Abstract
Hitler's willing executioners. Ordinary Germans and the
Holocaust. By Daniel Jonah
Goldhagen. London: Little Brown and Company, 1996. Pp. x+622. £20.Questions about the motives of the perpetrators and, by implication,
the causes of the
Holocaust, have long been in the forefront of academic or non-academic
discussions
of the Nazi period – from the time of contemporary observers to
the present day. A wide
range of possible responses to these questions has been put forward, drawing
on
concepts from a variety of disciplines, such as history, psychology, sociology
or
theology. Daniel Goldhagen's book on the motivation of the perpetrators
of the
Holocaust claims to be a ‘radical revision of what has until now
been
written’ (p. 9).
This claim is made on the book-jacket and by the author himself. His thesis
can be
summarized as follows: Germany was permeated by a particularly radical
and vicious
brand of anti-Semitism whose aim was the elimination of Jews. The author
defines this
as ‘eliminationist anti-Semitism’. This viral strain of
anti-semitism, he states, ‘resided
ultimately in the heart of German political culture, in German society
itself’ (p. 428).
Medieval anti-Semitism, based as it was on the teachings of the
Christian religion, was
so ‘integral to German culture’ (p. 55) that with the
emergence of the modern era it
did not disappear but rather took on new forms of expression, in particular,
racial
aspects. By the end of the nineteenth century ‘eliminationist
anti-Semitism’ dominated
the German political scene. In the Weimar Republic, it grew more
virulent even before
Hitler came to power. The Nazi machine merely turned this ideology into
a reality.
The course of its actualization was not deterred by anything save
bare necessity: ‘the
road to Auschwitz was not twisted’ (p. 425). When the
‘genocidal program’ was
implemented along with the German attack on the Soviet Union, it was supported
by
the general German population, by the ‘ordinary Germans’
– the key phrase of the
book – who became ‘willing executioners’. They had
no need of special orders,
coercion or pressure because their ‘cognitive model’
showed them that Jews were
‘ultimately fit only to suffer and to die’ (p. 316).
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
23 articles.
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