Jan. 25th, 2005

peteryoung: (Make Tea Not War)
Mark Steyn in today's Daily Telegraph (available at the site with registration) has prompted this response, despatched this evening:

Sir,
Mark Steyn's opinion piece in today's Daily Telegraph (25 Jan), titled 'Europe has taken over the Holocaust', at first attempts to put this week's remembrance of the liberation of Auschwitz into some kind of accord with present day political reality in Europe and the Middle East, but instead makes the usual error of minimising the Holocaust by telescoping something that was in fact so recent into something that has perceivably gained too much 'vintage', to use an inappropriate term, because of its recurrent and proven media shock value. It's an easy trap to fall into, and a trap that is usually lined with a journalistic cynicism that reeks of an almost deliberate discounting of the personal histories of the millions who were affected by it. What began as a balanced article turned an inappropriate corner when Steyn took issue with Anthony Lipmann, son of an Auschwitz survivor, who recently wrote in The Spectator, "When on 27 January I take my mother's arm – tattoo number A-25466 – I will think not just of the crematoria and the cattle trucks but of Darfur, Rwanda, Zimbabwe, Jenin, Fallujah." This is a well-expressed sentiment about man's inhumanity to man on any scale of suffering, but Steyn, clearly suffering from 'Holocaust fatigue', turns it into a numbers game and misses the point entirely. Jenin, he points out, was only 52 dead Israelis vs. 56 dead Palestinians. And Fallujah: "In rounding up a few head-hackers, the Yanks perpetrated another Auschwitz?" Steyn's thinking appears for the most part lazy, insensitive and misdirected, and he seems unfortunately engaged in reducing the symbolic value of Auschwitz – something any race of people are capable of doing – to a European historical footnote that needs to be remembered, seemingly now more than ever.

On the strength of today's piece I wonder if Steyn will, at the appropriate time, also be issuing similarly jaded opinions about co-opted commemorations of August 6th (the 60th anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima) by the rest of the world, and I also wonder where he will be pointing the finger then.

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