DETROIT MICHAEL WEISS Special to The Jewish News Ann Arbor — The Universi- ty of Michigan erupted into controversy last week over the Michigan Daily's publication of a full-page advertisement that claimed the Holocaust never existed. Outraged students pro- tested on Friday both the con- tent of the ad and the Daily's decision to run it. The ad, entitled "The, Holocaust Controversy: The Case for Open Debate" and paid for by Bradley R. Smith of the California-based "Com- mittee for Open Debate on the Holocaust," claimed that "the figure of 6 million Jewish deaths (in the Holocaust) is an irresponsible exaggeration," that "no ex- ecution gas chambers existed in any camp in Europe which was under German control," and that the "myth" of the Holocaust was created by "Zionist organizations" who were deeply involved in "pro- "On the back page they admit it was a mistake to print it, and on the front page they defend it with the First Amendment." mulgating anti-German hate propaganda" in the years im- mediately following World War II. More than 300 people gathered in the rain on the Diag (the campus center) on Friday for a hastily-organized rally in protest of the Daily's publication of the ad. "A lot of people who don't usually get involved in Jewish student organizations and in political action came out for the rally," said Uri Lev, a student at U-M. "Emo- tionally it was really impor- tant for a lot of people to come together at a time like this." "We want everyone to know that if you were hurt by this, you are not alone. If you were shocked and made angry by this, you are not alone," said Ken Goldstein, a political science graduate student who helped organize the rally. Speakers at the rally refus- ed to address specific points raised by Mr. Smith in the ad, arguing that to be drawn in- to a debate on whether the Holocaust occurred would lend credibility to the outrageous charges. . 14 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1991 "If we start wrestling with this skunk, we're all going to get smelly," said Mr. Golds- tein. "But if we ignore it, the skunk can turn into a monster!' History Professor Todd Endelman, one of the speakers at the rally, discuss- ed Holocaust revisionism in the context of historical and contemporary anti-Semitism. "Bradley Smith is part of a network of right-wing, racist extremists in this country and in France, Germany and England," said Professor Endelman. "They are not scholars. They are not profes- sional historians or resear- chers. They have no interest in history. Their only goal is to sow hatred of the Jews." Professor Endelman explain- ed that Smith was formerly a spokesman for the Institute for Historical Review, another California-based group of Holocaust revisionists, and that he has links with the Washington, D.C.-based Liber- ty Lobby, a white-supremacist group. Among the publica- tions of the Liberty Lobby (which also operates as The Noontide Press) are the "Pro- tocols of the Elders of Zion," a Czarist anti-Semitic docu- ment used by several genera- tions of anti-Semites, in- cluding the Nazi propaganda machine in the 1930s and 1940s, said Professor Endelman. These "professional anti- Semites," he said, have a three-fold political agenda. "First, they seek to find new, sanitized ways of ex- pressing old anti-Jewish and anti-black theories!' said Pro- fessor Endelman, citing the revisionists' use of "code words" like "Zionists," "establishment historians" and "thought police" in place of "Jews." "Second, they desire to rehabilitate the reputation of the Nazi party and Adolf Hitler. They perceive the Nazis primarily as an anti- Communist party, and believe the United States fought on the wrong side in the war," he said. "Third, they seek to under- mine the legitimacy of the Jewish state," said Professor Endelman. "It is not a ques- tion for them of what the borders of Israel should be, or what its policies should be. They do not-want there to be any Jewish state, anywhere!' In an announcement on the back page of Friday's paper, Daily business staffers Photo: by Sharon Musher Anti-Semitic Ad Sparks Controversy U-M students gather on the Diag to protest Daily ad. apologized for running the ad and claimed that "an error in the ad placement process" resulted in its accidental publication. "I have the ultimate authority for deciding which ads are acceptable and which are not," said Beth Warber, the Daily's business manager. "Due to a mix-up in produc- tion, this ad never came across my desk for approval. I first saw it at 11 a.m. on the day it ran. Had I seen it before we went to press, it would never have appeared in the paper." In an announcement on the front page of Friday's paper, however, Daily editorial staf- fers defended the publication of the ad on the grounds that "as a newspaper committed to upholding the principles of the First Amendment and the unrestricted exchange of ideas, we cannot justifiably condone the censorship of un- popular views from our pages merely because they are of- fensive, or because we disagree with them!" Many students and faculty were angered by what they perceived as a mixed message coming from the Daily's two announcements. "Frankly,' after looking at today's Daily, I'm even more confused than I was yester- day," said Mr. Goldstein at Friday's rally. "On the back page they admit it was a mistake to print it, and on the front page they defend it with the First Amendment. "But the First Amendment has nothing to do with this. The First Amendment doesn't say that if there is in- competence at the Daily, then the staffers can cloak themselves in the Constitu- tion and avoid responsibility for what they print," said Mr. Goldstein. "What is infuriating about the Daily's response is its characterization of Holocaust revisionism as 'unpopular views' that are 'merely . . . of- fensive,' " said Joseph Kohane, director of the cam- pus Wnai B'rith Hillel Foundation. "These claims are not `merely' anything. They are lies," said Mr. Kohane. "The revisionists are in a direct line of Jew-haters going back hundreds of years. The Nazi SS believed that if they coni- mitted a crime monstrous enough, no one in their right minds would believe it. The revisionists have exactly the same thing in mind!' Andy Gottesman, the Daily editor-in-chief, took pains to explain that the Daily is divided into two separate departments, business and editorial, and that each department made a different response. "I'm sorry that the people at the rally didn't understand that. Perhaps we weren't clear enough," he said. "I realize it's difficult for people to believe this, but nobody at the paper ever made a con- scious decision to run the ad. It just slipped through the cracks and got printed without ever being read by the business staffers!' But, Mr. Gottesman said, "While it was not my decision to print or reject the ad, if it had been my decision I would not have rejected it, on First Amendment grounds!" "Regardless of what the editorial staff feels, the business staff does not feel the ad should have been run, and should it have come across my desk it would not have run," said Ms. Warber. "I think it's apparent that people were outraged by this ad, and I think the large tur- nout at the rally demon- strates that we're not going to stand for it!" said Barry Hirsch, a student who attend- ed Friday's protest. "People get relaxed about anti- Semitism, and it isn't until something like this happens that it resurfaces and re- ignites people's fears!' ❑ State Budget Impact . Worries Area Agencies ALAN HITSKY Associate Editor L ocal Jewish organiza- tions which have received grants from the State of Michigan in the past are expecting little help from the state this year. The announcement last week that the Holocaust Memorial Center will lose its $100,000 state grant from its $600,000 annual budget did not surprise other Jew- ish organizations. Those groups which have state con- tracts, not grants — such as Jewish Vocational Service and JARC (Jewish Associ- ation for Residential Care for Persons With Develop- mental Disabilities) — are expecting a 2.5 percent in- crease. But no one believes that glimmer of hope offsets state budget cuts in health and welfare services which are affecting clients of the agencies. "We have sufficient resources to run our pro- grams," said Albert Ascher, executive director of JVS. "But we have nothing for expansion, and the need for expansion is there." As an example, Mr. Ascher cited JVS' adult day pro- gram for persons with disabilities. Persons who must leave special education programs — those reaching age 26 — must now wait 10 years to get into an adult