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Analysis

'Double Genocide' has become the deadliest form of denial

January 22, 2015 12:14
JC report on the Shoah
1 min read

The 70th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz approaches amid a disturbing new cover-up of Holocaust history. Across Eastern Europe, the notion of a "Double Genocide" - the idea that there were two equal holocausts, Soviet and Nazi - has been pushed by governments and nationalist elites in the media and arts.

The concept suggests that Jews were communists, and participated in the communist crimes against their countries - which must equally count as "genocide".

Therefore, the Holocaust should be reconceived as one of two equal catastrophes, one of them allegedly involving major Jewish culpability.

It was enshrined, in much more subtle and polite language, in the 2008 Prague Declaration and promoted by a commission sponsored by the Lithuanian government. Some European Union countries have even passed laws effectively criminalising opposing views, among them Hungary and Lithuania in 2010 and Latvia in 2014. It is all sugared over with investment in "Jewish" and "Yiddish" events attractive to some Western Jewish academics and community leaders who can be intoxicated with junkets in the new "eastern European playground".