Search
Close this search box.

Iran Calls Holocaust ‘A Big Lie’


hol21.jpgOn Tuesday afternoon, the UN Secretary general called on the world to “fight Holocaust denial, anti-Semitism and bigotry”. Almost simultaneously with his statement, an Iranian government spokesman released a statement that called the Holocaust a “big lie”. Posted below are both statements:

IRANIAN GOVERMENT: Iran’s government spokesman on Tuesday branded the Holocaust a “big lie” created to place the Islamic republic’s arch-foe Israel in the Middle East, the state IRNA news agency reported. “The Holocaust is a concept coming from a big lie in order to settle a rootless regime in the heart of the Islamic world,” Gholam Hossein Elham told a conference on Gaza in central Iran’s religious city of Qom.

It was not the first time an Iranian official has questioned the massacre of Jews by Nazis in World War II.

Iran does not recognise Israel, and since his election in 2005 President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has attracted international condemnation by repeatedly predicting that the Jewish state is doomed to disappear.

In late 2005 Ahmadinejad branded the Holocaust a “myth.” His comment was followed by a conference in Tehran in 2006 that brought together Holocaust deniers and revisionists.

UNITED NATIONS SECRETERY GENERAL: Over six decades after 6 million Jews, nearly a third of the total, and countless other minorities were butchered in the Nazi German Holocaust, it is more vital than ever to learn from the tragedy to prevent further atrocities, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon warned today.

“We must continue to examine why the world failed to prevent the Holocaust and other atrocities since. That way, we will be better armed to defeat anti-Semitism and other forms of intolerance,” he said in a message marking the International Day of Commemoration in memory of the victims of the Holocaust.

“We must continue to teach our children the lessons of history’s darkest chapters. That will help them do a better job than their elders in building a world of peaceful coexistence. We must combat Holocaust denial, and speak out in the face of bigotry and hatred,” he added in the message, read at a ceremony at UN Headquarters in New York by Deputy Secretary-General Asha-Rose Migiro.

Mr. Ban noted that new initiatives in Holocaust remembrance and education have given an authentic basis for hope, which is the theme of this year’s observance, the fourth since the General Assembly instituted the annual commemoration.

“But we can and must do more if we are to make that hope a reality,” he stressed. “We must uphold the standards and laws that the United Nations has put in place to protect people and fight impunity for genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity. Our world continues to be plagued by ruthless violence, utter disregard for human rights, and the targeting of people solely for who they are.”

As well as the ceremony, chaired by Under-Secretary-General for Communications and Public Information Kiyo Akasaka, the UN marked the occasion with panel discussions and other events, including an initiative by the UN Department of Public Information (DPI) called the “Footprints of Hope,” which brings the global network of the UN Information Centres together with local schools to further youngsters’ understanding of the Holocaust and their respect for human rights through documentary and film resources.

A new exhibit has also opened in the Visitors’ Lobby about the Nazi regime called “Deadly Medicine: Creating the Master Race.”

General Assembly President Miguel d’Escoto echoed Mr. Ban’s call to the world to learn the lesson of the Holocaust. “We need to move beyond our statements of grief and memory, however powerfully felt, and work to develop new ways of thinking about the Holocaust, about genocide, about the apparently bottomless capacity for peoples’ cruelty to each other,” he said in a message.

“That capacity is shared by all of us. At their core, all genocides, all holocausts, start with the alienation, demonization and the marginalization of the “Other” – those citizens of another religion, another race, ethnicity, another set of political ideas, or another sexual orientation than our own,” he added, calling for a struggle against intolerance and for relationships that replace “us and them” with “we and ours.”

(Dov Gordon – YWN)



8 Responses

  1. this is crazy what do they think happened to 6 million jew!!!!!!!! 12 million people!!!! the ran pres is obviously on some sort of drugs!!!!

  2. Reply to #1 Iran is used to people disappearing from their midst with no explanation of how they disappeared forthcoming from the goverment. In theyre backwards mentality 6 million can also disappear!

  3. to #4 the neturay karta are staunch supporters of iran- you can find many videos of their members hugging ahmadinejad y”s and showing much support for him- these people are sadly a bunch of totally misguided fanatics- they are a clear manifestation of the idea that no matter how l’shaim shamayim a person is, if one doesn’t follow true daas torah you never know where one can end up

  4. It’s a bit ironic.
    The un secretary general says: “We must uphold the standards and laws that the United Nations has put in place to protect people and fight impunity for genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity. Our world continues to be plagued by ruthless violence, utter disregard for human rights, and the targeting of people solely for who they are.”

    And then he charges Israel of violating human rights and genocide… utterly ignoring that they are the victims of such “ruthless violence” and “the targeting of people solely for who they are,” even wanting to charge them for war crimes.

    He thinks that by talking and telling children about it, he is opening the eyes of the world. Well, it’s definitely a step, and a necessary one, but l’maaseh, they are unfortunately as blind as ever… In the end, klal yisrael must know that we have no-one to rely on to save us and protect our right to exist, ella al avinu shebashamayim.

Leave a Reply


Popular Posts