- Retired university professor Robert Faurisson lives in
the central French town of Vichy. At 9 AM on January 24 he answered a summons
to appear at the local police station. No sooner had he arrived there than
he was notified by three senior officers, sent from Paris the day before,
that he was now in their custody for questioning and that a search of his
house would also be carried out.
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- In December 2006 then French President Jacques Chirac
had publicly called for an investigation into Faurisson's participation
in the conference in Tehran on the Holocaust (December 11th and 12th of
that year). That conference was open to all, including revisionists. A
British subject before being a French citizen, it was in English that the
Professor, a specialist of "the appraisal of texts and documents (literature,
history, media)", briefly spelled out the results of his research
on "the Holocaust". His paper bore the title "The Victories
of Revisionism". In it he didn't hide his belief that the more revisionism
gained ground, particularly on the Internet, the more revisionists would
face repression, first in the media, then at the hands of the police and
the law courts.
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- The Minister of Justice then put a Paris prosecutor in
charge of the investigation demanded by one who, dubbed "Superliar"
by French television, was now anxious to come to the aid of an imperilled
"Superlie". On April 16, 2007 police lieutenant Séverine
Besse and a colleague of hers were sent to Vichy to question the professor.
But to each of their queries he was to reply stubbornly: "No answer",
and he had them put down the following statement in their official record:
"I refuse to collaborate with the French police and justice system
in the repression of historical revisionism".
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- Nine months later, on January 24, 2008, the thought police
re-offended. In the meantime an examining magistrate, Marc Sommerer, was
assigned to the case. And he sent the same Séverine Besse to Vichy,
accompanied this time by two other officers of the Police Judiciaire (OPJ).
She made it known to the professor that he was henceforth in custody for
questioning and that after a session with them in a room in the station
his house would be searched. There then followed a bodily search, confiscation
of wallet and change purse, pen, watch andS belt (whereas the chances are
nil of a man of nearly 79 hanging himself in a police station office in
the presence of three officers). In fact, it was all probably just his
interrogators' way of trying to intimidate a notorious recalcitrant, whose
wife, as the police are aware, is for serious medical reasons in need of
his constant presence. However, with the stubbornness of a Scottish mother's
son, R. Faurisson persisted in replying "No answer" to every
question put. He reiterated his refusal to collaborate with the police
and the justice system against revisionism. Then he was told that he was
the target not of one but of three penal actions that had led to the issuing
of as many warrants by examining magistrate Sommerer. The first two cited
the professor directly for his participation in the Tehran conference;
whilst one of these, originating both from the prosecution service and
from a slew of pious organisations, attacked him for "disputing crimes
against humanity" (under the Fabius-Gayssot law of 1990), the other,
from the LICRA (Ligue internationale contre le racisme et l'antisémitisme),
charged him with "defamation". The third action, tortuously worded,
was brought "against persons unknown" by the daily Libération
for the "pirating" of one of its pieces in the review Dubitando
where, the police officers said, twenty of the professor's articles had
appeared.
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- Faurisson was then taken to his house. The three "OPJ's"
and a Vichy policewoman proceeded with the search. They drew a blank. They
discovered neither the coveted computer nor, in a mountain of documents,
the papers sought. At the end, towards 3 PM, the professor, making careful
note of the three officers' names, affirmed to them, as he'd had occasion
to do before judges in court: "It may turn out that your existence
will be noted in history only insofar as I'll have mentioned your names
and according to how I'll have mentioned you".
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- The day after this six-hour arrest for interrogation
and search, that is, the 25th of January, the professor would celebrate
his 79th birthday, not without a thought for those revisionist friends
of his who were already in prison or who risked finding themselves there
before long. He'd have a special thought for the heroic Vincent Reynouard,
today a father of seven: ten years ago this maths teacher, adored by his
pupils, was kicked out of the state school system in France for the crime
of revisionism; at present his living conditions are more precarious than
ever but he nonetheless keeps on doing copious research and producing revisionist
material regularly; he stands up in person to the courts where the judges,
noting his resolve, deny him the right to make a defence grounded in the
substance of the case as he sees it, and sentence him with increasing severity;
prison awaits him.
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- Faurisson would also be thinking of his fellow revisionists
imprisoned in either Austria or Germany, for example Ernst Zündel,
Germar Rudolf, Wolfgang Fröhlich, Gerd Honsik and indeed Silvia Stolz,
"the German Joan of Arc".
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- Over the past nearly sixty years, long has grown the
list of revisionists who have paid with their tranquillity, their health,
their freedom and, sometimes, their lives for an attachment to the freedom
of thought, the freedom of research (which, in history, should not see
itself assigned any limits) and, finally, the freedom of expression.
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