Koenraad Elst and the anatomy of Denial
With the antics of President Ahmadinejad and his Holocaust-Denial conference still fresh in the mind, now is a good time to introduce the work of Professor Koenraad Elst, a brilliant Flemish historian and comparative religion specialist. Professor Elst has written extensively on denial, or what he calls ‘negationism’, particularly in relation to Hindu-Muslim relations. Just substitute the word ‘Jew’ for ‘Hindu’, however, and the parallels are uncanny. Here he explains the tactics the negationist uses to confound his interlocutors (with thanks: Ranbir):
- Ignoring the facts: This passive negationism is certainly the safest and the most popular. The media and textbook-writers simply keep the vast corpus of inconvenient testimony out of the readers’ view.
- Minimizing the facts: If the inconvenient fact is pointed out that numerous Muslim chroniclers have reported a given massacre of unbelievers themselves, one can posit a priori that they must have exaggerated to flatter their patron’s martial vanity – as if it is not significant enough that Muslim rulers felt flattered by being described as mass-murderers of infidels.
Read article in full (scroll down to General Characteristics of Islam Negationism)
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