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ARARE is the campus arm of the Simon Wiesenthal Centre Europe, established in 1994 and now stands at over 500 members from a broad range of disciplines at universities in 30 European countries

Venice, 8 December 2003

Professors from 38 universities from across Europe welcomed UNESCO Dirctor-General Koichiro Matsuura's condemnation of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion (full statement). 

A two-day experts seminar on "The Centennial of the Protocols: A PAradigm for Contemporary Hate Literature," co-organised by the Simon Wiesenthal Centre's campus arm, ARARE and Olokaustos*, under the auspices of UNESCO.

  • Protested the display of The Protocols as "a Jewish sacred text" at the ancient Alexandria Library, recently renovated by UNESCO, as "a defilement of its academic standing," and called for the library to be "a centre for serious scholarly and inter-cultural dialogue."

  • Resolved that "hate literature targeting any one faith community in Europe should be considered an assault on all faith communities. Exposure of the deceit in this literature and the factors common to all conspiracy theories is incumbent upon all academics, religious leaders and international organisations."

  • Considered measures for the deconstruction and refutation of all conspiracy theories, including defamation suits, exposure of the bad faith of instigators, embarrassment of disseminators as accomplices, disclosing vested interests and the defusion of myths through ridicule and humor.

  • Recommended identifying and responding directly to specific consumer groups of hate literature by
             +encouraging research into the specificities, commonalities and underlying environments for the dissemination of hate literature;
               +launching local countermeasures interactively between law professors, jurists and religious leaders;
               +including student activists in academic dialogue on racism, antisemitism and hate literature;
              +monitoring and engaging editors and journalists on stereotyping and sub-textual slippage into the language of conspiracy theories in the media and Internet websites;
               +Stripping campus-based Holocaust deniers and conspiracy theorists of academic respectability;
              +exposing the absurdity of hate imagery to school children by editing a manual for teachers on conspiracy rebutal;
                +engaging representatives of each religious and ethnic group to identify, acknowledge and expose the dangers of hate literature within its own community.

*Olokaustos is a historical studies centre established in 2001 and based in Venice

For further information, please contact Dr. Shimon Samuels at the Simon Wiesenthal Centre in Paris and/or Giovanni Di Martis at Olokaustos at +39 348 272 3490