Holocaust denial
Holocaust denial, or Holocaust distortion, refers to the false belief that the Holocaust did not happen, or was not as bad as it was.
Background
Various groups and organisations use different definitions of what Holocaust denial is. One of these is the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance.
A trend of Holocaust denial, some state-sponsored, is seen in other European countries, including Austria,[1] Croatia,[2] Czechia,[1][3] Hungary,[4] Germany,[1] Italy[1] and Poland.[5][6] In the book Decoding Antisemitism, co-author Hagen Troschke said that the common strategies of such denial consisted of:
- Making some Holocaust perpetrators[a] look better than they were[7][b]
- Reducing the Holocaust responsibility to a small group of perpetrators[7][c]
- Doubting the scientifically proven death toll[7][10]
- Blaming Jews for the Holocaust[7][d]
- Equating the Holocaust with other crimes against humanity[7][e]
Some scholars said that Holocaust denial had gone mainstream[12] amid the rise of nationalism across Europe,[13][7] where Jews were sometimes equated with the disliked Soviet communists against whom the Holocaust was considered "a reaction".[7][8]
Some described the phenomenon with the concept mnemonic politics,[3] where nationalist governments distorted the Holocaust by painting their ethnic majority as the victims rather than the Jews or Roma.[3][14] Such denial is sometimes rooted in the conspiracy theory that the focus on Jews is an EU plot to suppress national identity[3][15] and promote "cosmopolitanism" and "multiculturalism".[3][16]
Denialist claims
Below is a summary of usual claims made by Holocaust deniers.
| Type | Rhetoric |
|---|---|
| Common |
|
| Other |
|
Tactics
Just Asking Questions
Just Asking Questions (JAQ) is a pseudoskeptical tactic often employed by Holocaust deniers to promote lies about the Holocaust by phrasing them as questions.
Sealioning
As a similar concept to JAQ, sealioning refers to the act of repeating the same questions that have already been answered while faking ignorance and politeness.[20] It is also a common tactic among Holocaust deniers on online forums and social media.[21][22]
Doubting Holocaust uniqueness
Some well-educated antisemites are more skillful at promoting Holocaust denial.[23] They do not deny that the Holocaust happened,[23] but they cast doubt on the Holocaust's nature,[23] ignore the historical context leading up to the Holocaust,[23] and abusively compare the Holocaust to other historical events.[7][23] They do this to whitewash the Holocaust and dehumanize Holocaust victims so as to whitewash Nazi antisemitism and justify the mass murder of Jews.[23] Such behavior is rejected by mainstream historians, including Emil Fackenheim, Yehuda Bauer, Deborah Lipstadt and Daniel Goldhagen.[23][24]
Some of them also accuse Jews of "owning the Holocaust" or "extorting compensation from European governments",[23] and rewrite the Holocaust's history to inflate Jewish collaboration with Nazi Germans so as to blame Jews for their own suffering.[25] These false claims are common on social media, especially Reddit.[26]
Rebuttal
Historians agree that the Holocaust happened and that Holocaust deniers use bad research, get things wrong, and sometimes make facts up to support their claims.[18][17] Many things together prove that the Holocaust did happen:
| Type | Details |
|---|---|
| Written documents | Like laws, newspaper articles, speeches made by Nazi leaders, and confessions from Nazi prisoners of war. The Nazis kept careful records, and many of them still exist. Even during World War II, many Germans knew about the Holocaust, and some tried to help save Holocaust victims. |
| Eyewitness testimony | From those who witnessed Nazi war crimes. That includes Holocaust survivors, like people who survived the Nazi concentration camps. There is specific testimony about the gas chambers from Jewish Sonderkommandos (concentration camp inmates who helped load bodies from the gas chambers to the crematoria because this gave them a chance to survive). It also includes the word of Nazi leaders, Nazi concentration camp guards, and Allied soldiers who discovered the camps. |
| Camps | Pieces of Nazi concentration camps, death camps, and work camps still exist. |
| Other evidence | Including population statistics. |
Holocaust deniers
Holocaust deniers usually call themselves Holocaust revisionists to make themselves look good.[27] Their usual claim is that the Holocaust is "a hoax made up by Jewish people working together."[18][17] It is a crime to deny the Holocaust in Israel and in many European countries, especially in Germany.[28] Some Holocaust deniers, like Ernst Zündel, have been charged with crimes.
Prominent Holocaust deniers
| Name | Birth | Death | Origin | Affiliations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ali Khamenei[29] | April 19, 1939 | Mashhad, Iran | Supreme Leader of Iran[29] | |
| David Irving[30] | March 24, 1938 | Hutton, Essex, England | A "historian" who is an alumnus of the ICL and UCL[30] | |
| Ernst Zündel[31] | April 24, 1939 | August 5, 2017 | A German graphic artist[31] | |
| Hutton Gibson[32][33] | August 26, 1918 | May 11, 2020 | Peekskill, New York, United States | Opus Dei member[32][33] |
| Jean-Marie Le Pen[34][35] | June 20, 1928 | January 7, 2025 | La Trinité-sur-Mer, Morbihan, France | Founder of the National Front[34][35] |
| Louis Farrakhan[36][37] | May 11, 1933 | The Bronx, New York | Leader of Black nationalist religious movement Nation of Islam (NOI)[36][37] | |
| Paul Rassinier[38] | March 18, 1906 | July 28, 1967 | Bermont, France | A French Resistance fighter who survived a Nazi concentration camp[38] |
| Pierre Guillaume[39] | December 22, 1940 | July 11, 2023 | France | An anarcho-Marxist[39] |
| Richard Williamson[40] | March 8, 1940 | January 29, 2025 | Buckinghamshire, England, United Kingdom | Society of Saint Pius X[40] |
| Robert Faurisson[41] | January 25, 1929 | October 21, 2018 | Shepperton, England | University of Lyon professor of literature[41] |
| Roger Garaudy[42] | July 17, 1913 | June 13, 2012 | Marseille, France | A former French Communist Party member[42] |
Related pages
Footnotes
- ↑ A person who carries out a harmful, illegal, or immoral act. Oxford Languages.
- ↑ This happened on English Wikipedia, which became a subject of media controversy.[8]
- ↑ Examples in Germany: Excusing the Wehrmacht, the police and the population, while blaming the SS, the Nazi leadership or Hitler alone.[7][9]
- ↑ This happened on English Wikipedia, which became a subject of media controversy.[8]
- ↑ An example is the Arab–Israeli conflict, which is often compared to the Holocaust by those accusing Israel of genocide.[11]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 "Defeating distortion: new report highlights Holocaust distortion amid rising antisemitism". International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA). Retrieved May 25, 2025.
- ↑
- Sampson, Tim (October 1, 2013). "How pro-fascist ideologues are rewriting Croatia's history". dailydot.com. Retrieved July 1, 2015.
- Dewey, Caitlin (4 August 2014). "Men's rights activists think a "hateful" feminist conspiracy is ruining Wikipedia". The Washington Post. Retrieved 8 April 2020.
- Odak, Stipe; Benčić, Andriana (July 10, 2016). "Jasenovac—A Past That Does Not Pass: The Presence of Jasenovac in Croatian and Serbian Collective Memory of Conflict". East European Politics and Societies: And Cultures. 30 (4). doi:10.1177/0888325416653657. Retrieved December 11, 2024.
- "The Hunt for Wikipedia's Disinformation Moles". Wired. October 17, 2022. Retrieved October 17, 2024.
- Kuznar, Andriana Bencic; Pavlakovic, Vjeran (May 10, 2023). "Exhibiting Jasenovac: Controversies, manipulations and politics of memory". Heritage, Memory and Conflict Journal. 3 (1). Amsterdam University Press: 65–69. doi:10.3897/ijhmc.3.71583.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Kubátová, Hana; Láníček, Jan (October 14, 2024). "Memory Wars and Emotional Politics: "Feel Good" Holocaust Appropriation in Central Europe". Nationalities Papers. 53 (2). Retrieved May 25, 2025.
- ↑
- Braham, Randolph L. (2014). "Hungary: The Assault on the Historical Memory of the Holocaust" (PDF). United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM). Retrieved May 25, 2025.
- "Fighting Holocaust distortion on our Hungary visit". Holocaust Educational Trust. April 10, 2019. Retrieved May 25, 2025.
- Erlichman, Camilo (April 17, 2019). "Orbán and the Hungarian Holocaust: Historical Distortion for Political Gain?". RUB Europadialog. Retrieved May 25, 2025.
- ↑
- Robert Rozett, “Competitive Victimhood and Holocaust Distortion,” The Israel Journal of Foreign Affairs, XVI (2022); “Distorting the Holocaust and Whitewashing History: Toward a Typology,” XIII: 1 (2019); Yehuda Bauer, “Creating a “Usable” Past: On Holocaust Denial and Distortion,” XIV: 2 (2022); and Jan Grabowski, “The Holocaust and Poland's 'History Policy'” X: 3 (2016).
- Joanna Beata Michlic, “The Politics of the Memorialisation of the Holocaust in Poland: Reflections on the Current Misuses of the History of Rescue,” Jewish Historical Studies—Transactions of the Jewish Historical Society of England, LIII: 1 (2022); Piotr Forecki, Po Jedwabnem: Anatomia pamięci funkcjonalnej (Kraków, 2018); Jan Gross, Neighbors: The Destruction of the Jewish Community in Jedwabne (Princeton, 2001).
- Piotr Forecki, “Domestic ‘Assassins of Memory’: Various Faces of Holocaust Revisionism in Contemporary Poland,” presentation at a symposium in honor of Professor Antony Polonsky called “The Holocaust in Eastern Europe: sources, memory, politics,” March 16, 2021, UCL, London.
- "Polish appeals court dismisses claims against Holocaust book historians". Euractiv. August 17, 2021. Retrieved January 4, 2025.
An appeals court ruled that two historians accused of tarnishing the memory of a Polish villager in a book about the Holocaust need not apologise, overturning a lower court ruling that raised fears about freedom of academic research.
- ↑
- Antony Polonsky and Joanna Beata Michlic (eds.), The Neighbors Respond: The Controversy over the Jedwabne Massacre in Poland (Princeton, 2009) and Laurence Weinbaum, “Amnesia and Antisemitism in the ‘Second Jagiellonian Age,’” Anti-Judaism, Antisemitism, and Delegitimizing Israel, Robert Wistrich (ed.) (Lincoln, 2016).
- “Professors Engelking and Grabowski case: Victory in the Warsaw Court of Appeal,” International Jewish Lawyers, https://www.ijl.org/engelking-and-grabowski-case13. For the full judgement, see https://www.ijl.org/grabowski_engelking-full.
- Grabowski, Jan (2024). "Whitewash: Poland and the Jews". Jewish Quarterly. London, United Kingdom. Retrieved May 25, 2025.
In this ground-breaking essay, Jan Grabowski, a world-renowned Holocaust historian, examines how the government, museums, schools and state institutions became complicit in delivering a message of Polish national innocence during the Holocaust. He recounts his own experience as the victim of smears and a notorious lawsuit for questioning the complicity of Poles in the destruction of the country's Jews, and examines the far-reaching consequences of Poland's historical distortions, which have been repeated and replicated worldwide to challenge the truth of the Holocaust.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 7.7 7.8 Becker, Matthias J.; Troschke, Hagen; Bolton, Matthew; Chapelan, Alexis (October 16, 2024). "Holocaust Denial and Distortion". Decoding Antisemitism. pp. 237–260. doi:10.1007/978-3-031-49238-9_18. Retrieved May 25, 2025.
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 Klein, Shira (June 14, 2023). "The shocking truth about Wikipedia's Holocaust disinformation". The Forward. Retrieved October 24, 2024.
Why Wikipedia cannot be trusted: It repeatedly allows rogue editors to rewrite Holocaust history and make Jews out to be the bad guys [...].
- ↑ Greven, Michael Th., and Oliver von Wrochem, eds. 2000. Der Krieg in der Nachkriegszeit. Der Zweite Weltkrieg in Politik und Gesellschaft der Bundesrepublik. Wiesbaden: Leske u. Budrich.
- ↑ Litvak, Meir, and Esther Webman. 2009. From Empathy to Denial. Arab Responses to the Holocaust. New York: Columbia University Press.
- ↑
- Wistrich, Robert Solomon. 2017. Antisemitism and Holocaust Inversion. In Antisemitism Before and Since the Holocaust. Altered Contexts and Recent Perspectives, ed. Anthony McElligott, and Jeffrey Herf, 37–49. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-48866-0_3.
- Klaff, Lesley (2014). "Holocaust Inversion and contemporary antisemitism". Fathom Journal. Retrieved October 24, 2024.
- "Holocaust inversion is going mainstream". Jewish News Syndicate. August 15, 2024. Retrieved October 24, 2024.
- ↑
- "International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance issues urgent Holocaust distortion warning". International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA). January 23, 2025.
- "Social media feeds Holocaust denial and distortion, finds UN report". United Nations (UN). Retrieved January 23, 2025.
- "WJC and British Government Join Forces to Combat Holocaust Denial and Distortion at UNHRC". World Jewish Congress (WJC). February 12, 2025. Retrieved February 21, 2025.
- ↑ Petrović, Zorica (2018). "The Roman Catholic Church and Clergy in the Nazi-Fascist Era on Slovenian Soil" (PDF). Athens Journal of History. 4 (3): 227‒252. doi:10.30958/ajhis.4-3-4. Retrieved May 25, 2025.
- ↑ Kónczal, Kornelia, and Moses, A. Dirk. 2022. “Patriotic Histories in Global Perspective.” Journal of Genocide Research 24 (2): 153–157. CrossRef Google Scholar
- ↑ Soroka, George, and Krawatzek, Félix. 2019. “Nationalism, Democracy, and Memory Laws.” Journal of Democracy 30 (2): 157–171. CrossRef Google Scholar
- ↑ Ray, Larry, and Kapralski, Sławomir. 2019. “Introduction to the Special Issue – Disputed Holocaust Memory in Poland.” Holocaust Studies 25 (3): 209–219. CrossRef Google Scholar
- ↑ 17.00 17.01 17.02 17.03 17.04 17.05 17.06 17.07 17.08 17.09 17.10 Michael Shermer & Alex Grobman. Denying History: : who says the Holocaust never happened and why do they say it?, University of California Press, 2000, ISBN 0-520-23469-3, p. 106
- ↑ 18.00 18.01 18.02 18.03 18.04 18.05 18.06 18.07 18.08 18.09 Mathis, Andrew E. Holocaust Denial, a definition Archived 2011-06-09 at the Wayback Machine, The Holocaust History Project, July 2, 2004, Retrieved 6 March 2013
- ↑ Mathis, Andrew E. Holocaust Denial, a Definition, The Holocaust History Project, July 2, 2004, Retrieved 6 March 2013
- ↑
- Lindsay, Jessica (July 5, 2018). "Sealioning is the new thing to worry about in relationships and online". Metro (UK). Retrieved February 6, 2025.
- Shepherd, Marshall (March 7, 2019). "'Sealioning' Is A Common Trolling Tactic On Social Media--What Is It?". Forbes. Retrieved February 6, 2025.
- Johnson, Amy (March 7, 2019). "'Sealioning' Is A Common Trolling Tactic On Social Media--What Is It?". Berkman Klein Center. Retrieved February 6, 2025.
- ↑
- "Reddit Shuts Down Some Racist, Anti-Semitic Web Forums". Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC). October 27, 2015. Retrieved October 23, 2024.
- "'Racism is fine on our site,' says Reddit's chief executive". Sky News. April 12, 2018. Retrieved October 23, 2024.
- "Combating racism on social media: 5 key insights on bystander intervention". Brookings. December 1, 2021. Retrieved October 23, 2024.
- "A moderator of one of the biggest Kanye West internet forums says the page has been a 'bloodbath' since the rapper's descent into antisemitism and conspiracy theories". Business Insider. November 16, 2022. Retrieved December 5, 2024.
- "Holocaust denial finds new life in Oct. 7 revisionism". The Jerusalem Post. January 22, 2024. Retrieved December 5, 2024.
- ↑
- "'Unmistakably Antisemitic': Harvard College Dean Khurana Slams Student Groups Over Instagram Post". Harvard Crimson. February 21, 2024. Retrieved December 13, 2024.
- "Is Instagram antisemitic? Jewish, pro-Israel influencers speak out". The Jerusalem Post. March 15, 2024. Retrieved December 13, 2024.
- "Gove accuses UK university protests of 'antisemitism repurposed for Instagram age'". The Guardian. May 21, 2024. Retrieved December 13, 2024.
- "CAM Monitoring Uncovers More Post-10/7 Students for Justice in Palestine Support for Hamas on Instagram". Combat Antisemitism Movement (CAM). July 17, 2024. Retrieved December 13, 2024.
- "Online Antisemitism: How Tech Platforms Handle User Reporting Post 10/7". Anti-Defamation League (ADL). September 30, 2024. Retrieved December 13, 2024.
- ↑ 23.0 23.1 23.2 23.3 23.4 23.5 23.6 23.7
- Stern, Kenneth S. (1993). "Holocaust denial" (PDF). American Jewish Committee (AJC). Retrieved February 28, 2025.
- Polger, Mark Aaron (2004). "Rewriting the Holocaust Online: A Discourse Analysis of Holocaust Denial Web Sites". City University of New York (CUNY). New York. Retrieved February 28, 2025.
- Heni, Clemens (November 2, 2008). "Secondary Anti-Semitism: From Hard-Core to Soft-Core Denial of the Shoah". Jewish Political Studies Review. Retrieved February 8, 2025.
- "Institute for Historical Review (IHR)". Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC). Retrieved February 6, 2025.
- Gerstenfeld, Manfred (July 13, 2020). "The Attacks on the Uniqueness of the Holocaust". Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies (BESA). Retrieved March 1, 2025.
- ↑ Gerstenfeld, Manfred (April 9, 2008). "Holocaust Trivialization". Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs (JCFA). Retrieved February 28, 2025.
- ↑
- "'Jews Helped the Germans Out of Revenge or Greed': New Research Documents How Wikipedia Distorts the Holocaust". Haaretz. February 14, 2023. Retrieved December 3, 2024.
- Klein, Shira (June 14, 2023). "The shocking truth about Wikipedia's Holocaust disinformation". The Forward. Retrieved October 24, 2024.
Why Wikipedia cannot be trusted: It repeatedly allows rogue editors to rewrite Holocaust history and make Jews out to be the bad guys.
- Tabarovsky, Izabella (July 25, 2024). "Wikipedia's Jewish Problem". Tablet. Retrieved October 24, 2024.
[...] Wikipedia's articles are [...] feeding billions of people [...] dangerously skewed narratives [...] "minimize[d] Polish antisemitism, exaggerate[d] the Poles' role in saving Jews," blamed Jews for the Holocaust [...].
- ↑
- Breit, Johannes (July 20, 2018). "How One of the Internet's Biggest History Forums Deals With Holocaust Deniers". Slate. Retrieved February 6, 2025.
- "The AskHistorians Subreddit Banned Holocaust Deniers, and Facebook Should Too | Slate". MediaWell. Retrieved February 6, 2025.
- "History under attack: Holocaust denial and distortion on social media". UNESDOC Digital Library. 2022. doi:10.54675/MLSL4494. ISBN 978-92-3-100531-2. Retrieved February 6, 2025.
- "Antisemitism Resurgent: Manifestations of Antisemitism in the 21st Century". Counter Extremism Project. Retrieved February 6, 2025.
- Lubet, Steven (September 10, 2024). "Why Is the New York Times Legitimizing a Holocaust Denier?". The Bulwark. Retrieved February 6, 2025.
- ↑ Lipstadt, Deborah, Denying the Holocaust: The Growing Assault on Truth and Memory, Penguin, 1993, ISBN 0-452-27274-2, p. 25
- ↑ Bazyler, Michael J. (December 25, 2006). "Holocaust Denial Laws and Other Legislation Criminalizing Promotion of Nazism" (PDF). Yad Vashem. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
- ↑ 29.0 29.1
- "Statement on Holocaust Denial Conference Sponsored by Iranian Regime". George W. Bush White House Archives. December 12, 2006. Retrieved December 23, 2024.
- Küntzel, Matthias (2012). "Judeophobia and the Denial of the Holocaust in Iran". Holocaust Denial. De Gruyter. pp. 235–256. doi:10.1515/9783110288216.235. ISBN 978-3-11-028821-6. Retrieved December 23, 2024.
- "Holocaust Denial and Distortion from Iranian Government and Official Media Sources, 1998–2016". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM). 2016. Retrieved December 23, 2024.
- "At the Paris Olympics, Iran is leading the antisemitism charge". New York Post. July 30, 2024. Retrieved December 23, 2024.
- Abramson, Scott (August 19, 2024). "The Iranian regime is not its people". Jewish News Syndicate (JNS). Retrieved December 23, 2024.
The Iranian people are the most pro-American and least antisemitic population in the region.
- Ghorbanpour, K. (December 4, 2024). "Opinion | Is Iran an Antisemitic 'Nazi Regime'?". Haaretz. Retrieved December 23, 2024.
- ↑ 30.0 30.1
- Evans, Richard J (2002). Telling lies about Hitler: The Holocaust, history and the David Irving trial. Verso. ISBN 978-1-85984-417-5. Retrieved December 30, 2024.
- Schonfeld, Gustav (2010). "Holocaust denial". Transactions of the American Clinical and Climatological Association. 121 (104). PMC 2917150.
- "David Irving". Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC). Retrieved December 30, 2024.
David Irving was once treated with great respect for his historical tomes on World War II and Nazi Germany. But in recent years, the writer has become known as the world's most prominent Holocaust denier.
- "David Irving". Anti-Defamation League (ADL). Retrieved December 30, 2024.
- "Deniers in different countries". Auschwitz-Birkenau. Retrieved December 30, 2024.
- ↑ 31.0 31.1 "Holocaust denier in Germany sentenced to five years in prison – Europe – International Herald Tribune", The New York Times, February 15, 2007. Retrieved November 14, 2009
- ↑ 32.0 32.1 "What is Opus Dei, and why is it so controversial — both in and out of the Catholic Church?". Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). January 30, 2023. Retrieved December 29, 2024.
- ↑ 33.0 33.1 McDermott, Jim (January 13, 2023). "Mel Gibson and the dangers of Catholic antisemitism". American Magazine. Retrieved December 29, 2024.
- ↑ 34.0 34.1 "Le Pen Convicted for Racial Hatred", Associated Press, June 2, 1999. Retrieved November 14, 2009.
- ↑ 35.0 35.1 "Le Pen fined over Holocaust remarks". BBC. BBC. Retrieved April 6, 2016.
- ↑ 36.0 36.1
- Shipp, E. R. (June 29, 1984). "Tape Contradicts Disavowal of 'Gutter Religion' Attack". The New York Times. pp. A12. Retrieved July 18, 2020.
- Hitchens, Christopher (2007). God Is Not Great. London: Atlantic Books. p. 219. ISBN 9781843545743.
- Pollack, Eunice G. (2013). Racializing Antisemitism: Black Militants, Jews, and Israel 1950-present (PDF). Vidal Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism, Hebrew University of Israel. p. 4.
- "Malcolm X founded Harvard University's antisemitism". Jewish News Syndicate (JNS). 22 February 2024.
Jews and Zionism have been cast as the ultimate oppressors of black Americans.
- "When Malcolm X Met the Nazis". VICE. 15 April 2015.
- Pierre, Dion J. (June 17, 2019). "How Anti-Semitism Became a Staple of 'Woke' Activism on Campus". National Association of Scholars (NAS). Retrieved October 27, 2024.
- "Nation of Islam". Anti-Defamation League (ADL). January 9, 2021. Retrieved October 27, 2024.
- ↑ 37.0 37.1
- "Louis Farrakhan". Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC). Retrieved October 27, 2024.
- "Black Radicalism". SAPIR Journal. 2024. Retrieved October 27, 2024.
Antisemitism runs deeper in the black radical tradition than many realize
- "Antisemitism in the Black Hebrew Israelite and Christian Identity Movements". Pogram on Extremism, George Washington University. 1 August 2024.
- "Black Hebrew Isralites Are Not Jewish: Tova the Poet Unpacks the Dangers of the Extremist Fringe Group Posing Harm to Jews". Campaign Against Antisemitism (CAA). 10 March 2023.
- "Extreme Black Hebrew Israelite Movement" (PDF). Simon Wiesenthal Center (SWC). December 2022.
- "Rabbi Dies Three Months After Hanukkah Night Attack". The New York Times. 30 March 2020.
- "Center on Extremism Uncovers More Disturbing Details of Jersey City Shooter's Extremist Ideology". Anti-Defamation League (ADL). 17 December 2019.
- ↑ 38.0 38.1 Reid, Donald (March 29, 2022). "Holocaust denial, Le Vicaire, and the absent presence of Nadine Fresco and Paul Rassinier in Jorge Semprún's La Montagne blanche". French Cultural Studies. 33 (3): 227–241. doi:10.1177/09571558221078450. Retrieved December 26, 2024.
Open access
- ↑ 39.0 39.1
- Finkielkraut, Alain; Kelly, Mary Byrd (1998). The Future of a Negation: Reflections on the Question of Genocide. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 9780803220003. Retrieved December 26, 2024.
- Golsan, Richard J. (2000). Vichy's Afterlife: History and Counterhistory in Postwar France. Dallas, Texas, United States: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0803270941. Retrieved December 26, 2024.
- Atkins, Stephen E. (April 30, 2009). Holocaust Denial as an International Movement (1 ed.). Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 9780313345388. Retrieved December 26, 2024.
- ↑ 40.0 40.1
- "Pope to cancel excommunication of rebel bishops | The Pope is expected to cancel the excommunication of four breakaway bishops including a Briton who has said the Nazis did not use gas chambers". The Telegraph. London, United Kingdom. January 22, 2009. Archived from the original on 20 November 2018. Retrieved 9 February 2019.
- "Catholic Bishop Williamson Unrepentant in Holocaust Denial". ABC News. February 1, 2020. Retrieved October 23, 2024.
- "Seminary sacks 'Holocaust bishop' | An ultra-traditionalist British bishop who denies the Holocaust has been removed from his post as the head of a Roman Catholic seminary in Argentina". BBC News. February 9, 2009. Archived from the original on 3 October 2018. Retrieved 9 February 2019.
- Willan, Philip (January 25, 2009). "Pope readmits Holocaust-denying priest to the church | Vatican lifts excommunication on renegade British bishop who declared: 'There were no gas chambers'". The Independent. London, United Kingdom. Archived from the original on 24 November 2018. Retrieved February 9, 2019.
- "Bishop Richard Williamson". Anti-Defamation League (ADL). Retrieved December 5, 2024.
- ↑ 41.0 41.1
- Shields, James G. (1991). "France: French revisionism on trial: The case of Robert Faurisson". Patterns of Prejudice. 25 (1): 86–88. doi:10.1080/0031322X.1991.9970068. Retrieved December 26, 2024.
Published online: 28 May 2010
- Ivry, Benjamin (May 30, 2012). "Denying Robert Faurisson". The Forward. Retrieved December 26, 2024.
- Berman, Paul (April 26, 2018). "The Grand Theorist of Holocaust Denial, Robert Faurisson". Tablet. Retrieved December 26, 2024.
- Cohen, Ben (October 26, 2018). "Robert Faurisson: The liar and his legacy". Jewish News Syndicate (JNS). Retrieved December 26, 2024.
- Shields, James G. (1991). "France: French revisionism on trial: The case of Robert Faurisson". Patterns of Prejudice. 25 (1): 86–88. doi:10.1080/0031322X.1991.9970068. Retrieved December 26, 2024.
- ↑ 42.0 42.1 "Writer fined for Holocaust writings", BBC News, February 27, 1998. Retrieved November 15, 2009.