The 66-year-old Goldberg said during a
broadcast of "The View" on Monday that the Holocaust was "not
about race" because it involved "white people doing it to white
people."
Goldberg apologized later on Monday during an appearance on "The
Late Show," and again on the next broadcast of "The View" on
Tuesday morning.
CNN reporter Oliver Darcy said on Twitter on Tuesday evening
that Kim Godwin, president of ABC News, had told staff in a note
that Goldberg would be suspended so she could "take time to
reflect and learn about the impact of her comments."
The New York Times also reported Godwin's note.
Goldberg and the other women who host "The View" were discussing
the Holocaust after a school board in Tennessee voted to remove
the graphic novel "Maus," by Art Spiegelman, from its
eighth-grade language arts curriculum. The McMinn County school
officials cited profanity and nudity in the Pulitzer
Prize-winning work.
Goldberg's comments faced criticism by activists online for
being dangerous.
"No Whoopi Goldberg, the Holocaust was about the Nazis'
systematic annihilation of the Jewish people – who they deemed
to be an inferior race," Jonathan Greenblatt, chief executive of
the Anti-Defamation League, said on Twitter in response to the
comments.
"They dehumanized them and used this racist propaganda to
justify slaughtering 6 million Jews. Holocaust distortion is
dangerous", Greenblatt said.
(Reporting by Radhika Anilkumar in Bengaluru and Dan Whitcomb in
Los Angeles; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky and Gerry Doyle)
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