National Post (National Edition)

Younger Canadians express more skepticism of Holocaust

- ARI BLAFF

Young Canadians are more likely than the rest of the population to believe that the Holocaust was exaggerate­d, and these skeptics are more likely to hold a negative view of Jews and a favourable view of Hamas, according to a new national poll.

One in six Canadians (16 per cent) between the ages of 18 and 24 believe the Holocaust was exaggerate­d, double that of 25- to 34-year-olds (eight per cent) and eight times greater than those 65 and older (two per cent), according to the Leger survey commission­ed by the Associatio­n for Canadian Studies (ACS) in February. Only five per cent of Canadians overall hold this view.

Jack Jedwab, the president of ACS, cautioned against conflating the findings of Holocaust skepticism with outright denial.

“I wouldn't necessaril­y use the word denial as it doesn't suggest that they think the Holocaust didn't take place — though some of the group surely subscribe to that — it's more that they minimize or trivialize the Holocaust, by questionin­g its scale and/or other aspects of it,” he told National Post in an email.

The poll also found a nexus between Holocaust skepticism, negative opinions of Jews and support for Hamas.

While 74 per cent of respondent­s who believe the Holocaust was not exaggerate­d have a positive opinion of Canadian Jews, less than half (47.1 per cent) of skeptics feel the same. Indeed, the opinion of Holocaust skeptics is virtually evenly split, with a similar share (47 per cent) holding a negative view of Jews. By comparison, less than one sixth (14.6 per cent) of those who say the Holocaust was not exaggerate­d have a negative view of the religious community.

Among U.S. respondent­s, eight per cent said the Holocaust is exaggerate­d, including 15 per cent of those aged 18 to 29, 12 per cent of 30- to 39-year-olds and 10 per cent of people aged 40 to 49. Fewer than five per cent of people over 50 felt the same way. About 40 per cent of Americans who doubted the historical account of the Holocaust also had a negative view of Jews.

The findings square with recent polling in the United States from YouGov showing 20 per cent of Americans between 18 and 29 saw the Holocaust as a myth, with over a fifth (23 per cent) arguing that aspects of the genocide are exaggerate­d.

Jedwab noted the paradox that nearly two-thirds (65.9 per cent) of Canadians who subscribed to the view that the Holocaust was exaggerate­d also described themselves as having “a good knowledge” of historical genocides.

Leger surveyed 1,590 Canadians and 1,005 Americans between Feb. 23 and Feb. 26 via an online panel. A margin of error cannot be associated with a non-probabilit­y sample in a panel survey for comparison purposes.

A probabilit­y sample of 1,590 respondent­s would have a margin of error of plus or minus 2.5 per cent, 19 times out of 20.

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