This House, on the occasion of the reunion
in London of 1,000 refugees from the Holocaust…is appalled by
the allegation by Nazi protagonist and longtime Hitler apologist
David Irving that "the infamous gas chambers...did not exist."
House of Commons motion,
20 June 19891
Publications dealing with Holocaust denial appearing throughout
the world since the 1970s can be divided into two kinds: the first, vulgar, unsophisticated
antisemitic propaganda, and the second, books and articles written
in an academic style, with a research methodology, primary sources,
"scientific findings" and a complete set of claims.2
Those belonging to the latter group, including publications by Robert Faurisson and
Arthur Butz, do not deny that the Jews fell victim to Nazi persecution
and that a large number of them died during the war in the concentration
camps, mainly as a result of epidemics and maltreatment. They do,
however, deny the existence of a systematic, industrial plan of
organized destruction which resulted in the death of six million
Jews.3
By the late 1980s/early 1990s David Irving had become one of the
most prominent representatives of this stream of Holocaust denial.
Unlike other authors in this school whose primary interest in World
War II was the attempt to distort or deny the Holocaust, Irving
came to the question of the destruction of the Jews as part of his
revisionist writing on World War II, which he began to publish as
early as the 1960s. He argued mainly against the demonic image of Hitler
created by what he described as "years of intense wartime propaganda
and emotive postwar historiography."4
However, up until the late 1980s Irving refrained from explicitly
denying the extermination itself.
This article will focus on the transition from a revisionist approach,
which presents a historical picture different from the one commonly
accepted in World War II and Holocaust scholarship, to the adoption
of views which question the uniqueness, and indeed the very historical
veracity, of the Holocaust. It will attempt to determine when and
under what circumstances this transition occurred and whether the
ideas adopted by Irving in the late 1980s were immanent in his general
historical concept and early historical writings.