Brussels: Islamic religion teacher tells Nazi camp survivor and pupils, Holocaust was 'exaggerated' TUESDAY, MARCH 17, 2009 islamizationwatch.blogspot.com
Henri Kichka (l), Nazi camp survivor: "This never happened to me in 25 years". He is regularly invited to meet young people.
It is clear that this Islamic teacher - was of the opinion that he could do what he wanted - how many schools - in the UK and in Holland have stopped teaching about the Holocaust because it is 'offensive' to Muslims - one British history teacher said that when she attempted to cover the subject in her class - the Muslims students would put their hands over their ears - so she preferred not to teach it.
Is it - the Muslim understanding that if the first genocide did not happen - then the world could excuse the second one - which they intend to carry out for religious reasons?
BRUSSELS (EJP)---An islamic religion teacher disputed the testimony of a Nazi camp survivor who recounted his story to students in a Brussels secondary school, Le Soir daily newspaper reported Tuesday.
Henri Kichka, from the Union of Jewish deportees in Belgium, had been invited last Friday by the school in Laeken, a Brussels commune, to describe how he survived Buchenwald and his family members were killed in the death camps.
During the meeting with the 150 students, the school was told by a teacher of Islamic religion that Kichka’s account “was largely exaggerated.”
“This never happened to me in 25 years,” Kichka, who is regularly invited to meet young people, told Le Soir.
The school management had decided to film the meeting because, it said, “witnesses disappear and we want to keep tracks.”
Education Minister in the French-speaking Belgian government Christian Dupont said he was "shocked" by the "totally unacceptable" comments by the religion teacher. An enquiry has been opened and a legal complaint lodged, the ministry said in a statement. It is studying a videotape of the event, which could lead to the teachers' dismissal.
On Monday, the trade unions saw the videotape. “To us, there is no doubt, the teacher quoted negationist ideas from Roger Garaudy,” a French revisionist author and philosopher who converted to Islam and called the Holocaust a “myth”.
“This will not remain without effect,” the school said. An administrative investigation has been opened.
The representative body of Muslims in Belgium, which appoints the teachers of religion, reacted swiftly. “Negationism is an offence. Our teachers must respect the Constitution and laws of this country. Otherwise there will be sanctions,”it said.
Holocaust denial is an offence in Belgium liable to prison term. |