Anne Frank diary, among other
things), apart from noting that they were the cause of "efforts to
deprive Professor Faurisson of his freedom of speech and expression."
It did not specify the steps taken against him, which include
suspension from his teaching position at the University of Lyons after
the threat of violence, and a forthcoming court trial for
falsification of history and damages to victims of Nazism.
The petition aroused considerable protest. In Nouvel
Observateur, Claude Roy wrote that "the appeal launched by
Chomsky" supported Faurisson's views. Roy explained my alleged stand
as an attempt to show that the United States is indistinguishable from
Nazi Germany. In Esprit, Pierre Vidal-Naquet found the
petition "scandalous" on the ground that it "presented his
'conclusions' as if they were actually discoveries." Vidal-Naquet
misunderstood a sentence in the petition that ran, "Since he began
making his findings public, Professor Faurisson has been subject
to...." The term "findings" is quite neutral. One can say, without
contradiction: "He made his findings public and they were judged
worthless, irrelevant, falsified...." The petition implied nothing
about quality of Faurisson's work, which was irrelevant to the issues
raised.
Thion then asked me to write a brief statement on the purely civil
libertarian aspects of this affair. I did so, telling him to use it as
he wished. In this statement, I made it explicit that I would not
discuss Faurisson's work, having only limited familiarity with it
(and, frankly, little interest in it). Rather, I restricted myself to
the civil-liberties issues and the implications of the fact that it
was even necessary to recall Voltaire's famous words in a letter to M.
le Riche: "I detest what you write, but I would give my life to make
it possible for you to continue to write."
Faurisson's conclusions are diametrically opposed to views I hold
and have frequently expressed in print (for example, in my book
Peace in the Middle East?, where I describe the holocaust as
"the most fantastic outburst of collective insanity in human
history"). But it is elementary that freedom of expression (including
academic freedom) is not to be restricted to views of which one
approves, and that it is precisely in the case of views that are
almost universally despised and condemned that this right must be most
vigorously defended. It is easy enough to defend those who need no
defense or to join in unanimous (and often justified) condemnation of
a violation of civil rights by some official enemy.
I later learned that my statement was to appear in a book in which
Faurisson defends himself against the charges soon to be brought
against him in court. While this was not my intention, it was not
contrary to my instructions. I received a letter from Jean-Pierre
Faye, a well-known anti-Fascist writer and militant, who agreed with
my position but urged me to withhold my statement because the climate
of opinion in France was such that my defense of Faurisson's right to
express his views would be interpreted as support for them. I wrote to
him that I accepted his judgment, and requested that my statement not
appear, but by then it was too late to stop publication.
Parts of my letter to Faye appeared in the French press and have
been widely quoted and misquoted and subjected to fantastic
interpretations. It was reported, for example, that I repudiated my
comments after having learned that there is anti-Semitism in France,
and that I was changing my views on the basis of clippings from the
French press (in the same letter, I had asked Faye to send me
clippings on another matter). My personal letter to Faye was
incomprehensible to anyone who had not read Faye's original letter to
me; a telephone call would quickly have clarified the facts.
The uproar that ensued is of some interest. In Le Matin
(socialist), Jacques Baynac wrote that my fundamental error was to
"defend, in the name of freedom of expression, the right to mock the
facts" -- "facts" determined, presumably, by some board of commissars
or a reconstituted Inquisition. My lengthy discussion on the
implications of this doctrine was from the occasionally recognizable
version of the interview with me published in Le Matin.
In Le Monde, the editor of Esprit, Paul
Thibaud, wrote that I had condemned "the entire French
intelligentsia," launching a "general accusation" against "les
Francais" without qualifications. Alberto Cavallari, Paris
correspondent for the Corriere della Sera went further
still, claiming that I had condemned all of "French culture." The
article is notable for a series of fabricated quotes designed to
establish this and other allegations. What I had written was that
though I would make some harsh comments about "certain segments of the
French intelligentsia... certainly, what I say does not apply to many
others, who maintain a firm commitment to intellectual integrity...I
would not want these comments to be misunderstood as applying beyond
their specific scope." Similar qualifications are removed from the
doctored "interview" in Le Matin, enabling the editors to
allege that I describe France as "totalitarian."
Cavallari went on to explain that my rage against "French culture"
derives from its refusal to accept the theory that linguistics proves
that "the Gulag descends directly from Rousseau" and other imbecile
ideas he chooses to attribute to me for reasons best known to himself.
In Nouvel Observateur, Jean-Paul Enthoven offers a
different explanation: I support Faurisson because my "instrumentalist
theory of language, the 'generative grammar'...does not allow the
means to think of the unimaginable, that is the holocaust." He and
Cavallari, among others, explain further that my defense of Faurisson
is a case of the extreme left joining the extreme right, a phenomenon
to which they devote many sage words. In Le Matin,
Catherine Clement explains my odd behavior on the ground that I am a
"perfect Bostonian," "a cold and distant man, without real social
contacts, incapable of understanding Jewish-American humor, which
relies heavily on Yiddish." Pierre Daix explains in Le Quotidien
de Paris that I took up left-wing causes to "clear myself" of
the reactionary implications of my "innatism." And so on, at about the
same level.
To illustrate the caliber of discussion, after I had noted that
Vidal-Naquet's comment cited above was based on a misunderstanding, he
reprinted his article in a book (Les Juifs, F. Maspero),
eliminating the passage I quoted and adding an appendix in which he
claims falsely that "the error in question had appeared only in an
earlier draft," which I am accused of having illegitimately quoted.
The example is, unfortunately, quite typical.
A number of critics (for example Abraham Forman of the
Anti-Defamation League in Le Matin) contend that the only
issue is Faurisson's right to publish and that this has not been
denied. The issue, however, is his suspension from the university
because of threats of violence against him, and his court trial. It is
of interest that his attorney, Yvon Chotard, who is defending him on
grounds of freedom of expression and the right to an attorney of one's
choice, has been threatened with expulsion from the anti-Fascist
organization that is bringing Faurisson to trial.
As Faye predicted, many showed themselves incapable of
distinguishing between defense of the right of free expression and
defense of the views expressed -- and not only in France. In The
New Republic, Martin Peretz concluded from my expressed lack of
interest in Faurisson's work that I am an "agnostic" about the
holocaust and "a fool" about genocide. He claims further that I deny
freedom of expression to my opponents, referring to my comment that
one degrades oneself by entering into debate over certain issues. In
short, if I refuse to debate you, I constrain your freedom. He is
careful to conceal the example I cited: the holocaust.
Many writers find it scandalous that I should support the right of
free expression for Faurisson without carefully analyzing his work, a
strange doctrine which, if adopted, would effectively block defense of
civil rights for unpopular views. Faurisson does not control the
French press or scholarship. There is surely no lack of means or
opportunity to refute or condemn his writings. My own views in sharp
opposition to his are clearly on record, as I have said. No rational
person will condemn a book, however outlandish its conclusions may
seem, without at least reading it carefully; in this case, checking
the documentation offered, and so on. One of the most bizarre
criticisms has been that by refusing to undertake this task, I reveal
that I have no interest in six million murdered Jews, a criticism
which, if valid, applies to everyone who shares my lack of interest in
examining Faurisson's work. One who defends the right of free
expression incurs no special responsibility to study or even be
acquainted with the views expressed. I have, for example, frequently
gone well beyond signing petitions in support of East European
dissidents subjected to repression or threats, often knowing little
and caring less about their views (which in some cases I find
obnoxious, a matter of complete irrelevance that I never mention in
this connection). I recall no criticism of this stand.
The latter point merits further comment. I have taken far more
controversial stands than this in support of civil liberties and
academic freedom. At the height of the Vietnam War, I publicly took
the stand that people I regard as authentic war criminals should not
be denied the right to teach on political or ideological grounds, and
I have always taken the same stand with regard to scientists who
"prove" that blacks are genetically inferior, in a country where their
history is hardly pleasant, and where such views will be used by
racists and neo-Nazis. Whatever one thinks of Faurisson, no one has
accused him of being the architect of major war crimes or claiming
that Jews are genetically inferior (though it is irrelevant to the
civil-liberties issue, he writes of the "heroic insurrection of the
Warsaw ghetto" and praises those who "fought courageously against
Nazism" in "the right cause"). I even wrote in 1969 that it would be
wrong to bar counterinsurgency research in the universities, though it
was being used to murder and destroy, a position that I am not sure I
could defend. What is interesting is that these far more controversial
stands never aroused a peep of protest, which shows that the refusal
to accept the right of free expression without retaliation, and the
horror when others defend this right, is rather selective.
The reaction of the PEN Club in Paris is also interesting. PEN
denounces my statements on the ground that they have given publicity
to Faurisson's writing at a time when there is a resurgence of
anti-Semitism. It is odd that an organization devoted to freedom of
expression for authors should be exercised solely because Faurisson's
defense against the charges brought against him is publicly heard.
Furthermore, if publicity is being accorded to Faurisson, it is
because he is being brought to trial (presumably, with the purpose of
airing the issues) and because the press has chosen to create a
scandal about my defense of his civil rights. On many occasions, I
have written actual prefaces and endorsements for books in France --
books that are unread and unknown, as indeed is the case generally
with my own writings. The latter fact is illustrated, for example, by
Thibaud, who claims that I advocated "confiding Vietnamese freedom to
the supposed good will of the leaders of the North." In fact, my
writings on the war were overwhelmingly devoted to the U.S. attack on
the peasant society of the South (and later Laos and Cambodia as
well), which aimed to undermine the neutralization proposals of the
National Liberation Front and others and to destroy the rural society
in which the NLF was based, and I precisely warned that success in
this effort "will create a situation in which, indeed, North Vietnam
will necessarily dominate Indochina, for no other viable society will
remain."
Thibaud's ignorant falsifications point to one of the real factors
that lie behind this affair. A number of these critics are
ex-Stalinists, or people like Thibaud, who is capable of writing that
prior to Solzhenitsyn, "every previous account" of "Sovietism" was
within the Trotskyite framework (Esprit). Intellectuals
who have recently awakened to the possibility of an anti-Leninist
critique often systematically misunderstand a discussion of
revolutionary movements and efforts to crush them that has never
employed the assumptions they associate with the left. Thibaud, for
example, cannot understand why I do not share his belief that Lenin,
Stalin and Pol Pot demonstrate "the failure of socialism." Many left
or ex-left intellectuals seem unaware that I never have regarded
Leninist movements as having anything to do with "socialism" in any
meaningful sense of the term; or that, having grown up in the
libertarian anti-Leninist left, familiar since childhood with works
that Thibaud has still never heard of, I am unimpressed with their
recent conversions and unwilling to join in their new crusades, which
often strike me as morally dubious and intellectually shallow. All of
this has led to a great deal of bitterness on their part and not a
little outright deceit.
As for the resurgence of anti-Semitism to which the PEN Club
refers, or of racist atrocities, one may ask if the proper response to
publication of material that may be used to enhance racist violence
and oppression is to deny civil rights. Or is it, rather, to seek the
causes of these vicious developments and work to eliminate them? To a
person who upholds the basic ideas professed in the Western
democracies, or who is seriously concerned with the real evils that
confront us, the answer seems clear.
There are, in fact, far more dangerous manifestations of
"revisionism" than Faurisson's. Consider the effort to show that the
United States engaged in no crimes in Vietnam, that it was guilty only
of "intellectual error." This "revisionism," in contrast to that of
Faurisson, is supported by the major institutions and has always been
the position of most of the intelligentsia, and has very direct and
ugly policy consequences. Should we then argue that people advocating
this position be suspended from teaching and brought to trial? The
issue is, of course, academic. If the version of the Zhdanov doctrine
now being put forth in the Faurisson affair were adopted by people
with real power, it would not be the "Vietnam revisionists" who would
be punished.
I do not want to leave the impression that the whole of the French
press has been a theater of the absurd or committed to such views as
those reviewed. There has been accurate commentary in Le Monde
and Liberation, for example, and a few people have taken
a clear and honorable stand. Thus Alfred Grosser, who is critical of
what he believes to be my position, writes in Le Quotidien de
Paris: "I consider it shocking that Mr. Faurisson should be
prevented from teaching French literature at the University of Lyons
on the pretext that his security cannot be guaranteed."
In the Italian left-liberal journal Repubblica,
Barbara Spinelli writes that the real scandal in this affair is the
fact that even a few people publicly affirm their support of the right
to express ideas that are almost universally reviled -- and that
happen to be diametrically opposed to their own. My own observation is
different. It seems to me something of a scandal that it is even
necessary to debate these issues two centuries after Voltaire defended
the right of free expression for views he detested. It is a poor
service to the memory of the victims of the holocaust to adopt a
central doctrine of their murderers.
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