| David O'Connell is a professor of French     at Georgia State University in Atlanta.           
This article was published in the November,     2004 issue of Culture Wars magazine.  CultureWars.com           
      
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Elie Wiesel is widely admired by many     of the Catholics who wield power in the diocesan chanceries and the administrations     of the nation's Catholic schools and universities. He has received honorary     degrees from a number of Catholic institutions, including Georgetown, Notre     Dame, Fordham and Marquette. He is also fawned over by assorted Catholic     intellectuals. He is accorded this treatment despite the fact that he plays     a prominent role in exploiting the abusive relationship that exists between     the representatives of the major Jewish Organizations and those Catholics     who "dialogue" with them. In the 40 years since Vatican II, this     alleged "dialogue," well intentioned at the beginning, has actually     turned out to be a monologue in which the Jewish side ritually denounces     Catholics and Catholicism while the Catholic representatives nod in approval.     No serious criticism is ever made of Jews or Zionism. The dialogue, for     instance, is strangely "silent" about the unrelenting Israeli     war against the Christians of Palestine. In 1948, 18-20 percent of Palestinians     were Christian. That figure is down to about 2 percent today. The Christian     population of Bethlehem, once 95 percent, has dwindled to about 15 percent.     Even worse, the "separation fence" now under construction cuts     through many places that are holy to all Christians.           
The role that Wiesel has assumed in the     abusive relationship is to exploit his privileged access to the media to     attack high value Catholic targets. In 1979, he attacked the Pope for not     mentioning the word "Jew" while visiting the Auschwitz victims'     monument, which also omitted the word. He also attacked the Pontiff for     not mentioning the word "Israel" on his visit to the U. N. When     the Pope invited him to come to Rome for a personal visit, Wiesel turned     him down. Then, in 2000, he rebuked the Pontiff because his apology to     Jews for past persecutions was not good enough.           
His attacks against Cardinal O'Connor     of New York, an honest, sincere and terribly naïve man, began in the     1980s. When O'Connor visited Jerusalem in 1987, he broke down in tears     over Jewish suffering during World War II. Upset, he stated that this was     a "gift." What he meant was that, in Catholic terms, it was a     possible occasion of grace, as is all suffering. Wiesel and other New York     Jewish figures ripped him in the media for his supposed bigotry and insensitivity.     He and Wiesel then became "friends" when Wiesel came to visit     him.1 Wiesel then convinced O'Connor to do an "interview" book     with him. It was called Journey of Faith (1991), and in it the Cardinal     was on the defensive from cover to cover. In 1997, he talked O'Connor into     helping him dedicate the Jewish Holocaust Museum in New York City. While     there, the Cardinal took it upon himself to "apologize" for all     Catholics who had contributed to past Jewish suffering.2 Then, on September     8, 1999, very sick and not far from death's door, he wrote Wiesel a personal     letter in which he made the same kind of "apology." Wiesel then     paid $99,000 to turn the cardinal's private missive into a full-page ad     in the Sunday New York Times on September 19. Strongly implied in each     of O'Connor's gestures was the idea that Jewish suffering of World War     II replicates the sufferings of Christ in the 20th century, an idea that     a faithful Catholic simply cannot accept.3           
Wiesel's relationship with Cardinal Jean-Marie     Lustiger of Paris followed the same pattern in the 1990s. First he attacked     Lustiger because he had converted to Catholicism as a boy, then he achieved     reconciliation and finally "friendship" with him.           
Wiesel also delights in desecrating what     is for many Catholics the beloved memory of Pope Pius XII, routinely trashing     him for his supposed "silence" during World War II. No other     Jewish media voice even comes close to Wiesel in terms of the frequency     and the vitriol of his insults to the Catholic memory of that Pope. Wiesel     has been claiming for the past 35 years that Christianity died at Auschwitz.     As early as 1971, he stated: "The sincere Christian knows that what     died in Auschwitz was not the Jewish people but Christianity."4 Yet,     the Catholic press, intellectuals and hierarchy treat Wiesel with reverence!     To Wiesel (as well as to our disproportionately Jewish mediarchy), Jewish     suffering during World War II has replaced the sufferings of Christ as     the functioning paradigm of the post-Christian era. It is the media's benchmark,     the sacred "burnt offering" of the secularists. As Rabbi Jacob     Neusner has pointed out, "the Judaism of Holocaust and Redemption"     has become the civil religion of America.5 Hardly a day goes by without     the Judeo-corporate media producing an article, report, TV show or movie     of some kind on the subject of the Holocaust and the dubious "lessons"     we are supposed to draw from it. Media propaganda, both against Catholicism     and in favor of the "specificity," or superiority of Jewish suffering,     never stops.           
Over the course of his career, Wiesel     has told many tall tales about his alleged experiences during World War     II. They can be called "true lies," since they are meant to edify     and are told with supposedly good intentions, even though they are not     true. In the following pages, I shall examine closely one of these "true     lies." It has to do with his internment at Buchenwald. As I tell the     story, it will become apparent to readers that I avoid using the word "Holocaust."6     Since that term is has become a media code word that is all too often used     as a justification for the Jewish war crimes and crimes against humanity     that are routinely committed in occupied Palestine, it is tainted. It is     also associated with the scams and manipulations of various Jewish holocaust     profiteers, of whom Wiesel himself is probably the most flagrant example.     It also serves the purposes of the pro-Israel Judeo-corporate power structure,     since it justifies foreign adventures to "prevent another Holocaust."7     I refer instead to the Jewish Ordeal of World War II (JOW) to describe     the Nazi persecution of innocent Jews.           
Wiesel's Credibility           
But who is Elie Wiesel, and how is he     related to the JOW? One Jewish commentator, Pierre Vidal Naquet, whose     father died at Auschwitz, wrote of Wiesel: "For example, you have     Rabbi Kahane, the Jewish extremist, who is less dangerous than a man like     Elie Wiesel, who says anything that comes to mind. . . You just have to     read parts of Night to know that certain of his descriptions are not exact     and that he is essentially a Shoah merchant. . . who has done harm, enormous     harm, to historical truth."8 Another Jewish voice made the following     comments on Wiesel's self-righteous autobiography: "Elie Wiesel's     memoir is written by a man whose inner postures have gone so long unreviewed     he cannot persuade us he is on a voyage of self-discovery, the first requirement     of a testament. His book, I am sorry to say, gives being witness a bad     name."9 Christopher Hitchens, taking issue with Wiesel for his silence     about Jewish war crimes in Palestine, wondered out loud: "Is there     any more contemptible poseur and windbag than Elie Wiesel? I suppose there     may be. But not, surely, a poseur and windbag who receives (and takes as     his due) such grotesque deference on moral questions."10           
>From November 1947 to January 1949,     Wiesel worked for Zion in Kampf, the newspaper of the terrorist gangsters     of the Irgun. The Irgun extermination of innocent Arabs at the village     of Deir Yassin took place on April 8, 1948, while Wiesel was on the payroll,     yet he is always appalled by Palestinian "terrorism." Likewise,     while he was actively campaigning for a Nobel Prize in the 1980's, he made     a trip to South Africa. Of course, the New York Times was there with him     and recorded his ritual denunciation of apartheid. Yet Wiesel now strongly     favors the apartheid wall being built in occupied Palestine even though     it will impose additional inhuman hardships on the Palestinians. Even worse,     he has attacked Pope John Paul II for proposing that what the Middle East     needs is bridges, not walls, writing: "From the leader of one of the     largest and most important religions in the world, I expected something     very different, namely a statement condemning terror and the killing of     innocents, without mixing in political considerations and above all comparing     these things to a work of pure self-defense. To politicize terrorism like     that is wrong."11 Ironically, the same Wiesel who accuses Pius XII     of "silence" now wants Jean Paul II to be "silent"     about Jewish war crimes in Palestine.           
Wiesel and François Mauriac           
Wiesel's claim to fame is his problematic     "autobiography," Night, which is actually a novel, since it contains     a good deal of invented material. It was first published in French in 1958,     and was based on a much longer Yiddish version, which he had published     under the title And the World Forgot (Und Di Velt hat Geshveyn) in Buenos     Aires in December 1955. At a reception held at the Israeli embassy in May     1955, which Wiesel attended as a reporter for an Israeli newspaper, he     approached the well-known Catholic novelist, newspaper chronicler, man     of letters, and 1952 Nobel Prize winner, François Mauriac (1885-1970),     and asked if he would consent to be interviewed.           
Mauriac was a French right-wing nationalist     by birth and upbringing. In his family in the early days of the 20th century,     they referred to the bedroom's chamber pot as "le zola," since     the Mauriacs were convinced, like many French people, that Dreyfus had     been guilty despite the media campaign in is favor. But he changed political     stripes in the mid-1930s, becoming a strong supporter of world Jewry. He     continued this support through the war years and after, when he favored     the creation of Israel. Then, in 1951, he was the first Catholic to accuse     Pope Pius XII of "silence" during the war years. Amazingly, just     two years later, when his career seemed dead, for he had not published     a major piece if fiction since 1940, he was awarded the Nobel Prize for     Literature-for his novels! The Parisian literati were stunned! How could     this be, they wondered, especially at the height of the "existentialist"     craze? One question they did not dare ask was the possible role of the     Jewish lobby, so powerful with the Nobel Committee, in this decision. Was     the Nobel Prize a payback for his support of Jewry through the years of     World War II, as well as for waving an accusatory finger at Pius XII, who     was still very much alive? I have not yet been unable to resolve this question.           
In any case, Mauriac invited Wiesel to     his home. They talked about the war years and the concentration camps.     In fact, it seems clear in retrospect that this was the only subject Wiesel     wanted to talk about. The two men became friends, and Mauriac told Wiesel     he would help him find a publisher for his book. But his book was not only     written in Yiddish, it was also several times longer than what would eventually     become La Nuit. How did the transformation take place? Did Wiesel rewrite     it, as he has always claimed, or did he get help from Mauriac? The answer     to this question could probably be found in their voluminous correspondence,     but Wiesel is in possession of both the letters received from Mauriac and     the ones he wrote to his friend and benefactor. Wiesel sits on this correspondence     and refuses to publish the letters, despite the entreaties of his rather     naive liberal Catholic admirers.12           
La Nuit became Night when it appeared     in New York in 1960. With the backing of the ADL, it became mandatory reading     in high schools shortly thereafter and has sold millions of copies since     then. It contradicts Jewish holocaust dogma on many key points, and in     fact is guilty of "holocaust denial" in this respect. Nevertheless,     it remains the only "holocaust memoir" with any redeeming literary     qualities (which brings us back once again to the question of who actually     wrote the final draft of the book). In the meantime, Wiesel moved to New     York, where he continued to work as a correspondent for an Israeli newspaper.     Shortly after his arrival, he was struck by a car near Times Square. Given     to exaggeration by nature, he later claimed: "I flew an entire block.     I was hit at 45th Street and the ambulance picked me up at 44th. It sounds     crazy. But I was totally messed up."13 Then, after the success of     Night, he was awarded a tenured teaching position at a public institution,     Hunter College. Despite his claims over the years about having studied     philosophy and psychology at the Sorbonne and doing a two year internship     at the Hôpital Sainte-Anne in clinical psychology, he actually never     enrolled for any credit-bearing course at the Sorbonne, or any other branch     of the University of Paris. Even worse, there is no evidence that he ever     earned a French secondary school diploma. Yet, he now earns a huge six-figure     salary as a year as a Mellon Professor of Literature at Boston University,     a position that theoretically requires a Ph.D.           
During the years from 1960 to 1967 the     two men kept up a regular correspondence. After the conquest of Palestine     in 1967, Mauriac voiced concern in his Bloc-Notes column in Le Figaro that     the Israelis were now behaving more and more like Nazis. During the war,     Mauriac had been obliged to give shelter to several German soldiers in     his home for over four years, and he knew what occupation did to both occupier     and occupied. The two men quarreled, and there were harsh words committed     to paper. Wiesel would prefer nowadays not to revive this issue, for he     probably wrote some things he is now ashamed of. Yet, for years he proclaimed     he was going to some day publish the letters.14 But I believe there might     be a much more important reason for the suppression of the correspondence,     for it could possibly reveal Mauriac's active role in the redaction of     La Nuit. After all, as Naomi Seidman has pointed out, La Nuit differs dramatically     from the Yiddish original in length, tone, basic themes and meaning. She     rightfully attributes this difference to Mauriac's "influence."15     But how do we define "influence?" While the Yiddish original     appears to be hated-filled, dripping with a Jewish desire for vengeance     against goyim, the latter is more oblique and restrained. In a word, it     is a work of literature and, as such, implies the presence of a mature     literary hand, like Mauriac's. Conversely, when one compares La Nuit to     the many novels that Wiesel has written since then, the absence of a mature     literary hand, like Mauriac's, is obvious. In France, La Nuit is mandatory     reading in state-sponsored indoctrination classes, but none of his other     novels are read in schools or taken seriously by critics. The same situation     prevails in this country. In a word, La Nuit is totally different from     anything else that Wiesel has written, and it is fair to ask if in fact     Mauriac's influence went beyond the level of mere suggestion and advice.           
Wiesel at Auschwitz and Buchenwald           
Wiesel, along with his parents and three     sisters was deported from Sighet, Hungary, to Auschwitz in May 1944. Born     in September 1928, he was fifteen and a half years old. The Germans needed     labor for their factories, since Nazi ideology forbade German women from     engaging in such work. Women stayed home in Nazi Germany, a policy that     made sense to the Nazi racists who ruled the country but left the Germans     short of blue-collar labor. Wiesel's mother and a sister died at Auschwitz     in the summer of 1944, probably in the horrible typhus epidemic that raged     in the women's camp. Their death certificates are in the files at Auschwitz,     but on a research trip there I was not allowed to see them. The two other     sisters survived the epidemic, and lived to advanced age. Wiesel was sent     to the men's camp with his father. In late 1944, when Wiesel injured his     foot in an industrial accident, he was operated on at the camp hospital.     According to the vulgate version of the Jewish holocaust story, he should     have been disposed of in a gas chamber since he was not only a child but     was also disabled. Yet nothing of the sort happened. While in the hospital,     he befriended the hospital personnel and, as the Russians approached in     January 1945, was offered the opportunity by the Jewish staff physicians     to stay on and not be evacuated with the retreating Germans. Yet, Wiesel     preferred to go off with the Germans who, according to the Jewish holocaust     story, were allegedly sending 20,000 people a day to the gas chambers.     This decision raises a number of very serious questions. Not only that,     he also insisted on dragging his sickly father along with him, which was     the equivalent of writing the man's death certificate. The latter, physically     weak even before the horrible trauma of the camps, died of dysentery shortly     after arriving in Buchenwald in the dead of winter. Repatriated to France     in late April at the age of sixteen and a half, Wiesel was reunited there     with the two sisters who had survived the typhus epidemic.           
On July 4, 2004, Parade magazine featured     an article by Wiesel. It included what is probably the most famous propaganda     picture from World War II. In it, a circle is drawn around the face of     a man who is supposedly Wiesel. The picture was taken by Private H. Miller     of the Civil Affairs Branch of the U. S. Army Signal Corps at Buchenwald     concentration camp on April 16, 1945, five days after the American arrival     there on April 11. It was not taken on the spur of the moment on April     11, but was one of a larger group of about a dozen photos in which professional     montage and mise en scène techniques were used.16 The shot was then     released to the media to be used for the usual propaganda purposes: project     an image of the Germans as war criminals while distracting the American     public from the horrible war crimes then being committed by Allied forces.     The fact that the picture is still being exploited almost 60 years after     it was taken shows how successful and adaptable it has proved to be.           
The last two pages of Night recount the     events associated with the flight of the Germans and the arrival of the     Americans at Buchenwald. Wiesel writes in Night that "three days after     the liberation of Buchenwald, I became very ill with food poisoning. I     was transferred to the hospital and spent two weeks between life and death."     Thus, Wiesel's first claim about his mysterious illness is that it occurred     "three days after the liberation of Buchenwald," that is, on     April 14. He was immediately hospitalized, and "spent two weeks between     life and death." According to this scenario, he would have been in     the hospital from April 14 to April 28. Since the picture was taken on     April 16, he could not have been in it.           
Wiesel later changed this basic story     a number of times. Here is the second version of events, which he invented     many years later. "After the liberation I became sick and it's strange     how it happened. I hinted at it in Night but it's not the full story. April     11, 1945, when the Americans came, we were some 20,000 left in Buchenwald     out of some 60,000 or 80,000, and we hadn't had food for a week or so.     Suddenly the Americans came and brought their food but they really didn't     know what they were doing; they gave fats. 5,000 people died immediately     from food poisoning. . . and my body rebelled; I lost consciousness immediately     and was sick for ten days or so-unconscious, in a coma-blood poisoning     or something." In this second version, Wiesel says that he ate the     food "an hour or two after the liberation,"17 which contradicts     his original claim in Night that he only got sick three days after liberation.     Also, in this new version he is sick, unconscious and in a coma for ten     days, or from April 11 until about April 21. Here, once again, he could     not have been in a picture that was taken on April 16. As for Wiesel's     claim of 5,000 deaths from food poisoning, it is pure hysteria, and is     not supported by the historical record.           
Wiesel, Mendacity and the New York Times           
The Buchenwald picture first appeared     in the New York Times on May 6, 1945, several weeks after it was taken.     The caption read: "Crowded Bunks in the Prison Camp at Buchenwald."     The caption does not date the photo, but it does imply that the picture     was taken when the prisoners were being liberated on April 11. The media     has always implied this date, but that is the basic lie on which everything     else is based. Also, the New York Times does not identify any of the men     in the picture, which did not so much portray the chaotic reality of Buchenwald     on April 11, but rather the Holywoodized version of it that had been carefully     crafted by the Signal Corps. The photo appeared in conjunction with an     article by correspondent Harold Denny, in which he communicated the official     U. S. Government propaganda line. Entitled "The World Must Not Forget:     What was done in the German prison camps emphasizes the problem of what     to do with a people who are morally sick,"18 his piece was a distraction     from what the Allies were doing to innocent German civilians. As he wrote,     Germany was a smoldering ruin as a result of Allied carpet bombardment     of civilians, Dresden and Hamburg had been bombed to a pulp, the dams on     the Rhine had been destroyed drowning untold numbers of innocents and destroying     their homes, countless German civilians whose families had lived in East     Prussia and Poland for generations were being forcefully evicted by the     advancing Soviets, the five million Volga Germans who had been settled     in Russia since the 18th century had been deported to Siberia during the     war where most of them would perish, the valiant men of the Red Army were     in the process of raping millions of German women as they advanced through     Germany, and, most dreadful, Hiroshima and Nagasaki, were on the drawing     board. For the NYT, however, it was the Germans who were "morally     sick." But the Allies had saved "civilization."           
The third version of Wiesel's liberation     from Buchenwald is linked to this photo. In 1983, almost 40 years after     the picture was taken, the NYT published it with the caption: "On     April 11, 1945, American troops liberated the concentration camp's survivors,     including Elie, who later identified himself as the man circled in the     photo." It is important to note here that Wiesel had never claimed     to be in this famous picture before 1983. Why had he never told anyone     about this before 1983? And why did the NYT suddenly want to associate     Wiesel with this picture, especially since the individual circled in it     was a young man, and clearly not a boy of 16? Furthermore this man does     not resemble in any way what Wiesel actually looked like at this age! Obviously,     no checking was done by the paper to see if Wiesel's claim was true, but     the NYT knows that in the matter of the Jewish holocaust story, no one     would dare to challenge them. In retrospect, however, it is clear that     this bogus claim was a first step in the NYT campaign to secure a Nobel     Prize for Wiesel, either for literature or peace.19 The picture was published     in the high circulation Sunday NYT Magazine , and included the statement,     "His name has been frequently mentioned as a possible recipient of     a Nobel Prize, for either peace or literature."20 Incredibly, after     the NYT had manufactured history by declaring erroneously that Wiesel is     seen in the picture, they had the nerve a few years later to castigate     Buchenwald Museum authorities for not repeating their lie as fact! In 1989,     a NYT reporter visiting Buchenwald wrote: "A large photograph in the     [Buchenwald] museum shows Mr. Wiesel, among others, on the day of liberation.     He is not identified in a caption. And the guide who has shown visitors     around Buchenwald for 14 years had never heard of the author, who has written     eloquently about that camp."21 In addition to Wiesel's earlier claims     that he was sick when the picture was taken, another major problem with     Wiesel's alleged image in this picture is that it is quite unlike his appearance     in a photo taken shortly before his deportation eleven months earlier.     Clearly, he was merely a boy at the time, and his image bears no relationship     to that of the man shown in the bunk at Buchenwald.22 This picture, coupled     with the fact that he has stated repeatedly over the years that he was     sick on April 16, offers double proof that his claim be to shown in the     Buchenwald shot is nothing but a Jewish holocaust scam. Tragically, this     true lie exploits the tragic sufferings of Wiesel's relatives and all the     other innocent Jews.           
As the Nobel campaign went forward, the     NYT usually tried to present Wiesel in dramatic terms, even if it meant     telling more "true lies." His image as a JOW survivor needed     to be enhanced. Thus, for example, when he made a trip to Berlin in January     1986 to attend a JOW conference, the NYT reporter declared solemnly: "Elie     Wiesel returned to Germany this week for the first time since he was released     from the Buchenwald concentration camp almost 41 years ago."23 Unfortunately,     this dramatic statement was nonsense, as the NYT should have known, since     Wiesel had begun his career as a New York journalist in December 1962 when     he published a hate-filled article appropriately entitled "An Appointment     with Hate" in Commentary, the organ of the American Jewish Committee.     Its subject was a recent trip he had made to Germany. In it, he wrote:     "Every Jew, somewhere in his being, should set apart a zone of hate-healthy,     virile hate-for what the German personifies and for what persists in the     Germans. To do otherwise would be a betrayal of the dead." The word     "Catholic" can easily be substituted for "German" here.           
Likewise, even after the Nobel award     was announced on October 14, 1986, the NYT would continue to embroider     the facts, always trying to dramatize Wiesel's life experience. For instance,     on November 2, they triumphantly republished a severely cropped version     of the Buchenwald photo with the caption: "Elie Wiesel, the winner     of the Nobel Peace Prize (at far right in the top bunk) in the Buchenwald     concentration camp in April 1945, when the camp was liberated by American     troops."24 The picture was cropped in such a way that the man who     is supposed to be Wiesel remains barely visible. The NYT also suggests     the picture was taken on April 11, 1945 without, of course, actually saying     so. Then, in January 1987, they erroneously claimed that Wiesel had been     "freed from Auschwitz" during the war.25 A year later, when he     made a trip to Auschwitz, the NYT wrote: "Mr. Wiesel was a prisoner     at Auschwitz and witnessed the killing there of his father and one of his     sisters."26 Of course, Wiesel's father died in Buchenwald, and the     tragic details of his sister's death are contained in the unavailable (to     me at least) Auschwitz camp records. But the word "Auschwitz"     is one of the three Jewish holocaust terms that have been sloganized in     the pages of the NYT, along with "six million" and "gas     chambers," while "Buchenwald" is not.           
In 1987, a year after cashing his $270,000     Nobel check, Wiesel appeared at the Klaus Barbie trial in Lyons, France.     Here, once again, the Buchenwald photo was put to use by the media, although     it is not clear to what extent Wiesel was involved in this particular Jewish     holocaust fraud. On June 3, 1987, the Chicago Tribune published an AP photo     containing a cropped version of the men in the bunks at Buchenwald. What     was completely new in this fourth tall tale about his liberation was that     Wiesel, accompanied by two other people, one of whom might have been French     Prime Minister Lionel Jospin, was shown standing in front of a blown-up     version of the picture and pointing to himself in it. The caption read:     "Nobel Prize winner Elie Wiesel points to a picture of himself, taken     by a German at the Auschwitz death camp in 1945. The photograph is part     of the Holocaust Memorial in Lyon, France."           
This caption is totally mendacious, and     the only problem with this particular scam is determining Wiesel's role     in it. However, when we recall words he wrote early in his career and has     repeated many time since then, we have a possible key. "Some events     do take place but are not true; others are true although they never occurred."27     Telling a "true lie" with good intentions is simply not a problem     for Wiesel. Also, since the Barbie trial focused on deportations to Auschwitz,     not Buchenwald, the former was in the news every day during the summer     of 1987, while hardly a word was being said about the latter. Thus, Wiesel,     never shy about generating publicity for himself, might well have felt     that a "true lie" was called for here.           
In 1995, Wiesel offered a fifth version     of his liberation experience in an interview published in the German weekly     Die Zeit. It contained two new pieces of information. The first was the     claim that the picture had actually been taken the day after the liberation,     that is, on April 12, 1945, not on April 11th, as the media had always     implied. This new date not only contradicts the date of April 16 given     by the U.S. Army, but it also made it impossible for him to be in it if     we believed his second claim that he had been put in the hospital for ten     days immediately upon eating American food on April 11th. The second new     assertion to emerge from this interview was that the picture was taken     in the children's barracks, or Kinderblock at Buchenwald, where Wiesel     was lodged. The following statement to this effect appears twice in the     article, once in the text and once again as the caption to the picture     (in which the person alleged to be Wiesel is circled as it had been in     the NYT in 1983): "On the day after the liberation the picture was     taken in the Children's Block at Buchenwald by an American soldier. It     shows old men. But these old faces are the faces of men who, in truth,     were 15 or 16 years of age like I was."28 Since 1945, when the NYT     first made propaganda use of this picture, no one has ever claimed that     it depicts children. Yet, Wiesel actually expects us to believe that these     men, some of whom are heavily bearded or partially bald, were mere boys.     Finally, when Wiesel states that the picture was taken "by an American     soldier," he gives the impression that it was a spur-of-the-moment     event and not one that was carefully orchestrated for propaganda purposes.           
A sixth version of events at the liberation     of Buchenwald was concocted by Wiesel in 1989 when a black filmmaker and     a Jewish producer were trying to create a new myth, namely, that a black     unit, the 761st Tank Battalion, had actually liberated the Jews at Buchenwald.     Their intention was to increase black and Jewish mutual "understanding"     in Brooklyn through a movie to be shown on PBS called Liberators. For the     benefit of the NYT, which gave serious coverage to this far-fetched story,     Wiesel conjured up a brand new memory that he had never mentioned before:     "I will always remember with love a big black soldier. He was crying     like a child-tears of all the pain in the world and all the rage. Everyone     who was there that day will forever feel a sentiment of gratitude to the     American soldiers who liberated us."29 He made this statement despite     the fact that there were no blacks present at the liberation of Buchenwald     on April 11, 1945, and the black unit in question was over 50 miles away     on that date. After a gala preview screening of the movie in Harlem, it     was gradually revealed that the film's thesis was a hoax. Thus, it was     never released. Jeffrey Goldberg, among others, denounced this media fabrication     that the NYT had so strongly supported.30 Yet, Wiesel repeated this true     lie in his autobiography: "I will never forget the American soldiers     and the horror that could be read in their faces. I will especially remember     one black sergeant, a muscled giant, who wept tears of impotent rage and     shame, shame for the human species, when he saw us. He spewed curses that     on his lips became holy words. We tried to lift him onto our shoulders     to show our gratitude, but we didn't have the strength. We were too weak     to even applaud him."31 In Wiesel's patronizing and essentially racist     view of the world, blacks are portrayed as physically strong but inarticulate.     They can only spit out obscenities. Amazingly, even though the story was     known to be false, he later incorporated it into his lecture routine, as     needed.32           
Conclusion           
Elie Wiesel, so admired by many U. S.     Catholic leaders, is in fact a con man who has enriched himself with his     tall tales. Although courted by various misguided Church representatives,     he is actually an outspoken enemy of traditional Catholicism, and should     play no role whatsoever in Catholic life in this country. It is also evident     that both Wiesel and the NYT are comfortable using true lies to promote     the Jewish holocaust story and, in turn, Israel. Even worse, it is appalling     that Wiesel, in his drive to become a multi-millionaire (he charges a standard     fee of $25,000 per appearance and demands a chauffeur-driven car to go     with it), and media personality, has so heartlessly exploited the suffering     and death of his parents and sister at the hands of the Nazis. In falsifying     his "memories" for personal gain, Wiesel has trivialized the     personal tragedies of not only his closest family members, but also of     all those, Jews and Gentiles, who died in the camps. The old shame of the     JOW was, and is, the documented deaths of all too many innocent Jews during     the war. The new shame of the JOW is the ongoing media exploitation of     those deaths by people like Wiesel and the editors of the New York Times.           
David O'Connell is a professor of French     at Georgia State University in Atlanta.           
      
Notes           
1. Ari L. Goldman, "For Cardinal,     Wiesel Visit Proved a Calm in Storm Over Trip," NYT, February 15,     1987, I, 67.           
2. Brian Caulfield, "Holocaust Memorial:     Cardinal Asks Forgiveness for Christians Who Turned Their Backs on Jews,"     Catholic New York, September 18, 1997, 14-15.           
3. Brian Caulfield, "University     Award: Cardinal Honored for Promoting Catholic Jewish Relations,"     Catholic New York, November 13, 1997, 12. "Although many Christians     were persecuted by the Nazis, the cardinal said, only Jews were killed     mainly because of their ethnic background. He stressed that he is 'passionately     committed' to making the truth about the Holocaust known.'" Of course,     this statement is absurd, for Nazi ideology was equally scornful of the     Catholic Poles, whose country was supposed to provide living space for     the Germans. Furthermore, an archbishop's primary responsibility is to     proclaim Christ, not to tell the Jewish holocaust story.           
4. "What is a Jew? Harry Cargas     Interviews Elie Wiesel," U.S Catholic/Jubilee , September 1971, 28.           
5. Jacob Neusner, "American Jews     Embrace a Religion of Memory," St. Petersburg Times, April 12, 1999.     This is why the Anti-Defamation League, the American Jewish Committee,     the New York Times and other media outlets were so one-sided and hateful     in their attacks on Mel Gibson's Passion. He was not only reiterating the     centrality of Christ's suffering for the redemption of all mankind, but     in doing so he was also undermining our country's civil religion. It was     no accident that various mediarchs repeatedly accused him of "Holocaust     denial" for reasserting Christ over "Holocaust." It should     be noted that the capital H in Holocaust underlines the racist assumption     that other holocausts, whether they refer to the millions of victims in     Ruanda, Armenia, Cambodia, the Stalinist Ukraine (in which Jewish commissars     played a major role) or Palestine, are not important.           
6. Limitations of space do not permit     a description of how Wiesel, with the help of his mentor at the NYT, Abe     Rosenthal, created the word in 1968 as a cover for the 1967 conquest and     occupation of the rest of Palestine. Catholic victimhood at the hands of     the Nazis, well documented at Nuremberg, was declared by Wiesel to be henceforth     inoperative. Only Jews could be true victims of the Nazi "holocaust."           
7. Bob Woodard, Plan of Attack, (New     York, Simon & Schuster, 2004), 320-1. Woodward recounts Wiesel's visit     to the White House in late February 2003, when Bush was still allegedly     wavering in his decision to attack Iraq. After hearing Wiesel tell him     that Israel's security was at stake, Bush made the decision easily. Americans     must fight to protect Israel. Did Bush know at the time that Wiesel is     on the CIA payroll, as he boasts in his autobiography? Wiesel, of course,     had previously been a leading supporter of Clinton's bombing of Yugo slavia     in 1998.           
8. Pierre Vidal-Naquet, Zero [monthly     magazine], avril 1987, 57. "Par exemple, vous avez le rabbin Kahane,     cet extrémiste juif, qui est moins dangereux qu'un homme comme Elie     Wiesel qui raconte N'IMPORTE QUOI. . . Il suffit de lire certaine description     de La Nuit pour savoir que certaines de ses descriptions ne sont pas exactes     et qu'il finit par se transformer en marchand de Shoah. . . Eh bien, lui     aussi, porte un tort, un tort immense, à la vérité     historique."           
9. Vivian Gornick, "The Rhetoric     of Witness: All Rivers Run To the Sea: Memoirs by Elie Wiesel," The     Nation, December 25, 1995.           
10. Christopher Hitchens, "Wiesel     Words," The Nation, February 19, 2001.           
11. Anon. "Wiesel Slams Pope's Comments,"     News24.com, November 17, 2003.           
12. Eva Fleischner, "Mauriac's Preface     to Night: Thirty Years Later,' America , November 19, 1988, 411, 419.           
13. Clyda Haberman, "An Unoffical     but Very Public Bearer of Pain, Peace and Human Dignity," NYT, March     5, 1997, C1.           
14. Isreal Shenker, "The Concerns     of Elie Wiesel: Yesterday and Today," NYT, February 10, 1970, 48.     "The two became close friends, and Mr. Wiesel plans to publish a volume     of their dialogue-which have had strongly polemical moments, notably on     the subject if Israel."           
15. Naomi Seidman, "The Rage That     Elie Wiesel Edited Out of Night," Jewish Social Studies, December,     1996.           
16. Jonathan Heller, War and Conflict:     Selected Images from the National Archives, (Washington, D.C., National     Archives and Records Administration, 1990), 253.           
17. Cargas, Conversations with Elie Wiesel,     88.           
18. Harold Denny, "The World Must     Not Forget," NYT, May 6, 1945, 42.           
19. After Wiesel received the prize,     several Jewish writers denounced him for shamelessly lobbying for it. See,     for example: Jacob Weisberg, "Pop Goes Elie Wiesel," New Republic,     November 10, 1986, pp.12-3.           
20. See: Samuel G. Freedman, "Bearing     Witness: The Life and Work of Elie Wiesel," NYT, October 23, 1983.     The picture appeared on p. 34.           
21. Henry Kamm, "No Mention of Jews     at Buchenwald," NYT, March 25, 1989, 8.           
22. Elie Wiesel, "Le Jour où     Buchenwald a été libéré," Paris-Match,     #28126, du 10 au 16 avril 2003, 116.           
23. John Tagliabue, "Elie Wiesel     Back in Germany After 41 Years," NYT, January 23, 1986, A4.           
24. Martin Suskind, "A Voice from     Bonn: History Cannot be Shrugged Off," NYT , November 2, 1986, IV,     2. The article points out that the Nobel Committee "chose precisely     Elie Wiesel for the award" because they wanted to send a message to     the Kohl government in Germany, which had not demonstrated sufficient guilt     in 1985 in commemorating the fortieth anniversary of the end of World War     II.           
25. "A Survivor's Prize," NYT,     January 4, 1987, XIII, 3.           
26. "Wiesel and Walesa Visit Auschwitz,"     NYT, January 18, 1988, I, 3.           
27. Legends of Our Time, (1968), viii.           
28 "Am Tag nach der Befreiung wurde     das Bild aus dem Kinderblock von Buchenwald von einem amerikanischen Soldaten     aufgenommen. Darauf sind alte Männer zu sehen. Doch diese alten Gesichter     sind die Gesichter von Menschen, die in Warheit wie ich um die um die fünfzehn     oder sechzehn Jahre alt waren." Elie Wiesel [aufgezeichnet von Werner     A. Perger] "1945 und Heute: Holocaust," Die Zeit, April 21, 1995,     16.           
29. Henry Kamm, "No Mention of Jews     at Buchenwald," NYT, Mar 25, 1989, 8.           
30. Jeffrey Goldberg, "The Exaggerators,"     New Republic, February 8, 1993, 13-14.           
31. All Rivers Run to the Sea, 97.           
32. Anon. "Maya Angelou and Elie     Wiesel on Love, Hate and Humanity," Massachusetts, Spring 1995, 4.           
http://www.culturewars.com/2004/Weisel.htm     
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