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Director clashes with Board over ‘censorship’ of Irving film

A film-maker has attacked Jewish leaders for ‘seeking to ban’ his TV interview with the Shoah-denier

December 11, 2008 14:18
The Board denies that it called for the film — which includes an interview with Holocaust-denier David Irving — to be banned

By

Leon Symons,

Leon Symons

2 min read

Award-winning film-maker Rex Bloomstein has become embroiled in a censorship row with the Board of Deputies over a television documentary featuring convicted Holocaust denier David Irving.

Mr Bloomstein, 66, made the film, An Independent Mind, to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. It was shown on the Channel 4 digital subsidiary More4 on Tuesday night.
The film featured seven stories from around the world of people who had chosen to speak out against oppressive regimes and the consequences they faced. The eighth and last person interviewed in the 90-minute
programme was Irving.

But Mr Bloomstein saw red after a story in The Observer newspaper’s Pendennis column suggested that the Board of Deputies was trying to stop the programme being transmitted.

Diarist Oliver Marre wrote: “The Board of Deputies of British Jews tells me the programme should not be shown. ‘Whatever airtime David Irving gets is too much,’ says chief executive Jon Benjamin. ‘Here, he once again seems to be casting himself in the role of victim.’”

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