In an
 ironic op-ed at Asharq Al Awsat called "
The Crocodile Tears of the Holocaust Industry," Hamad Al-Majid writes:A young Jewish American woman approached the  prominent Jewish professor; she had been attending the lecture he was  conducting [at the University of Waterloo] when she asked a question  before breaking down in tears.  In a trembling voice, the student asked  "During your speech, you made reference to Jewish people – some of whom  are in this audience – describing them as Nazis, how can you do this?  I  find that extremely offensive."    
This young woman was talking  to Jewish American professor, academic, and writer, Dr. Norman G.  Finkelstein.  Finkelstein's mother survived the Majdanek concentration  camp, while his father survived the Auschwitz concentration camp; every  single member of his family on both sides was killed by the Nazis. Dr.  Finkelstein is one of the bitter opponents of Israel, and he has harshly  criticized the Israeli criminal actions and brutality against the  Palestinian people. The young woman's tears did not move the professor,  and instead he fiercely criticized her with the vigour of a wounded  Palestinian whose home, wife, and children had all been taken away from  him by the Zionists.  Frowning at the young student, Dr. Finkelstein  reacted angrily saying, "I don't respect that…I don't like and I don't  respect your crocodile tears.  I don't like to play the Holocaust card  before an audience, but my late father was in Auschwitz and my late  mother was in Majdanek, every single member of my family on both sides  was exterminated, and it is precisely and exactly because of the lessons  that my parents taught me that I will not be silent while Israel  commits crimes against the Palestinians. There is nothing more  despicable than to use their suffering and martyrdom to try to justify  the torture and brutalization and the demolition of homes committed by  Israel against the Palestinians. If you had a heart, you would be crying  for the Palestinians."
The lesson that Majid learns from this sickening episode?This is a positive way of dealing with the  Holocaust, and this is something that wise Jews and Westerners should  promote in order to prevent such injustice occurring again. In my  opinion, this is better than entering bitter controversy over the  veracity of the Holocaust, and casting doubts and denying it. If we  compare the French Muslim intellectual Roger Garaudy's denial of the  Holocaust with Dr. Norman G Finkelstein's condemnation of the Nazi  Holocaust against the Jews, as well as the Israeli Holocaust against the  Palestinians, and how – in his view – the former is being used to  justify the latter, we find that Finkelstein's controversial view is far  more influential in the West than Garaudy's.
This writer is saying that he prefers using the Holocaust as a political weapon against Israel than denying the Holocaust altogether, because the former is more effective.
Holocaust denial isn't wrong - it is just not effective.
The corollary to this argument is that if, at some time, Holocaust denial becomes a more effective argument, then that would be the preferred weapon.
The only thing missing from his argument is any reference to the truth. Truth, he believes, is completely irrelevant - absurd Holocaust analogies must be used as a club to beat Jews with, because that hurts them more than denying the Holocaust does, and the goal, of course, is to hurt the Jews.
The ironic part is that the same people who accuse Jews of politicizing the Holocaust to justify Zionism are now politicizing the Holocaust to denounce Zionism. Somehow, to them, this is not a problem.
And the reason is, as mentioned, that the truth is not a factor in this battle.
