Fighting Those Who Deny The Horror Deborah Lipstadt has captured national attention in her attempt to expose Holocaust deniers. NEIL RUBIN SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS eborah Lipstadt is known for pushing the joys over the "oys" in Ju- daism. But her recent rise to national acclaim has brought her a strange mixture of both. Her recently pub- lished book, Denying the Holocaust: The Growing Assault on Truth And emory, is being praised from coast to coast. The 278- page text, the result of a decade of research, explores the frightening rise of Holo- caust deniers in this country and elsewhere. The book has already at- tained what Dr. Lipstadt, pro- fessor of modern Jewish and Holocaust studies at Atlanta's Emory University, called a rare "grand slam" in publish- ing: Both the New York Times and Washington Post reviewed Denying the Holocaust on the front page of their book sec- tions. The former called the work "important and impassioned" and said that it "could not have come at a better time." The Los Angeles Times soon followed with similar praise. She has been featured on National Public Radio's "Fresh Air," and other shows. Last fall, she appeared on the "Charlie Rose Show." Lost in some of the atten- Neil Rubin is managing editor of the Atlanta Jewish Times lion, however, are the four major network appearances that she has turned down be- cause she refuses to appear with the peo- ple whom she writes about. "I tell them that I can't debate with peo- ple who lie, people who have no fidelity with the truth," Dr. Lipstadt says with characteristic blunt- ness. Dr. Lipstadt's book comes at a turning point in American understanding of the Holocaust. The open- ing of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washing- ton has heightened awareness about the Nazi genocide. At the same time, a recent Roper Poll found that 20 percent of high school students in this country and 22 percent of the adults said that it was "possible" that the Holo- caust never happened. "People are just amazed that 50 years after the Holocaust that anyone would take this nonsense seriously," says the 46-year- old scholar. Not that she believes all of the Roper Poll's respondents to be classic Holocaust deniers. "We are fawn very crafty, very slick group of people. — Deborah Lipstadt "There will always be Ameri- cans who believe that JFK is alive and well and living in Alaska and that we didn't land on the moon," she says. "All these peo- ple who answered are not necessarily anti-Semites." Also, she believes that on a subliminal level, members of the media might be reprimanding themselves for not having paid atten- tion to the Holo- caust deniers in recent decades. Writing Denying the Holocaust was not pleasant for Dr. Lipstadt who, con- trary to what many believe, is not a child of Holocaust survivors. "I feel on some level as if I've spent the past three to four years in a mine with the most noxious fumes," she says. "It was a mine filled with no re- deeming social value. This was the worst type of pornography." Dr. Lipstadt says that the threat Holocaust de- niers pose goes beyond Jews. "This is not just an assault on Jewish history, because if this history is not safe, no history is safe." She adds after a pause, "I don't think anybody has tried FIGHTING page 92