Ernst
Nolte, a German revisionist historian who broke academic taboos by
equating Nazism with Bolshevism and who was denounced as an apologist
for Hitler and even the Holocaust, died on Thursday in Berlin. He was
93.
His family told the daily newspaper Der Tagesspiegel that he had died in a hospital.
Professor
Nolte, a respected scholar of fascism, provoked an ideological uproar
in 1986 by suggesting in an essay that Nazisim had been a logical
response in Germany to an “existential threat” posed by the Russian
Revolution and its aftermath. He also argued that Hitler’s extermination
of Jews and other minorities was comparable to the mass murders
engineered by Stalin in the Soviet Union, where victims were singled out
by economic and social class as enemies of the Communist state.
“Did
the ‘Gulag Archipelago’ not exist before Auschwitz?” Professor Nolte
wrote in the newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. “Was Bolshevik
‘class murder’ not the logical and factual predecessor to the Nazi
‘racial murder’?” he continued. “Did Auschwitz not, perhaps, originate
in a past that would not pass away?”
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