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Die amerikanische Historikerin Deborah Lipstadt hatte in ihrem 1993 erstmals erschienenen Buch Denying the Holocaust: The Growing Assault on Truth and Memory Irving vorgeworfen, er hätte Quellen gefälscht oder bewusst ausgeblendet, um seine Sicht der nationalsozialistischen Geschichte, vor allem die verharmlosende Beurteilung ihrer Protagonisten, abzustützen. "Die Leugnung historischer Tatsachen," so Lipstadt, "ist das Ergebnis einer politischen Voreingenommenheit und eines politischen Extremismus, die in der Welt der historischen Forschung keinen Platz haben." Irving sei "einer der gefährlichsten Wortführer der Holocaust-Leugnung." Eine seiner Thesen bestand in der Tat darin, Hitler hätte bis 1943 vom Holocaust nichts gewusst und anschließend versucht, die schlimmsten Auswüchse zu verhindern. Im darauf folgenden Verleumdungsprozess zwischen dem Ankläger Irving und der Beklagten Lipstadt fiel Richard J. Evans, Geschichtswissenschaftler an der Universität Cambridge, die Rolle eines Hauptgutachters der Verteidigung zu, wobei er sich der Frage nach der historischen Objektivität anzunehmen hatte.
Akribisch geht Evans das Thema an, am Ende steht ein über 700 Seiten umfassendes Gutachten und der eindeutige Beweis für den recht "freizügigen" Umgang Irvings mit historischem Quellenmaterial. Das Buch beruht in weiten Teilen auf dem Text des Gutachtens, was der Lesbarkeit aber keinesfalls schadet. Evans eröffnet einen profunden Einblick in die "jüdische Weltverschwörungstheorie" Irvings, in seine Selbststilisierung als Historiker-Desperado und in seinen bedenklichen Umgang mit historischen Quellen. Dieses Buch verdeutlicht eindringlich die Notwendigkeit, Geschichtsverklärung und -klitterung an den Pranger zu stellen -- und zwar nicht nur, wenn sie ideologischen Zielen dient, sondern prinzipiell. --Dr. Manfred Schwarzmeier
Paperback
First published April 15, 2001
“Don’t look Irving in the eye,” he said, “it’ll just make you angry.” On my first day of of cross-examination I was foolish enough to forget this sage counsel, and it turned out to be just as Robert Jan had foretold: I became irritated by many of the things Irving was saying or implying, especially when he tried to tackle me on reports written by other expert witnesses whom the defense had chosen not to call – reports for which I was not responsible and did not have the expertise to discuss. This did not make a good impression on the court. Over the weekend, I had a rethink and for the remaining five days of cross-examination I did not make eye contact with Irving once. This was much better, as the disembodied questions, statements, innuendos, and insults volleyed in from my left, I was able to take them in an impersonal manner and answer them in relative calm, addressing my remarks either to the court in general, or to the judge. Later I noticed that [defense counsel] Richard Rampton never looked Irving in the eye either. Confronting Irving in a personal manner would have made it more difficult to deal with the issues at hand in a dispassionate way. For all of us he became someone with whom the least contact was defiling.I don’t know how much it reflects subsequent events in the UK, but much of the coverage of and reaction to the trial as recounted by Evans reminded me of free-speech controversies in the US. Many who wrote about it seemed to think that it was Irving who was on trial and that his freedom to publish his interpretation of history was threatened. Of course it was actually he who instituted the suit and a judgment in his favor would have resulted in Lipstadt’s book being withdrawn and pulped. In similar controversies in the US I too often see the right wing and totalitarian side represented as being denied a hearing of their views when in fact they are merely acting as provocateurs creating controversy to air their lies beyond what would otherwise remain a very limited audience of fringe believers.