Historical Review
Volume 17 number 4 (July/August 1998)

Widespread Holocaust Doubts in
Sweden
Nearly 30 percent of Sweden's elementary and secondary school pupils "have doubts" about the orthodox Holocaust extermination story, a recent survey shows. Calling this "an appalling warning sign," Prime Minister Goeran Persson responded by promising that his government will increase its emphasis on "Holocaust education." Beginning this fall, he said, the government will offer "Holocaust education materials" to all households with school-age children. (Source: Boston Globe, AP report, June 14, 1997).
Reprinted from
The Journal of Historical Review,
P.O. Box 2739 , Newport Beach, CA 92659, USA. Subscription: $40 per
year (domestic).
Index1. Swiss Court Punishes Two Revisionists
(Jürgen Graf, Gerhard Förster).2. Holocaust Skeptics Under Growing Attack in Switzerland
4. Switzerland's Anti-Racism Law
Mark Weber5. Dissident German Historian Punished for Revisionist Writings
[Udo Walendy]6. Polish Authorities Ban BBC Team and David Irving from Auschwitz
8. Revisionists Meet in Australia
Arthur R. Butz9. Pope Pius XII and the Jews
Arthur R. Butz10. Jewish Group Demands More Anti-revisionist laws
Mark Weber11. Revisionist Activism in Sweden
12. Widespread Holocaust Doubts in Sweden
13. A Historian Acknowledges: No Evidence for Nazi Gas Chambers
Robert Faurisson14. Promoting Holocaust Hatred of Germans
15. Stalin's Plan to Conquer Europe: Suvorov's The Last Republic
A review by Daniel W. Michaels16. Letters






























