Editor
MNH: (as submitted)
In
a letter to the editor I have been accused of trying to remove books from our
High School Libraries. Here is my story.
In l994 I offered to donate
books, the Hoax of the Twentieth Century, the Aushwitz Myth, the Leuchter Report,
etc. to the M. Public Library. The library accepted. In a letter to the M.
School Board (Jan.26, 1995) I
repeated this offer to the Senior High School Library. At the
same time I requested that the Holocaust books
at the Junior High either be
removed, or transferred to Senior High. My question was and still is: Can’t you
wait until your charges are out of their childhood before you indoctrinate them
with hate for Germans by means of the gaschamber/holocaust lore? If you want to promote tolerance by teaching man’s inhumanity to
man then a Christian would look in the
eye of his own nation, for only that promotes humility, tolerance
and reconciliation. The School Board rejected my offer and denied my request.
However I was handed Rule 871 which
allows every citizen of the school
district to challenge books which
he considers detrimental to our
students. After having challenged “Never to Forget” by Milton Meltzer I received a letter on official school stationary written by a
school official containing this sentence: “The German people should suffer a
shared guilt that should last many generations.” Most people and that
includes Americans of German descend,
side with the victor where life is easy and honorable. But my sympathies have always
been with the witches, the heretics, the losers and that includes Nazi
Germany. If you want to accept this
collective guilt that is your business.
I will fight to the hour of my death anybody who calls my goodly
parents criminals, or tries to put the
mark of Cain on my children, for that
is the ultimate of racism.
Below
is the newspaper’s edited version of the above letter.
Explanation
offered for book removal request
Editor
MNH: 5/14/03
In a letter
to the editor I have been accused of trying to remove books from our high
school library. Here is my story:
In 1994
I offered to donate books, the “Hoax of the Twentieth Century,” the “Auschwitz
Myth;’ the “Leuchter Report,” etc. to the Marshfield Public Library. The
library accepted. In a letter to the M. School Board (Jan. 26, 1995) I repeated
this offer to the high school library. At the same time I requested that the
Holocaust books at the junior high either be removed or transferred to the high
school. The School Board rejected my offer and denied my request. However, I was handed Rule 871 which allows
every citizen of the school district to challenge books which he considers
detrimental to our students. After having challenged “Never to Forget” by
Milton Meltzer, I received a letter on official school stationery written by a
school official containing this sentence: “The German people should suffer a
shared guilt that should last many generations.” Most people, and that includes
Americans of German descent, side with the victor where life is easy and
honorable. But my sympathies have always been with the witches, the heretics,
the losers and that includes Nazi Germany.