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Revisionist
Activism in Sweden
Support for historical
revisionism has traditionally been strong in
northern Europe. Orders for books and tapes
arrive regularly at the IHR from Sweden,
Denmark, Norway and Finland - countries where
most educated people understand
English.
And unlike citizens of
France, Germany and a few other countries,
Scandinavians still enjoy the freedom to express
skeptical views on controversial issues of
20th-century history. According to a survey
conducted by Stockholm University and the Crime
Prevention Council, and made public last year,
nearly a third of Swedish secondary school
students have doubts about the official
Holocaust extermination story.
Certainly some of the
credit for this is due to the work cf Ahmed
Rami, a Moroccan-born political exile who lives
and works in Stockholm. For more than ten years
now, he has been upsetting the complacent with
his pro-revisionist and Islamist "Radio Islam"
broadcasts, his Internet web site
(www.abbc.net/islam), in leaflets, and in
several books. In addition, Rami makes frequent
visits to Arab and Muslim countries, where he
and his views are widely respected. Much to the
distress of Jewish-Zionist forces, Sweden's
highest-level public prosecutor decided last
September to drop all charges of inciting hatred
against Rami's "Radio Islam" Internet Web
site.
Rami, who addressed the
1992 IHR Conference, can be reached at Box 316,
10126 Stockholm, Sweden, or by e-mail at
rami@abbc.net.
Also based in Sweden is
the "Mimer" association, which has emerged in
recent years as an important northern European
revisionist center. It defends Swedish and
European culture against "one worldism,"
dissects historical distortion, and counters
Zionist propaganda. (In Nordic mythology Mimer
is the giant who guards the spring of wisdom at
the root of the great ash tree, Ygdrasil, whose
roots and branches bind together heaven, earth
and hell.)
From time to time Mimer
puts out an attractive newsletter-magazine, now
in its eighth year of publication. A typical
issue of Mimer is 20-24 pages in length, often
with one or two articles in English.
An article on the
Jewish role in the black slave trade, along with
an essay (in English) on Savitri Devi, the
"Priestess of Hitlerism," appear in issue No. 24
(Nov. 1997).
An essay on the 1938
"Crystal Night" anti-Jewish outburst of violence
in Germany appears in Mimer issue No. 25 (Dec.
1997). This piece is based on the book
Flashpoint by German author Ingrid Weckert
(published by the IHR). In this same issue is a
good summary article, in question and answer
format, on the origins of the Second World War,
as well as a close look at the pivotal role of
Danzig in the outbreak of war in 1939, and
several articles on Nordic heritage and
culture.
Mimer also gets out the
word through its own Internet web site
(www.mimer.org), and a book distribution
service. Its catalog lists more than a hundred
books and booklets dealing with history, current
affairs and political philosophy, including
several titles published by the IHR and Noontide
Press.
Mimer
can be reached at Box 15024, 20031 Malmö,
Sweden, or by e-mail at
webmaster@mimer.org
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