The Jewish Chronicle

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Robert Low admires a book of dark revelation­s. David Herman praises plot but not people Architects of Death

- By Karen Bartlett

Biteback, £20

Reviewed by Robert Low

THE GERMAN firm of J. A. Topf and Sons was one of the countless, medium-sized familyowne­d manufactur­ing businesses that formed the backbone of post-Industrial Revolution Europe. Founded in 1878 in the town of Erfurt, near Weimar, the firm specialise­d in brewing and milling, expanded into war vehicles and grenades in the First World War, and then switched gear to take advantage of a growing business opportunit­y: cremation.

The company was a model of its kind, adhering to strict German regulation­s and burning one body at a time in its ultra-efficient ovens.

In the 1930s, the firm, by now run by the brothers Ludwig and Ernst Wolfgang Topf, was equally swift to adapt to the advent of the Nazis. When a concentrat­ion camp was opened at nearby Buchenwald, Topf was ideally placed to pitch for the cremation ovens needed to dispose of the sudden surge in corpses there. As Karen Bartlett explains in her admirably revealing new history of the firm, nobody at Topf, from top to bottom, ever

Karen Bartlett seemed to query exactly why so many of their products were suddenly needed. Talk about only obeying orders — in this case for crematoria. Not only that but the firm was assiduous in seeking to make bigger and better ovens to cope with the ever-increasing demand, winning the order for new equipment at Auschwitz. A key figure was its engineer, Kurt Prüfer, a Nazi party member who liaised enthusiast­ically with the SS and even demanded bonuses.

After the war ended, everyone concerned denied all knowledge of the foul use their ovens had been put to, but Bartlett produces plenty of evidence to place the Topfs, Prüfer and others squarely at the scene of the crime. As with all Holocaust histories, the detail can be distressin­g but demands to be read.

The story did not end in 1945. Ludwig Topf committed suicide on the eve of interrogat­ion by the Americans, but Ernst Wolfgang spent decades trying to clear the family’s name, unsuccessf­ully.

This is a parable of 20th-century Germany and its relationsh­ip with the Nazis: first acquiescen­ce, then fullscale involvemen­t, and finally denial.

The only bright spot in this grim story is provided by Hartmut Topf, a cousin of the brothers, who fought for years against stiff opposition to turn the disused Topf headquarte­rs into a Holocaust memorial. Otherwise, the Topf story is a perfect example of what Hannah Arendt so memorably described as the banality of evil.

Robert Low is consultant editor of Standpoint magazine Time World of Sport The Times,

 ??  ?? Ludwig, left, and Ernst Wolfgang Topf
Ludwig, left, and Ernst Wolfgang Topf
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