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From: Grubozo@aol.com
Sent: Monday, 11 February 2008 9:08 AM
To: info@adelaideinstitute.org
Subject: 2nd Grubach letter to French ambassador on Dr. Faurisson
French
Government Hypocrisy, Islam and
Holocaust Revisionism:
A
Second Open Letter to France’s Ambassador
to the United States
February
8, 2008
Ambassador
Pierre Vimont
Embassy
of France in the United States
4101
Reservoir Road, NW
Washington,
D. C. 20007
Dear Ambassador Vimont,
As
you are undoubtedly aware by now, Holocaust revisionist scholar Dr. Robert
Faurisson will probably stand trial for comments he made at the Iran Holocaust
Conference of December 2006. Allegedly, he violated France’s Gayssot Act, a
statute passed in 1990 that prohibits any public doubt about the alleged Jewish
Holocaust.
There
is a new development to this ongoing story that I would like to bring to your
attention. On January 24, Dr. Faurisson was taken into police custody for
questioning and a search of his house was carried out.
In
my last open letter to you of January 15, I brought attention to the
hypocritical double standard of the French government. In September 2006, high
school teacher Robert Redeker made a scathing attack upon the Prophet Mohammed [PBUH]
and the Islamic religion in the center-right daily Le Figaro. Because of
threats to his life, he was forced to go into hiding. The French government
immediately came to his defense, offering him police protection and a public
statement on his behalf.
In
reference to Redeker’s case, former Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin
called the threats to his life "unacceptable," and added: "We are
in a democracy. Everyone has the right to express his views freely, while
respecting others, of course." (See The New York Times, 30 September
2006, p. A 3)
That
this is an outrageous lie is demonstrated by the ongoing plight of Dr.
Faurisson. In 1991, French "democracy" demanded that Dr. Faurisson be
removed from his university chair. In July 2006, French "democracy"
again violated his inalienable right to freedom of speech and research. He was
convicted of "Holocaust denial" by a Paris court over remarks he made
on Iranian television, and was given a three-month suspended prison term and he
has to pay 18 000 euros.
Clearly,
as the cases of Redeker and Faurisson show, one has the right to attack and
violate the sacred beliefs of Muslims, but one has no right whatsoever to
question and repudiate the Holocaust doctrine, one of the most sacred beliefs of
Jewish-Zionism.
The
sacred belief and taboo of the Jewish people is enshrined in law in France. If
you contest the Holocaust, you are prosecuted and persecuted. However, the
sacred beliefs of Muslims are not enshrined in law. If you attack Muslim
beliefs, this is depicted as an expression of "freedom of speech."
Once again, this is evidence of a hypocritical double standard.
I
have come across another case which further bolsters my point.
Do
you recognize the name of the French Jewish writer, Marek Halter? He
co-founded the so-called "anti-racist" group, SOS-Racisme.
There
is an interview of him in the February 11, 2005 issue of the English edition of The
International Jerusalem Post, (pp. 9-11). Halter claims that France's
rapidly growing Islamic population is too frequently incompatible with
democracy.
Let
me give you two of his direct quotes. Halter stated: "All of a sudden
we realize that they [Muslims] are not a small minority anymore and that the way
most of them practice their religion is not compatible with French democratic
principles." He also stated: "Muslims threaten to
weaken a French democracy that no longer knows how to impose its rules without
seeming oppressive."
In
April 2007 the European Union made inciting racism and xenophobia crimes
throughout its 27 member states in a landmark decision. Even before April
2007, when Halter made these statements, inciting racism and xenophobia in
France were outlawed. That is to say, Halter made these statements when
these "racism and xenophobia" laws were on the books.
A
French prosecutor could cogently argue that Halter's statements incite hatred
and xenophobia against Muslims, and thus, the man should be prosecuted.
After all, he is stating that Muslims as a group threaten
to weaken and even destroy French "democracy." This will cause
people to hate Muslims.
Your so-called French "democracy" allows him to make anti-Muslim
statements. Yet, Robert Faurisson is put on trial by this same French
"democracy" for making statements that contest and debunk Holocaust
orthodoxy.
Do
you see my point, Ambassador Vimont? France grants "freedom of speech"
to Jewish people like Marek Halter who criticize and attack Muslims. Yet,
"democratic" France denies freedom of speech to non-Jews like
Faurisson who question and debunk the orthodox view of the Holocaust.
If
France was truly a democracy as former Prime Minister de Villepin claims, it
would defend Dr. Faurisson’s right to freedom of research on the Holocaust.
That is to say, there would be no "limits in advance" or
"prewritten conclusions" about his Holocaust research. After all,
France grants freedom of research for atheists and others who deny the existence
of God or attack the Islamic and Christian religions.
If
the French government does prosecute and imprison Dr. Faurisson for his
Holocaust revisionist views, this will only demonstrate to the world the truth
of his arguments. The French government cannot disprove his Holocaust
revisionism with reason and science, but must resort to oppressive laws and
prison sentences in its attempt to silence truth.
Sincerely,
Paul
Grubach
©-free 2008 Adelaide Institute