ChanceAndNecessity.blogspot.com | 21Oct2009 | David Friedland
http://chanceandnecessity.blogspot.com/2009/10/esquire-magazine-glorifies-accused-ss.html
Esquire Magazine Glorifies
Accused SS Guard John Demjanjuk
Scott Raab's November
2009 [15Oct2009]
Esquire article
titled "The Last Nazi"
paints a sympathetic portrait of John Demjanjuk,
the Cleveland autoworker who has been accused of being an SS guard.
Demjanjuk was sentenced to death by Israel in 1988 but the Israel
Supreme Court overturned that conviction on a technicality [???]
in 1993;
Demjanjuk had been charged with being Treblinka's infamous "Ivan the
Terrible" but evidence released from Soviet archives [There
was no evidence released from the Soviet archives. The OSI had this
evidence even before Mr. Demjanjuk was denaturalized in 1981, but
withheld it from the defense.] after Demjanjuk's
conviction raised the possibility that Demjanjuk was, as Alan
Dershowitz wrote in an August 14, 1993 Jerusalem Post International
Edition article, "Ivan the Very Bad of Sobibor." [Alan
Dershovitz is a charter member of the Holocaust Industry and a disgrace
to Jews and humanity.]
Dershowitz also pointed out that the Israel Supreme Court bent over
backwards to be fair to Demjanjuk, because most courts have
"unreasonably rigid rules about when newly discovered evidence can be
introduced to reverse a guilty verdict, even in a death penalty case."
While the Israeli trial may not have proven that Demjanjuk was "Ivan
the Terrible," it demonstrated that Demjanjuk had in fact served as an
SS guard at the Sobibor death camp [Absolutely
not true!] -- and on that basis alone the Israeli
Supreme Court certainly would have been justified in upholding
Demjanjuk's death sentence. Indeed, an August 7, 1993 JPIE article
by Evelyn Gordon bore the title, "The judges' ruling was a triumph of
legal principle but was justice done?" Gordon quoted Mordechai
Kremnitzer, dean of the Hebrew University Law School: "The Supreme
Court stretched to the maximum these liberal principles of proper
defense for criminals." Kremnitzer added that Demjanjunk "got off the
hook by a distance that could be measured perhaps in millimeters" and
although Kremnitzer refused to explicitly condemn the Supreme Court's
ruling he concluded, "But if the court had decided to convict him --at
least on the Trawnicki document, which was a major part of the case --
I
would have been ready to defend the decision." [The
reasoning of these Demjanjuk hate-mongers is astounding!]
Raab's article disgusted me so much that I sent this letter to Esquire's editors:
Scott Raab attempted to
do justice both to the horrors of the Holocaust and to the concept of
"innocent until proven guilty" but his attempt to create sympathy
for John Demjanjuk is most unfortunate
because it is not grounded in the facts of the case. Joshua Muravchik
authored the definitive piece about the Demjanjuk case ("Demjanjuk: A
Summing Up," published in the April 1997 issue of Commentary).
[W.Z. Mr. Friedland is presumably referring to the article
which I archived over 12 years ago on this website -- never dreaming
that the rantings of Joshua Muravchik would someday be quoted by
Demjanjuk hate mongers.]
Raab suggested that it
is "funny" that the same evidence that first was used to accuse
Demjanjuk of being an SS guard at Treblinka is now being used to
accuse Demjanjuk of being an SS guard at Sobibor -- but Demjanjuk's
posting to Sobibor is dated March 27, 1943 and Muravchik noted "Since
the vast bulk of the killing at Treblinka was accomplished between July
1942 and January 1943, Demjanjuk could have earned his notoriety as
Ivan the Terrible there and then been transferred to Sobibor in March.
The two camps were only 100 miles apart and Wachmanner were often
transferred." [W.Z.
Since the Israeli Supreme Court determined that John Demjanjuk was
never in Treblinka and it is 99% certain that the Trawniki ID card is
fraudulent, the mental meanderings of Mr. Muravchik are pointless.]
Raab completely ignored
the numerous contradictions -- not to mention outright lies -- in
Demjanjuk's various accounts of his wartime activities, including the
fact that Demjanjuk has admitted that he lied on his immigration
application to the United States. [W.Z.
Surely Mr. Friedland is aware that if Mr. Demjanjuk had admitted to
immigration authorities that he was born in Eastern Ukraine, he would
have been forcibly repatriated to certain death in the Soviet Union, as
happened to so many Eastern Ukrainian and Russian refugees.]
Demjanjuk also did not have a
satisfactory explanation for the scar on his left arm in the exact
place where Waffen SS
members received
tattoos; Demjanjuk admitted to being tattooed there and he admitted to
gouging out the tattoo but denied that it had been an SS
tattoo.
Muravchik declared, "None
of the courts that have heard Demjanjuk's case, in America or in
Israel, has found him credible on his wartime experience. As Judge
Thomas Wiseman, Jr., the Special Master appointed by the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, stated in his report: 'Mr.
Demjanjuk's alibi was so incredible as to legitimately raise the
suspicions of his prosecutors that he lied about everything.'" [W.Z. Has Mr. Friedland read my CRITIQUE of Wiseman's Report ? Mr. Wiseman twisted his mind into a pretzel to try to excuse OSI criminality.]
It is irresponsible for
Raab to not have made it quite clear that Demjanjuk has not only
contradicted himself during his various court testimonies but at times
Demjanjuk has even contradicted the evidence supplied by his own
lawyers! Demjanjuk has never provided a credible, consistent account of
his wartime activities. Raab paints an image of a sickly, dying
Demjanjuk but the reality is that Demjanjuk lied when he was a young
man trying to gain entry to the United States and Demjanjuk lied when
he was a middle aged man on trial for being an SS guard.
The Israeli Supreme Court ultimately set
Demjanjuk free on a procedural technicality and declined to put him on
trial again despite the very strong evidence that he did in fact serve
as an SS guard in Sobibor [W.Z. Aside for the fraudulent Trawniki ID card, there is no evidence whatsoever that Mr. Demjanjuk was ever in Sobibor.], so for Raab to try to make Demjanjuk a
sympathetic figure is reprehensible. Muravchik concluded, "In short, the
evidence that Demjanjuk served as a Wachmann at Trawnicki, Sobibor and Flossenburg was
and remains quite persuasive. In addition to the identity card, at
least one other document places him at Sobibor and at least four put
him at Trawnicki, while at least three put him at Flossenburg after
Sobibor. All of these documents are mutually consistent and all bear
Demjanjuk's tell-tale identification number...Is John Demjanjuk Ivan
the Terrible? We may never know. If he is not, then justice of a sort
has been done through his acquittal by the Israel Supreme Court. But that acquittal hardly
makes him 'an innocent victim,' as his defenders would have it, much
less a martyr. Far from it. That he served the SS and assisted in
unspeakable crimes against humanity -- of that, there can be no doubt."
Raab obviously spent
quite a bit of time interviewing various Demjanjuk family
members/sympathizers--but did he ever take the time to review the court
proceedings and the actual evidence of the case? Raab's article will
surely give great comfort to Nazi sympathizers and Holocaust
deniers but
it hardly did justice to this case or to the victims of the Holocaust.
[W.Z. It is
possible that Scott Raab had an ulterior motive in writing his article
(to re-inforce his version of the "facts of the Holocaust" in the
readers' mind), but at least he was not hate-mongering against Mr.
Demjanjuk as David Friedland does.]