FREE SPEECH
Freedom
for the
thought we hate
Jeff Jacoby
Funny
people, the Austrians. If you're Kurt Waldheim – a former Nazi military
officer
linked to a genocidal massacre during World War II – they elect you
president.
But if you're David Irving – a British author who claimed that there
never was
a Nazi genocide during World War II – they throw you in the slammer.
On
second thought, not funny at all. Austria disgraced itself when it
elected
Waldheim president in 1986, apparently unconcerned by the revelation
that he
had served in a German military unit responsible for mass murder in the
Balkans
and been listed after the war as a wanted criminal by the UN War Crimes
Commission.
In a very different way it disgraced itself again last week, when a Vienna court sentenced Irving, a racist and an
anti-Semite,
to three years in prison for denying that the Nazis annihilated 6
million
European Jews.
Irving is a man of great intellectual gifts who
devoted his
life to a grotesque and evil
project:
rehabilitating the
reputation of Hitler and the Third Reich.
Necessarily,
that meant denying the Holocaust and ridiculing those who suffered in
it, and Irving has long done so with relish. ''I don't see
any
reason to be tasteful about Auschwitz. It's baloney, it's a legend," he told a
Canadian audience in 1991. ''There are so many Auschwitz survivors
going around
– in fact the number increases as the years go past, which is
biologically very
odd to say the least – I'm going to form an association of Auschwitz
Survivors,
Survivors of the Holocaust, and Other Liars, or A-S-S-H-O-L-S."
Presumably Irving had in mind people like my father, whose arm
bears to
this day the number A-10502, tattooed there in blue ink on May 28,
1944, the day he and
his family were transported to Auschwitz. My father's parents, David and Leah
Jakubovic, and his youngest
brother and sister, Alice, 8, and Yrvin, 10, were not tattooed; Jews
deemed too
old or too young to work were sent immediately to the gas chambers. His
teenage
siblings, Zoltan and Franceska, were tattooed and, like him, put to
work as
slave laborers. Zoltan was killed within days; Franceska lasted a few
months.
Of the seven members of the Jakubovic family sent to Auschwitz in the spring of 1944, only my father was
alive in the spring of 1945.
So on a personal level, the prospect of David Irving spending his next
three
years in a prison cell is something over which I will lose no sleep. He
is a
repugnant, hate-filled liar, who even as a child (so his twin brother
told the
Telegraph, a British daily) was enamored of the Nazis and had a
pronounced cruel streak.
But as a matter of law and public policy, Irving's sentence is deplorable. The opinions he
expressed
are vile, and his arguments about the Holocaust – perhaps the most
comprehensively researched and documented crime in history
– are ludicrous. But
governments
have
no business criminalizing opinions and arguments, not even those that
are vile
or ludicrous. To be sure, freedom of speech is not absolute; laws
against
libel, death threats, and falsely shouting fire in a crowded theater
are both
reasonable and necessary. But free societies do not throw people in
prison for
giving offensive speeches or spouting historical lies.
Austria, the nation that produced Hitler and cheered
the
Anschluss, may well believe that its poisoned history requires a strong antidote. Punishing anyone
who
''denies, grossly trivializes, approves, or seeks
to
justify"
the Holocaust or other Nazi crimes may seem a small price to pay to
keep
would-be totalitarians and hatemongers at bay. But a government that
can make
the expression of Holocaust denial a crime today can make the
expression of
other offensive opinions a crime tomorrow.
Americans, for whom the First Amendment is a birthright, should
understand this
instinctively. ''If there is any principle of the Constitution that
more
imperatively calls for attachment than any other it is the principle of
free
thought," wrote Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. in
1929.
''Not free thought for those who agree with us, but freedom for the
thought
that we hate."
It is popular in some circles to argue that the United States should do certain things -- adopt
single-payer health
insurance, abolish capital punishment, etc. – to conform to the
practice in
other democracies. Those who find that a persuasive argument might
consider
that Irving is behind bars today because Austria doesn't have a First Amendment. Neither do
Belgium,
the Czech Republic, France, Germany, Israel, Lithuania, Poland,
Romania,
Slovakia, or Switzerland – all of which have made Holocaust denial a
crime.
''Freedom for the thought we hate" is never an easy sell, but without
it there
can be no true liberty. David Irving is a scurrilous creep, but he
doesn't
belong in prison. Austria should find a way to set him free – not for
his sake,
but for Austria's.
Jeff
Jacoby
is an Op-Ed writer for the Boston Globe, a radio
political commentator, and a contributing columnist for Townhall.com.
Posted
at townhall.com, March 2, 2006.