The Hoax of the Twentieth Century: The Case Against the Presumed Extermination of European Jewry is a book by Northwestern University electrical engineering professor and Holocaust denier Arthur Butz. The book was originally published in 1975[1] in the United Kingdom by Anthony Hancock’s Historical Review Press,[2] known as a Holocaust denial publisher. An antisemitic work,[3][4][5] it has been influential in the Holocaust denial movement.[6]
Author | Arthur Butz |
---|---|
Language | English |
Genre | Non-fiction |
Publisher | Historical Review Press |
Publication date | 1975 |
Publication place | United Kingdom |
Synopsis
editButz argues that Nazi Germany did not exterminate millions of Jews using homicidal gas chambers during World War II but that the Holocaust was a propaganda hoax.[7]
The main arguments Butz presents in the book to back up his claims are:[8]
- the overwhelming majority of deaths in Nazi administered concentration camps were caused by a typhus outbreak rather than any deliberate extermination policy
- the Final Solution was actually a program to round up and then expel Jewish people from Europe into the remnants of the Soviet Union after the Wehrmacht had secured "lebensraum"
- the missing millions of Jews in Eastern Europe after World War 2 can be explained by their pre-war mass emigration to countries such as America and British Palestine, combined with the dramatic redrawing of sovereign borders skewing the population statistics of any post-war census
- defendants at the Nuremberg trials, such as Rudolf Höss, were beaten into making incriminating confessions that a program of killing Jews was enacted by the Nazis
- extermination camps didn't exist as concentration camp inmates, who were primarily incarcerated for punitive or security reasons, were actually a valuable source of penal labour to the German government for military production
- the Red Cross inspected several concentration camps scattered around German-occupied Europe during the war, including Auschwitz and Theresienstadt, and could find no evidence of deliberate mistreatment of Jewish inmates at any of them
- aerial reconnaissance photographs of Auschwitz taken by the Allies in early 1944 show no evidence of the claimed mass outdoor burning of bodies and the crematory chimneys in fact appear inactive
- captured German documents reference a program of expulsion and resettlement of Jews, and do not contain any references to gas chambers or extermination camps
Reception
editCanadian academic Alan T. Davies has described it as an "antisemitic classic".[9]The book has been banned in Canada and is X-rated in Germany where it cannot be displayed or advertised.[10] In 2017, the online book seller Amazon.com removed the book, along with other Holocaust-denying titles, from its US and UK sites.[11][12]
External links
editNotes
edit- ^ Michael Freeden; Lyman Tower Sargent; Marc Stears (15 August 2013). The Oxford Handbook of Political Ideologies. Oxford University Press. pp. 737–. ISBN 978-0-19-166371-0.
- ^ Rouben Paul Adalian; Steven L. Jacobs; Eric Markusen; Marc I. Sherman (March 2003). Encyclopedia of Genocide. ABC-CLIO. pp. 181–. ISBN 978-1-57607-446-6.
- ^ Schweitzer, F; Perry, M (2002). Anti-Semitism: Myth and Hate from Antiquity to the Present. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 251. ISBN 978-0312165611. Retrieved 17 August 2016.
- ^ Mason, Carol (2009). Reading Appalachia from Left to Right: Conservatives and the 1974 Kanawha County Textbook Controversy. Cornell University Press. p. 75. ISBN 978-0-8014-4728-0. Retrieved 17 August 2016.
- ^ Dawidowicz, Lucy (1983). The Holocaust and the Historians. Harvard University Press. p. 15. ISBN 978-0674405677. Retrieved 17 August 2016.
- ^ Charny, Israel A. (1999). Encyclopedia of Genocide. Vol. 2. ABC-CLIO. pp. 181–182.
- ^ Geri Yonover (2000). "Anti-Semitism and Holocaust denial in the academy: a tort remedy". In DeCoste, F. C.; Schwartz, Bernard (eds.). The Holocaust's Ghost: Writings on Art, Politics, Law, and Education. University of Alberta Press. p. 329. ISBN 978-0888643377. Retrieved 7 October 2017.
- ^ Butz, Arthur R. (1 September 2003). "The Hoax of the Twentieth Century" (PDF). files.secure. Retrieved 2024-10-10.
- ^ Alan Davies (1992). Davies, Alan (ed.). Antisemitism in Canada: History and Interpretation. Wilfrid Laurier University Press. p. 242. ISBN 9780889202160. Retrieved 17 August 2016.
- ^ Green, Jonathan (2005). Encyclopedia of Censorship. Facts on File. p. 234. ISBN 978-0816044641. Retrieved 17 August 2016.
- ^ "Amazon UK Removes 3 Holocaust Denial Books from Sale". Times of Israel. March 9, 2017.
- ^ Ziv, Stav (6 June 2017). "Under pressure, Amazon stops selling Holocaust-denial books". The Jewish Chronicle. Retrieved 17 June 2017.