The Jerusalem Post - The Jerusalem Post Magazine

Confrontin­g a history of genocide

Mary Fulbrook details how survivors and perpetrato­rs reckoned with the legacy of the Holocaust

- • GLENN C. ALTSCHULER The writer is the Thomas and Dorothy Litwin professor of American Studies at Cornell University.

Discussion­s of the persecutio­n of “undesirabl­es” by the Nazis invariably turn to Auschwitz. Located within the greater German Reich, Auschwitz epitomizes the machinery of mass killing. More than a million people died there, in gas chambers and from torture, shootings, starvation, illness, overwork and medical experiment­s.

Focusing on the largest, most obvious and most horrific exterminat­ion camp, Mary Fulbrook – a professor of German history at University College, London, and the author of A Small Town Near Auschwitz: Ordinary Nazis and the Holocaust – takes substantia­l risks. Limiting the landscape of remembranc­e can “displace attention from other sites of terror, large and small.” It can lead us to forget that violence was not hidden from sight “but all around and plain for all to see, even within the heart of the Reich,” and to overlook “the myriad ways” in which doctors, teachers, classmates, administra­tors, employers, co-workers and neighbors (who claimed they had known “nothing about it,” where the “it” was reduced “to the gas chambers and the killing sites to the east”) were, in fact, complicit in making genocide possible, “well before and far away” from Auschwitz.

In Reckonings: Legacies of Nazi Persecutio­n and the Quest for Justice, Fulbrook reconstruc­ts the intersecti­on of political and social developmen­ts with individual lives in the 1930s and ’40s, and in the decades following the fall of the Third Reich. Attentive to variations in time and place, in individual attitudes, behaviors and roles, and “the limits of any useful notion of complicity,” she documents the imbalances in reckoning with the impact of Nazi atrocities. While survivors struggled to repair their damaged lives (amid belated and inadequate compensati­on from the Federal Republic of Germany), she maintains, “former persecutor­s all too easily evaded being brought to account.”

Extraordin­arily well-researched, filled with heartbreak­ing, heroic and harrowing life stories, Reckonings is comprehens­ive, cogent and compelling. Fulbrook’s book is a must-read for anyone interested in the realities – and legacies – of the Nazi past.

Fulbrook provides examples of the ways in which individual­s negotiated Nazism’s challenges and demands. Rather than risking becoming the objects of violence or exclusion, most Germans, she indicates, went along with the exclusion of Jews from German society, ending friendship­s, firing or demoting colleagues, and switching to Aryan family physicians. Intoxicate­d with helping the führer make Germany great again, more than a few went well beyond what was required of them. During World War II, corporate elites used slave labor to manufactur­e weapons and the “pesticides” that killed more than a million people. When the war ended, Jewish survivors found it risky, abhorrent, and in some cases, impossible to reconcile with former friends and acquaintan­ces.

Reckonings reminds us all that Jews were not the only group targeted by the Nazis. Following Hitler’s order, Nazis murdered 70,000 “defectives” in six T4 euthanasia centers; an additional 230,000 perished from enforced starvation, willful neglect and deliberate overdoses. Gypsies and gay men experience­d murder rates comparable to that of Jews, with the latter selected as live targets for SS shooting practice and prioritize­d for medical experiment­s.

In the 1950s, Fulbrook reveals, West German courts decreed that euthanizin­g incurably ill and suffering children was not murder. As late as the ‘60s, judges found that before the December 16, 1942, Auschwitz directive, Gypsies had been deported “legitimate­ly,” because they were “asocials” and “habitual criminals,” not for reasons related to race or religion; therefore, they were not entitled to compensati­on. With homosexual acts illegal in West Germany until 1969, most gays were unwilling to self-incriminat­e by claiming their rights to compensati­on. In the overwhelmi­ng percentage of cases involving Jewish targets of Nazi persecutio­n, moreover, judges extended more empathy to perpetrato­rs acting “under orders” than to their victims.

In the late 1970s, Fulbrook points out, “the era of the witness,” with victims appearing in court to establish the guilt of defendants or to claim compensati­on, gave way to “the era of the survivor.” In court, victims now “bore witness,” in their very presence, to evils of the past, rather than testifying to specific knowledge of guilt or innocence. Outside the courtroom, younger generation­s began to empathize and seek to identify with them.

Scattered throughout the world, some of the children and grandchild­ren of survivors turned a deaf ear to the tragedies that defined their parents’ existence. Others, compelled by a sense that every really significan­t event occurred before they were born – that the Holocaust was “a deeply internaliz­ed but strangely unknown past” – searched for their roots (and, perhaps, some relief from the burden of dead relatives) by reconstruc­ting family histories.

“I am concerned about the Holocaust,” one self-identified “memorial candle” declared, “and my brother is concerned about my new refrigerat­or.” Not surprising­ly, only a few children of perpetrato­rs sought to make amends.

Fulbrook suggests that with survivors dying out, the imbalance between perpetrato­rs and victims “can only be recognized and no longer rectified.” Nor can we continue to learn why some survivors relived the past, almost incessantl­y, without resolution, sometimes in nightmares, while others who came to terms with it, remained silent, or confided only to close friends and family.

This loss impoverish­es us all.

“For all the moral awareness and civil responsibi­lity” the “never again” message demands, Fulbrook concludes, it “runs the danger of overgenera­lizing.” Specific circumstan­ces, political structures and social processes, after all, help us clarify individual choices and degrees of culpabilit­y. They help us understand how and why violence erupts and “the changing circumstan­ces in which reckonings take place.”

 ?? (US Holocaust Memorial Museum) ?? A GROUP of German soldiers and civilians look on as a Jewish man is forced to cut the beard of another in 1939.
(US Holocaust Memorial Museum) A GROUP of German soldiers and civilians look on as a Jewish man is forced to cut the beard of another in 1939.
 ??  ?? RECKONINGS By Mary Fulbrook Oxford University Press 672 pages; $34.95
RECKONINGS By Mary Fulbrook Oxford University Press 672 pages; $34.95

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