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A nation on trial : the Goldhagen thesis and historical truth

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Uploaded by station03.cebu on October 17, 2020

Goldhagen’s Willing Executioners

The attack on a scholarly superstar, and how he fights back..

Last year, while browsing at one of those sadly disappearing Upper West Side bookstores, I ran into Norman Finkelstein, a member of the sadly disappearing tribe of left-wing gadflies. Finkelstein said he was working on a book about Harvard Professor Daniel Jonah Goldhagen’s Hitler’s Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust . Goldhagen, he declared, was a fraud crying out to be unmasked.

This wasn’t surprising. Goldhagen made a lot of people angry with that book. ( Click here for a quick refresher on why.) Finkelstein, a political scientist, bills himself a “forensic” scholar. He’s fashioned a career out of demystifying what he deems pseudoscholarly arguments. It also made a kind of poetic sense that Finkelstein would become obsessed with Goldhagen. Like him, Finkelstein is the son of Holocaust survivors and a strident commentator on Jewish affairs. He just comes at them from the opposing side.

F inkelstein’s reputation rests on his refutation of Joan Peters’$2 1984 From Time Immemorial , a book purporting to prove Palestinian Arabs had no claims on the land that is now Israel, having been drawn to it only by reports that Jews were making the desert bloom. Peters’ book was lavishly praised by American Jewish organizations, novelists, and scholars. But when Finkelstein showed that Peters had manipulated Ottoman demographic records to make her case, the book’s supporters attacked him as an anti-Zionist. By 1986, though, Zionist scholars having published articles that bolstered Finkelstein’s case, his version was the conventional wisdom.

Finkelstein told me Goldhagen was just another Peters. That struck me as dubious. After all, Goldhagen’s book wasn’t a hoax. It was a troubling interpretation. But Finkelstein insisted that, whatever the reviewers said, the book had been a megapublishing event, and for one simple reason: It was useful to Zionist Jews who believe that all non-Jews are potential Jew killers and that Jews, therefore, are justified in using whatever means are necessary to defend themselves.

C alling Goldhagen a Zionist propagandist seemed an act of provocation, to say the least, and so it was taken. Last summer, Finkelstein published an article with the lurid title “Daniel Jonah Goldhagen’s ‘Crazy’ Thesis” in the British New Left Review . Shortly afterward, it was excerpted in the German newsmagazine Der Spiegel and in Italy’s Panorama . Goldhagen promptly denounced Finkelstein as a supporter of Hamas , a radical Islamic Palestinian group. Metropolitan Books, an imprint of Holt, decided to publish a revised version of Finkelstein’s essay, along with a no less hotly contested attack on Goldhagen by the German-born historian Ruth Bettina Birn that was first published in the Cambridge Historical Journal .

Several months before the publication of Finkelstein and Birn’s book, A Nation on Trial: The Goldhagen Thesis and Historical Truth , Finkelstein’s opponents pressured Metropolitan to cancel it. Leon Wieseltier, the literary editor of the New Republic , got on the phone with his friend Michael Naumann, the publisher of Holt and a German, to express his outrage . The Anti-Defamation League’s Abraham Foxman wrote to Finkelstein’s editor, Sara Bershtel, calling the writer’s views “beyond the pale.”

F inkelstein’s co-author took even worse flak. Goldhagen accused her of having defamed him in her Historical Journal article, then assembled a team of lawyers in Britain to demand a retraction and an apology. In Canada, the Canadian Jewish Congress is trying to have Birn removed from the government’s war crimes division (where she helps build cases against Nazi war criminals) on the grounds that, by publishing with Finkelstein, she has demonstrated insensitivity unbecoming a public servant.

The prepublication attack almost worked. István Deák, a Columbia University historian who agreed to write a preface, backed out . He did provide a blurb, as did seven other distinguished academics, including the Holocaust experts Raul Hilberg and Christopher Browning, the French Jewish intellectual Pierre Vidal-Naquet, and the eminent Marxist historian Eric Hobsbawm. (Click here to read what some of them say and here to read why they say it.) Now that the book is out, the grand irony is that Goldhagen should consider himself lucky to have Finkelstein as his adversary. Not that it isn’t a good dissection of Goldhagen’s contradictions and distortions. Finkelstein handily refutes Goldhagen’s claim that German anti-Semitism is all that’s required to explain the Holocaust. (Click here to read how he does this.) Checking Goldhagen’s assertions against his citations, Finkelstein demonstrates that the scholar’s use of secondary sources is untrustworthy. (Click here for another telling example.) And yet Finkelstein turns out to be a kind of doppelgänger of Goldhagen’s, equally biased and inflammatory.

F irst, Finkelstein makes much of the point that the majority of Germans “did not cast their lot for Hitler.” Technically true–but a plurality of Germans did. No party received as many votes in the March 1933 election as the Nazis–43.9 percent. Finkelstein acknowledges the Nazi state was a brutal dictatorship, but he glosses over its disturbingly popular character.

Second, Finkelstein echoes conventional historical thinking when he says Nazism’s main appeal lay in Hitler’s promises to restore order in post-Weimar Germany, end unemployment, and make the country an international power. But anti-Semitism permeated Nazi ideology, and Finkelstein is deaf to its nuances. He writes, “Not the Jews but Marxism and Social Democracy served as the prime scapegoats of Nazi propaganda” during their rise to power. Also technically true. But the Nazis perceived Social Democracy as a Jewish party and Marxism as a Jewish creed; when they rallied against Bolshevik enemies, their audiences did not need to be told that these enemies were, if not actual Jews, then “spiritual Jews.” If Finkelstein were to apply his logic to Lee Atwater’s Willie Horton strategy, he’d have to write, “Not race but crime served as the prime scapegoat of George Bush’s 1988 campaign.”

T hird, Finkelstein deduces from some Germans’ disgust at the destruction of Jewish lives and property during Nazi-sponsored pogroms such as Kristallnacht that “Germans overwhelmingly condemned the Nazi anti-Semitic atrocities.” If they did, they gave new meaning to the term “silent majority.” The Germans, he writes, displayed “the callousness toward human life typically attending war. … Hardened and bitter, in search of a scapegoat, they occasionally lashed out at the weak.” The first adverb casually banalizes German brutality; the second diminishes its extent; together, they come dangerously close to apologia.

The most controversial part of Finkelstein’s book, though, is the last chapter, in which he sets out to explain why the Goldhagen book was such a big deal. Finkelstein observes that after the 1967 Arab-Israeli War, there was a boom in the kind of Holocaust literature that portrayed the catastrophe as the natural culmination of millennial Jew-hatred. Where some Holocaust experts, such as Hilberg and Martin Broszat, depicted it as a “complex and contingent event,” other writers, such as Lucy Davidowicz, found it more “politically expedient” to focus on anti-Semitism, especially as Israel came under increasing censure. (Click here for Finkelstein’s explanation of why this logic is “expedient.”) According to Finkelstein, Goldhagen’s claim that all forms of anti-Semitism “tend toward a genocidal ‘solution’ ” is expedient in this way, and therefore popular–though Finkelstein says Goldhagen adds no more than a veneer of social science sophistication to this reductionist point of view.

F inkelstein is not breaking new ground here. Israeli intellectuals such as Amos Elon and Tom Segev and the Holocaust historian Omer Bartov have made similar points about the ideological subtext of Holocaust writing. But they also take pains not to dismiss the trauma the Holocaust visited and continues to visit upon Jews. By contrast, Finkelstein adopts an ugly conspiratorial tone when he attributes the book’s popularity in the United States to its Zionist message. This is nonsense. The book owed its commercial success to its soothingly simplistic thesis–and to astute marketing. At times, Finkelstein’s tone even veers toward the jocular, as when he makes fun of Elie Wiesel’s racist remarks about ungrateful black people. One is reminded of Gershom Scholem’s remark to Hannah Arendt at the time of Eichmann in Jerusalem : “This is not the way to approach the scene of that tragedy.”

It’s too bad that the noise about Finkelstein has drowned out his co-writer, Birn. She knows the archives better than anyone, and she has come up with more quietly damning observations. Birn’s experience as a prosecutor gives her a radically different take on the legal testimony Goldhagen bases much of his book on, for the most part confessions of death squad members. “Goldhagen seems to have difficulty comprehending that when perpetrators claim to have been motivated by Nazi propaganda, it need not be sincere,” she writes. (Click here to see how these statements could instead form part of a legal defense.) Birn also shows how Goldhagen’s insistence on German complicity leads him to soft-pedal the anti-Semitism of the Germans’ collaborators, referring obliquely to the “pressures operating on the Ukrainians that did not exist for the Germans.” This is flat-out Eastern European revisionism; you could easily imagine some Ukrainian nationalist writing it.

But the weightiest of Birn’s accusations is that Goldhagen glosses over atrocities in which the victims weren’t Jewish. Goldhagen recounts the tale of a witness who saw a Russian man beaten to death because his name was Abraham; he does not report the same witness’s account, on the next page of testimony, of the “sexually sadistic murder of a young [non-Jewish] girl by one of the officers.” In the end, this may be one of the most compelling condemnations of Goldhagen yet: that his focus on Jewish victims leaves him indifferent to the fate of non-Jews, from that young girl to the millions of Soviet POW’s who were starved and worked to death in the camps. Without minimizing the significance of anti-Semitism, Birn provides an eloquent rejoinder to Goldhagen’s blood-thinking. Her essay radiates a dignified humanism that both Goldhagen and Finkelstein lack.

Note 1: Holocaust historians have traditionally offered a variety of reasons why Germans followed orders to exterminate the Jews. These include anti-Semitism, the culture of German military units, the pressures of totalitarian rule, the hysteria of wartime mobilization, and the effects of Nazi propaganda. Goldhagen, by contrast, offers a single-bullet explanation. He posits a society of ordinary Germans bred, like attack dogs, to despise Jews, and unleashed by a regime that shared their bloodlust. Germany’s uniquely anti-Semitic history had, in his view, made most of them “assenting mass executioners … [who] considered the slaughter to be just.” The book had its defenders, but the reviews were mostly scathing. Hitler’s Willing Executioners was dismissed as fundamentally ahistorical in Commentary , of all places, and as a “bizarre inversion of the Nazi view of the Jews as an insidious, inherently evil nation” in the New Republic . Back

Note 2: This was an unfair characterization of Finkelstein’s views on the Oslo accords. Like Edward Said, who regards the Oslo accords as a Palestinian Versailles, he is opposed to them. That doesn’t make him a Hamas supporter. Back

Note 3: According to Finkelstein’s editor, Sara Bershtel, who was in Naumann’s office at the time and heard Wieseltier on the speaker phone, he said: “Michael, you don’t know who Finkelstein is. He’s poison, he’s a disgusting self-hating Jew, he’s something you find under a rock.” Wieseltier told me he wasn’t trying to silence Finkelstein: “The idea that anyone is trying to suppress the lonely prophet in the wilderness called Finkelstein is comical. Virtually every scholar has attacked [Goldhagen’s] book, including, I might add, our critic in the New Republic . Finkelstein is just playing this game of épater les juifs .” Back

Note 4: Deák, who was so impressed by an early draft Finkelstein sent him that he wrote him praising his efforts, now says, “I didn’t read the article very carefully. I made the mistake of giving my consent too early, and then had second thoughts.” Back

Note 5: “All readers of Goldhagen’s controversial book should take note of these much-needed studies, which, in line with serious historians, convincingly and authoritatively dismantle its arguments.”

– Eric Hobsbawm, author of The Age of Extremes: A History of the World, 1914-1991

“In this important volume Finkelstein and Birn demonstrate that Daniel Goldhagen’s study of the Judeocide is monocausal, teleological, and severely blinkered. Finkelstein carefully sets forth Goldhagen’s distortion and disregard of the secondary literature; Birn masterfully lays bare his gravely flawed use and interpretation of archival sources. Both authors also raise hard questions about the political reasons for the inordinate promotion and reception of Goldhagen’s book. No serious student of history can afford to ignore these well-reasoned and withering reflections on the perils of pseudo-scholarship.”

– Arno Mayer, author of Why Did the Heavens Not Darken?: The Final Solution in History

“Finkelstein and Birn provide a devastating critique of Daniel Goldhagen’s simplistic and misleading interpretation of the Holocaust. Their contribution to the debate is, in my view, indispensable.”

– Ian Kershaw, author of Hitler

“Among the dozens of reviewers of Hitler’s Willing Executioners , Ruth Bettina Birn and Norman Finkelstein stand out for the seriousness and thoroughness with which they have undertaken their task. Even if I do not embrace every aspect of Finkelstein’s conclusions concerning the politicization of Holocaust historiography, I am grateful for these writers’ courageous, conscientious, and labor-intensive efforts.”

– Christopher Browning, author of Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland

“Is Daniel Goldhagen’s Hitler’s Willing Executioners the definitive work on Hitler’s Judeocide? The authors of this volume express serious doubt, which I share. To reduce a phenomenon of this scale and complexity to the anti-Semitism which permeated German society as it also permeated other societies is to be simplistic and to show contempt for the reader. This book rights the balance.”

– Pierre Vidal-Naquet, author of The Jews: History, Memory, and the Present

“Highly recommended to the many readers of Goldhagen’s controversial book, especially those who were mesmerized by its hypotheses. Fortunately, in an open society all scholarship is subject to public scrutiny, and the advance of historical knowledge cannot do without rigorous criticism of the kind provided in this important and courageous collection.”

– Volker R. Berghahn, J.P. Birkelund distinguished professor of European history, Brown University

“Birn’s and Finkelstein’s essays constitute a sharp rebuttal provoked by the public’s and the press’s love affair with a book that casually dismisses excellent work done by others; that contains many contradictions; and that upholds dangerous myths regarding the existence of ‘national characteristics.’ “

– István Deák, author of Beyond Nationalism: A Social and Political History of the Habsburg Officer Corps, 1848-1918 Back

Note 6: Christopher Browning told me: “What’s important about Finkelstein’s critique is that he has traced the inconsistencies and contradictions in Goldhagen, and no one else has taken the time to do that. It’s not my style of writing. But I don’t think he’s gone beyond the bounds of polemic in replying to Goldhagen’s polemic.” In interviews, Holocaust scholars sounded grateful that someone had stood up so boldly to Goldhagen, who, in Hitler’s Willing Executioners , had dismissed the work of virtually every scholar who came before him. Two of the blurb writers have quite understandable grudges: Goldhagen has, for years, been railing against Browning’s emphasis on peer pressure in explaining why German soldiers participated in genocide; in a New Republic review, he accused another endorser, Arno Mayer, of being a Holocaust revisionist. In any event, these blurbs often appear to be more the expressions of well-wishers than of close readers. Hobsbawm is not alone in saying he didn’t read Finkelstein’s essay “line-by-line.” Back

Note 7: Finkelstein notes that anti-Semitism in other countries was often worse; there was, in pre-Hitler Germany, “no equivalent of the riots that attended the Dreyfus Affair in France or the pogroms in Russia.” In the Weimar period, moreover, the Nationalist Socialists found they couldn’t get much mileage out of raw appeals to anti-Jewish prejudice, and often toned down their anti-Semitism around election time. Back

Note 8: Footnoting historian Peter Pulzer’s sober study Jews and the German State , Goldhagen asserts that only the “core of the socialist movement, its intellectuals and leaders” opposed anti-Semitism. In fact, Pulzer says no such thing. He found little evidence of anti-Semitism among Social Democrats, intellectuals or workers. Back

Note 9: “Thus interpreted, the Nazi extermination both justifies the necessity of Israel and accounts for all hostility directed at it: The Jewish state is the only safeguard against the next outbreak of homicidal anti-Semitism and, conversely, homicidal anti-Semitism is behind every attack on, or even defensive maneuver against, the Jewish state. ‘The Holocaust’ is in effect the Zionist account of the Nazi holocaust.” Back

Note 10: Among other things, they warn against the danger of removing the Holocaust from history and turning it into a sort of secular religion, the central symbol of Jewish identity. They also deplore the invocation of the Holocaust as a justification for policies that most Jews would deplore if they were implemented in their own countries. Back

Note 11: Goldhagen asserts the German police battalions knew of the planned destruction of the Jews before entering the Soviet Union, rather than two months after, as most historians believe. He bases this claim on the “conclusive” statement of two former storm troopers. In fact, their statements about extermination orders from above evolved over time, Birn explains, as part of a “defense focused on superior orders as an excuse.” Back

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A Nation on Trial: The Goldhagen Thesis and Historical Truth

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Norman G. Finkelstein

A Nation on Trial: The Goldhagen Thesis and Historical Truth Hardcover – March 15, 1998

  • Print length 176 pages
  • Language English
  • Publisher Metropolitan Books
  • Publication date March 15, 1998
  • Dimensions 6 x 0.75 x 9 inches
  • ISBN-10 0805058710
  • ISBN-13 978-0805058710
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Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Metropolitan Books; 1st edition (March 15, 1998)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 176 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0805058710
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0805058710
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 10.4 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6 x 0.75 x 9 inches
  • #3,417 in Historiography (Books)
  • #7,054 in Jewish Holocaust History

About the author

Norman g. finkelstein.

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goldhagen thesis

By Michael Zank

Published in Religious Studies Review , vol. 24 no. 3 (July 1998), 231-240 (Note: This online version was revised in Dec. 2007 and Jan. 2008.)

Back to issue

Norman Finkelstein

Daniel Jonah Goldhagen’s 'Crazy' Thesis: A Critique of Hitler’s Willing Executioners

In the opinion, not of bad men, but of the best men, no belief which is contrary to truth can be really useful. . . John Stuart Mill

R arely has a book with scholarly pretensions evoked as much popular interest as Daniel Jonah Goldhagen’s study, Hitler’s Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust . footnote 1 Every important journal of opinion printed one or more reviews within weeks of its release. The New York Times , for instance, featured multiple notices acclaiming Goldhagen’s book as ‘one of those rare new works that merit the appellation landmark’, ‘historic’, and bringing to bear ‘corrosive literary passion’. Although initial reviews were not uniformly positive, once the Goldhagen juggernaut proved unstoppable, even the dissenting voices joined in the chorus of praise. An immediate national best-seller, Hitler’s Willing Executioners was hailed in Time magazine’s year-end issue as the ‘most talked about’ and second best non-fiction book of 1996. Before long, Goldhagen was also an international phenomenon, creating an extraordinary stir in Germany. footnote 2

is worthless as scholarship. The bulk of what follows documents this claim. In the conclusion I speculate on the broader meaning of the Goldhagen phenomenon.

Genocide was immanent in the conversation of German society. It was immanent in its language and emotion. It was immanent in the structure of cognition. Hitler’s Willing Executioners , p. 449

In a seminal study published thirty-five years ago, The Destruction of the European Jews , Raul Hilberg observed that the perpetrators of the Nazi holocaust were ‘not different in their moral makeup from the rest of the population. . .the machinery of destruction was a remarkable cross-section of the German population.’ These representative Germans, Hilberg went on to say, performed their appointed tasks with astonishing efficiency: ‘No obstruction stopped the German machine of destruction. No moral problem proved insurmountable. When all participating personnel were put to the test, there were very few lingerers and almost no deserters.’ Indeed, an ‘uncomfortably large number of soldiers. . .delighted in death as spectators or as perpetrators.’ footnote 3

explanation it purports to supply for what Hilberg called this ‘phenomenon of the greatest magnitude’. footnote 5 It is Goldhagen’s thesis that the ‘central causal agent of the Holocaust’ was the German people’s enduring pathological hatred of the Jews. ( Hitler’s Willing Executioners [hereafter hwe ], p. 9) To cite one typical passage:

[A] demonological anti-Semitism, of the virulent racial variety, was the common structure of the perpetrators’ cognition and of German society in general. The German perpetrators. . .were assenting mass executioners, men and women who, true to their own eliminationist anti-Semitic beliefs, faithful to their cultural anti-Semitic credo, considered the slaughter to be just. ( hwe , pp. 392–3)
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One of the big differences between workers and middle-class intellectuals is that workers tend to fight against injustice collectively rather than individually, whether on their own behalf or on others. While Steven Spielburg chose to make a movie about the industrialist Schindler's fight to save Jewish lives, nobody dreams of dramatizing the fight of the German workers against Hitlerism. Part of the problem is that their organizations failed to confront Hitler effectively before he took power, so there is no heart-warming story to be told. The heroism of working-class militants came to naught, since their leadership had the wrong strategy.

After Hitler seized the reins of state, the first thing he did was destroy the workers organizations. He understood that once these organizations were destroyed, atomized workers would be incapable of resisting the naked rule of capital. Gunter W. Remmling's article "The Destruction of the Workers' Mass Movements in Nazi Germany" describes this in chilling detail. In the span of less than a year in 1933, shortly after Hitler's illegal "election", the massive institutions of the working-class had been destroyed.

The event that set the reign of terror in motion was the Reichstag fire of February 2, 1933, the fourth day of Nazi rule, which was set by Brown Shirts but blamed on the Communists. Two days later, they used the fire they set themselves as a pretext for dictatorial rule. The legal cover was provided by article 48 of the Weimar Constitution which allowed them to issue a Decree for the Protection of the German People. This emergency act made it impossible for opposition political parties to hold meetings, demonstrate or publish newspapers. Under the provisions of this act, the SA occupied the Karl-Liebknecht-Haus in Berlin and changed its name to the Horst-Wessel-Haus.

What should be done about the Communists? Frick, minister of the interior, said that they must learn "productive work" in special camps where they would be under strict supervision. The first of these camps, Dachau, was announced on March 20, 1933.

By April of 1933, most Communists were either in Dachau, in prison, in exile or dead. But the Nazis were not finished. They next set their sights on the rest of the working-class movement. They put through a law on April 7, 1933 that would purge all politically suspect individuals from civil service. This included Jews as well, regardless of their political views. The law profession was purged next. "Bolsheviks" and Jews were not allowed to practice law. This meant that if you were an ordinary worker who was arrested for opposing the regime, you could not even find a lawyer to defend you. Is it any surprise that so few Schindlers were to be found in the coal mines or steel-mills, let alone the corporate board-rooms? An idealistic member could always find a good lawyer, but an ordinary worker could not.

In May of 1933 a new campaign against the German Socialist Party began. SA and SS units occupied party, trade union offices and buildings housing their newspapers. In this month, all Socialist deputies, politicians, administrators and mayors were removed from their offices.

The unions were the final bastion of independent working class opposition to be smashed. Legislation was passed on May 19 called the Law About Trustees of Labor. It dissolved the old unions and set up corporatist units under the control of high-ranking Nazis. The goal was to provide political conformity and Arbeitsfrieden, or labor peace.

It wasn't sufficient to destroy the socialist movement and the unions, which had an independent class base. The Nazis found it necessary to clamp down on bourgeois parties next, since they could provide a muffled outlet for proletarian opposition. So on June 25, Goebbels gave a speech that called for the unity of the German people in the Nazi Party. On the same day Nazi cops arrested the deputies and functionaries of the bourgeois Bavarian People's Party. Two days later, the National Party--the equivalent of our Republican party--voted to dissolve itself. On the 28th of June, the Catholic Center Party dissolved itself as well.

When we speak of the culpability of the German workers, we are duty-bound to factor in the destruction of its organizations and the murder of its leaders. In general, I am opposed to guilt-baiting the workers for the crimes of the capitalist class. This was one of the reasons I found the SDS so repulsive during the Vietnam War. They characterized the American people as fascist because it seemed to back the murderous war in Vietnam. The American people at least had ways to express their opposition to the war, which they finally did. The German people had none.

If Nazism was nothing but the naked rule of finance capital and heavy industry, as Stalinists such as Dmitrov claimed, then how was it able to stay in power? After all, the bourgeoisie is a tiny percentage of the population and very rarely rules directly, except for the occasional Nelson Rockefeller. The answer is that German big business had a tenuous alliance with the violent, activists mobs of the Nazi Party who had as much hostility to the ruling class as did to the workers. This lumpen-proletarian and petty-bourgeois base was in favor of some kind of social revolution, as long as it wasn't Marxist-oriented. The Nazi party flattered these social layers with the notion that a new Germany would be built in their image. Hitler's demagogy enable a sizable mass movement to be built. Many rank-and-file Nazis did have an expectation that Hitler would not cater to the bourgeoisie and his first months in power gave them a false promise of what lied in store.

The biggest grievance of all Germans, including the base of the suppressed working-class parties, was unemployment. There were some measures that raised peoples' hopes, as described in Kurt Patzold's "Terror and Demagoguery in the Consolidation of the Fascist Dictatorship in German, 1933-34." (Both articles are contained in the Monthly Review book "Radical Perspectives on the Rise of Fascism in Germany, 1919-1945", a book I highly recommend.)

The Nazis jobs programs was tailored more to public opinion than anything else, but it did have some success.. These programs consisted of placing unemployed workers in rural regions where the degenerate Marxism of the big cities would be less of a temptation. There were also some construction programs that additionally reduced the unemployment rate. These measures in a very real respect were similar to the cosmetic changes introduced in the early years of the Roosevelt administration. They did little to reduce poverty, but they did mollify the masses who anticipated further help from the government.

Goebbels launched a "winter aid campaign" in 1933-34 that provided charity donations in the form of goods and money to the very needy. The recipients were the old, sick and large families. The Nazi press used these campaigns to their full advantage.

Over and beyond such immediate social programs, there was the promise of a new system that would eliminate unemployment and poverty. The whole basis for social transformation was to be through a synthesis of urban and rural life, called "rurban" values by Arthur Schweitzer in his "Big Business and the Third Reich." The Nazis promoted the view that the class-struggle in the city could be overcome by returning to the villages and developing artisan and agricultural economies based on cooperation. Ayrans needed to get back to the soil and simple life.

The ramifications of this was felt most immediately in farming where the Nazis seemed to be on a collision course with the big rural estates of the old-line bourgeoisie. The Nazis passed a law on September 13, 1933 that introduced the principle of cooperative organization into agriculture. They also created an state marketing agency that would set prices and regulate the supply and demand of produce. Finally, they stipulated that farms could no longer be sold nor foreclosed. While the Junkers were assured that the new laws would not effect them, they did feel nervous about the apparent radicalism of the new Nazi laws.

The core of Nazi rural socialism was the idea that land-use must be planned. Gottfried Feder was a leading Nazi charged with the duty of formulating such policy. He made a speech in Berlin in 1934 in which he stated that the right to build homes or factories or to use land according to the personal interests of owners was to be abolished. The government instead would dictate how land was to be used and what would be constructed on it. Feder next began to build up elaborate administrative machinery to carry out his plans.

Not surprisingly, Feder earned the wrath of the construction industry. This segment of heavy industry had no tolerance for any kind of socialism, even if it was of the fake, nutty Nazi variety. Hitler had promised the captains of heavy industry that the "rabble-rousers" in his party would be curbed and Feder certainly fell into that category.

Hjalmar Schacht was a more reliable Nazi functionary who agreed with the need to curb Feder's excesses. After Hitler named Schacht Minister of Economics on November 26, 1934, he gave Feder the boot assured the construction magnates that business would be run as usual.

From 1934 to 1936, every expression of Nazi radicalism was suppressed. After the working-class was tamed in 1933, the petty-bourgeois supporters of a "People's Revolution" were purged from the government one by one. The real economic program of the big bourgeoisie was rearmament. Any pretense at "rural socialism" was dispensed with and the Third Reich's real goal became clear: preparation for a new European war. It needed coal, oil and other resources from Eastern Europe. It also needed to channel all investment into the armaments industry, which could act as a steam-engine for general capitalist recovery. In brief, the economic policy of the Nazi government started to look not that different from Franklin Roosevelt's. It was World War Two, after all, that brought the United States out of the Great Depression, not ineffectual public works programs.

The purge of the the most famous Nazi radicals, the Strasserites, was absolutely necessary in order to rid the movement of its plebeian aspects. Analysis of the Nazi Party has often tilted in the direction of portraying it as a mere tool of capital. The reality is more complex. The Nazis were a grass roots movement that targeted the workers movement, but there was a important anti-capitalist dimension as well. The explanation for the anticapitalist component is simple. The capitalist class in Germany was despised. The ruin of the economy could be attributed to the Treaty of Versailles, the Jews, strikes, etc., but at a certain point one could not let the bourgeoisie off the hook. Too many of the petty-bourgeois supporters of the Nazis had deep resentment to one or another bank that had foreclosed on their farm or businesses.

"Radical Perspectives on the Rise of Fascism in Germany, 1919-1945" (edited by Michael Dobkowski and Isidor Wallimann, Monthly Review, 1989) contains an interesting article "The NSDAP: An Alternative Elite for Capitalism in Crisis" by John D. Nagle. Nagle takes up the question of the nervousness of the big bourgeoisie with respect to the street-fighting, fanatical Nazi movement. One of the biggest anxieties was over the possibility that the Nazis represented a form of "national Bolshevism." The Nazis called for the break-up of department store chains and railed against the big banks and insurance companies. They advocated a "People's Revolution" in contradistinction to the proletarian revolution of the Marxist parties. However, the bourgeoisie is wary of any kind of revolution and preferred to see a stable Bonapartist government such as Hindenburg's in power.

Hitler tried to reassure the big bourgeoisie in two ways. In private talks with the elites, he said that he had no intention of dismantling private property. And in June 1930 he threw Otto Strasser and his followers out of the Nazi party. Yet the influence of the Strasserites remained strong. Throughout the 1932 elections, the Nazi militants continued to employ anti-capitalist rhetoric.

Despite these measures, the ruling class continued to distrust the Nazis. It continued to fear the street-fighting army of the Sturmabeilung (or SA). In the early 1930s, its leader Ernst Rohm claimed not only military authority but political authority as well. The SA had attacked meetings and demonstrations of the left, but it had also attacked bourgeois parties as well.

Eventually the fears of the ruling class were assuaged and Hindenburg the Bonapartist decided to turn state power over to Hitler. Nagle suggests that the Protestant Church was a key factor in improving the public image of the Nazi party. The bourgeois press also began to view the Nazis as the only hope in the fight against Bolshevism. Once the Nazis took power, however, the dangers to the capitalist system from this party were no longer taken seriously. Hitler's economic policy was conducted in close consultation with the ruling circles of big business and plebeian threats to the capitalist system were rooted up. More on this in my next post.

Louis Proyect

The Nazi Labor Front made a last-ditch effort to rejuvenate the "People's Revolution" at the end of 1936. It announced that all retail organizations would be dissolved and their functions performed by the Labor Front itself. Goring got wind of this plan and dismissed Rudolf Schmeer, the leader of the Labor Front.

With the narrowing of its social base and its transformation into a military-industrial dreadnought, the Nazi regime sought ways to stabilize its rule. The Bolshevik "menace" was of primary use since this allowed the population to accept sacrifice for a military build-up. If the Bolshevik menace was so grave, why would any good German complain over the production of guns rather than butter?

Anti-Semitism was the perfect mechanism to unify the population in support of the government as well. The Jew was a convenient scapegoat for the frustrations of the German people. Since the Jew was still functioning to some extent as a part of the German economy, the Nazi regime could continue to point its finger at Jewish "greed." The ludicrousness of this charge could have been refuted in a left-wing newspaper but those days were long past. Intellectual conformity ruled.

What was the basis for singling out Jews as a scapegoat? While the Zionist historians tend to explain this in terms of the innate hatred of Jews in German society, the anti-Semitism of the post-WWI era has an entirely different and more virulent character than that of the nineteenth century. In my next post, I will relate the thinking of Avram Leon, a Belgian Trotskyist on the causes of the anti-Semitism that eventually led to the "final solution."

Louis Proyect

Abram Leon wrote "The Jewish Question: A Marxist Interpretation" in 1941 when he was all of 24 years old and at a time when his hands were filled leading the Belgian Trotskyist movement under conditions of fascist repression. Eventually, the Gestapo captured him and sent him to Auschwitz. He did not make it out alive.

Leon's first involvement with radical politics was with the Hashomir Hatzoir, a Zionist-socialist youth group. He grew disenchanted with Zionism and became a Trotskyist at the time of the Moscow trials. This showed a certain independent streak since the Hashomir-ites were pro-Stalin, as well as being Zionist.

While Leon devoted himself to the Trotskyist movement from this point on, he never lost interest in the "Jewish Question." He was anxious to answer the claims of the Zionists, as well as explain the virulent anti-Semitism that had swept Germany. What was the explanation for the failure of the Jews to assimilate? Why had this peculiar combination of race, nationality and religious denomination persisted through the ages? What was the nature of the hatred against the outsider Jew?

Leon took his cue from Karl Marx who wrote in " On the Jewish Question", "We will not look for the secret of the Jew in his religion, but we will look for the secret of the religion in the real Jew." This led Leon to examine the socio-economic relations that might explain both the identity of the Jews and, by the same token, their persecution.

He believed that the key to understanding the Jewish question was their status as a "people-class." The Jews, according to Leon, "constitute historically a social group with a specific economic function. They are a class, or more precisely a people-class." That economic function is tradesman. The Jew, from the days of the Babylonian exile, have functioned as tradesmen. Their location in the Mid-East facilitated commercial exchanges between Europe and Asia. As long as the Jew served in this economic capacity, the religious and national identity served to support his economic function.

Leon was strongly influenced in his views by Karl Kautsky, a leader of the Second International, who theorized the identity of a class with a people in pre-capitalist societies: "Different classes may assume the character of different races. On the other hand, the meeting of many races, each developing an occupation of its own, may lead to their taking up various callings or social positions within the same community: race becomes class." The chief difference between Kautsky and Leon is that Leon made the equation between class and people specific. Where Kautsky saw tendencies, Leon saw a dialectical unity.

The period that lasted from classical antiquity to the Carolingian epoch was a time of prosperity and relative well-being for the Jews. In the Hellenistic era, Jews were part of the commercial elite in cities such as Alexandria, Antioch and Seleucia. The rise of the Roman Empire saw their continued success, as cities such as Alexandria continued to function as trading centers between the West and East. The role of Jews at Alexandria was so important that a Jew, Tiberius Julius Alexander, was appointed Roman governor of the city.

It is important to note that what united the Jews in this period was not wealth and power per se, but their economic role as tradesmen. Within the group were poorer peddlers and artisans. In the decline of the Roman Empire, many of these individuals were hardest hit. Their desperation, argues both Kautsky and Leon, explains the emergence of the Christianity cult which expressed class hatred of the rich in theological terms.

With the advent of the middle ages, the economic role of the Jew shifts somewhat. This is the period when the native merchant class begins to sell commodities produced in artisan workshops, the embryonic form of the factory. The trade that the Jew engaged in prior to this period was separate from production, but the Christian tradesman is part of the network of commodity exchange. Leon notes that "The evolution in exchange of medieval economy proved fatal to the position of the Jews in trade. The Jewish merchant importing spices into Europe and exporting slaves, is displaced by respectable Christian traders to whom urban industry supplies the principal products for their trading. This native commercial class collides violently with the Jews, occupants of an outmoded economic position, inherited from a previous period in historical evolution."

These circumstances force the Jew to make his living as a usurer. He lends money to the feudal lords and the kings to finance their war expenditures and their luxuries. One of the main ways this is done is through "tax farming." The King "farms out" the collection of tax revenues to a "Court Jew", who gets a percentage of the take. My family name "Proyect" means the "counting house of a tax farmer."

This primitive form of banking eventually clashes with banking based on the production of exchange values, which has been emerging during the same period as that of the artisan workshops and early factories. The usurer is hated not only by the lord to whom he charges high interest, but by the peasants who confront the Jew in his capacity as tax collector. The hatred builds to a fever pitch in places like London, Lincoln and Stafford, England in 1189 when massacres of Jews take place. Shakespeare's "Shylock" reflects the lingering animosity toward the Jew long after these historical events took place and the Jew had been driven out of England. The most infamous campaign against the Jew took place in Spain during the Inquisition, when they were burned at the stake. The true motive was economic rivalry, according to Leon.

The Jews take flight to Eastern Europe and Poland in particular, where feudalism continues long after the emergence of capitalism in the West. An 1810 travel diary notes the following: "Poland should in all justice be called a Jewish kingdom... The cities and towns are primarily inhabited by them. Rarely will you find a village without Jews. Jewish taverns mark out all the main roads... Apart from some are manors which are administered by the lords themselves, all the others are farmed out or pledged to the Jews. They possess enormous capitals and no one can get along without their help. Only some very few very rich lords are not plunged up to their neck in debt with the Jews."

In the late nineteenth century, capitalist property relations begin to develop in the Polish and Russian countryside. Lenin writes about this development in order to refute the Narodniks who held out the possibility of a village-based socialism. The transformation of Christian peasants into landless and debt-ridden laborers has dire consequences for the Jew who is not integrated into the new forms of capitalist property relations. They continue to act as intermediary between the peasant and plebeian masses in the countryside on one hand and the wastrel nobility in the big city on the other. As tensions arise, the first pogroms take place.

Also, at this time, the Jews begin to undergo class differentiation under the general impact of capitalism. A Jewish proletariat develops, which works in small artisan shops producing clothing and household utensils. This deeply oppressed social grouping is the target of pogroms, which indiscriminately attack rich and poor Jew alike. The deep insecurities of this period give rise to the Chassidic sects which function in much the same way that Christianity functions in the Roman Empire. It gives solace to a deeply insecure and economically miserable people.

Eventually the economic suffering takes its toll and mass migrations back to the West take place, both to Austria and Germany, and across the Atlantic to the United States. The ancestors of most Jews living in the United States arrived in this period.

Nobody could have predicted at the turn of the century the awful consequences of the exodus into Germany. Notwithstanding the vile utterances of Richard Wagner, Germany had a well-deserved reputation for tolerance. The German Jews, as opposed to their recently arrived Yiddish speaking brethren from the East, spoke German and were assimilationist to the core. Some of the Jewish elites tended to argue for acceptance of the new Hitlerite regime on its own terms, which they viewed as simply another species of ultra-nationalism.

For Leon, the rabid anti-Semitism of the post-WWI period fell into the same category as the age-old forms. It was virulent economic rivalry that grew out of the collapse of the German economy:

"The economic catastrophe of 1929 threw the petty-bourgeois masses into a hopeless situation. The overcrowding in small business, artisanry and the intellectual professions took on unheard of proportions. The petty-bourgeois regard his Jewish competitor with growing hostility, for the latter's professional cleverness, the results of centuries of practice, often enabled him to survive 'hard times' more easily. Anti-Semitism even gained the ear of wide layers of worker-artisans, who traditionally had been under petty-bourgeois influences."

When a Trotskyist veteran first presented this theory to me in 1967, it had powerful explanatory aspects. The true cause of anti-Semitism was the capitalist system, not some latent and free-floating animus toward the Jew. The key to the survival of the Jewish people was not the Zionist state of Israel, but the abolition of the capitalist system.

Recent controversy over the Goldhagen thesis, which tries to explain anti-Semitism in metaphysical terms, has forced me to rethink Leon's nominally Marxist interpretation. We must revisit the question of the explanatory power of Leon's thesis in light of the exterminationist policy of the Hitler regime. It is very likely that Leon himself had not been aware of the pending genocide, which did not take shape until 1943 at the Wansee Conference. Leon was trying to explain an anti-Semitism that was in many ways no more vicious than the anti-Black racism of the American south. The Nuremburg racial laws of 1935 stripped Jews of their German citizenry and made intermarriage illegal. This was deplorable, but after all Blacks could not vote or marry whites in the Deep South in 1935 either.

Another weakness of Leon's work is that he de-emphasizes the people side of the people-class equation. Most of his work is devoted to an examination of the Jew's relationship to the means of production, but very little to their religion, language, culture and values. This is one of the criticisms found in the chapter on Leon in Enzo Traverso's "The Marxists and the Jewish Question: The History of a Debate 1843-1943". The importance of this was driven home to me last night while I watched a 90 minute documentary on Jewish liturgical music on PBS. There is an immense variety of influences on Cantorial chanting. The Falashas of Ethiopia echo African harmonies, while the Turkish Jews employ the oud and tamboura, typical instruments of the region. In all cases, the prayers are nearly identical. The narrator of the documentary asks one Cantor for his explanation of the unity of the Jews over a 3500 year period, when other nationalities have disappeared from the face of the earth. His answer: the geographical dispersion of the Jews is the answer. If the Jews had remained tied to the same territory, they would have gone the way of the Babylonians, Romans, Greeks, etc. This certainly makes wonder if an ironic twist lies in store for the state of Israel.

It could be argued that this deficiency in Leon has a lot to do with the exigencies of trying to write about the social and economic factors when so many others had covered the cultural aspects. It is more likely, as Traverso points out most tellingly, that the reason for this lack has to do with Leon's intellectual dependence on Kautsky.

Kautsky's Marxism was deeply problematic. It comes close to economic determinism. The Second International tended to follow a simplistic base-superstructure model of Marxism. At its worst, it allowed social democrats to side with the bourgeoisie against the Russian Revolution. Since the base of the Russian economy was not fully mature in a capitalist sense, the Bolshevik seizure of power was premature, adventuristic and would lead to dictatorship.

The same methodological error appears in Leon. He tries to explain German anti-Semitism almost exclusively in economic terms. The problem, however, is that this explanation tends to break down when the Nazi regime institutes the death camps. After all, there is no plausible economic explanation for such behavior. It can only be called madness.

In 1933, ten years before the death camps, Leon Trotsky wrote "What is National Socialism." This article does an excellent job of diagnosing the madness of the Nazi movement which had just taken power:

"Fascism has opened up the depths of society for politics. Today, not only in peasant homes but also in city skyscrapers, there lives alongside of the twentieth century the tenth of the thirteenth. A hundred million people use electricity and still believe in the magic power of signs and exorcisms. The Pope of Rome broadcasts over the radio about the miraculous transformation of water into wine. Movie stars go to mediums. Aviators who pilot miraculous mechanisms created by man's genius wear amulets on their sweaters. What inexhaustible reserves they possess of darkness, ignorance, and savagery! Despair has raised them to their feet, fascism has given them a banner. Everything that should have been eliminated from the national organism in the form of cultural excrement in the course of the normal development of society has now come gushing out from the throat; capitalist society is puking up the undigested barbarism. Such is the psychology of National Socialism."

Nazism as undigested barbarism seems much closer to the mark than the base-superstructure model. Trotsky goes even further than this. In 1938, a midway point between date of the preceding article, and the death camps, Trotsky predicts the impending genocide. In December of that year, in an appeal to American Jews, he writes: "It is possible to imagine without difficulty what awaits the Jews at the mere outbreak of the future world war. But even without war the next development of world reaction signifies with certainty the physical extermination of the Jews."

These remarks are cited in the first paragraph of Norman Geras's "Marxists before the Holocaust", an article which appears in the special July/August 1997 issue of New Left Review on the holocaust. This issue features a lengthy critique by Norman Finkelstein on Goldhagen. While Finkelstein's rather devastating attack on the scholarship and implicitly pro-Zionist ideas of Goldhagen have achieved a high profile, Geras's article is worthy of discussion as well, since it occupies a space much closer to Goldhagen's than to Marxism.

Geras argues that Marxism can not explain the holocaust. His attack is not directed at Leon's economic determinism. Rather it is directed at Trotsky and Ernest Mandel who try to explain the holocaust as an expression of capitalism in its most degenerate and irrational phase. Geras says that the murder of the Jews is radically different than the bombing of Hiroshima, the war in Indochina and other acts of imperialist barbarism cited by Mandel in an effort to put the genocide in some kind of context. The difference between the death camps and the slaughter of the Vietnamese people is one of quantity, not quality. This outrages Geras, who says that Mandel and the German "revisionist" historian Ernst Nolte should be paired.

"What follows should only be said bluntly. Within this apologia there is a standpoint bearing a formal resemblance to something I have criticized in Mandel. I mean the energetic contextualization of Nazi crimes by Nolte, even while briefly conceding their singular and unprecedented character: his insistence that they belong to the same history of modern times as the American war in Vietnam, the Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia, the exodus from Vietnam of the boat people--a 'holocaust on the water'--the Cambodian genocide, the repression following on the Iranian revolution, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and, above all, the liquidation of the kulaks, and the Gulag. Against that backdrop, Nolte urged that the Third Reich 'should be removed from the isolation in which it still finds itself.' This is what came, in the debate in question, to be called 'relativization' of the Holocaust; and it is what Mandel himself calls it in taking issue with Nolte's views. Mandel continues even now to assert that the Holocaust was an extreme product of tendencies which are historically more general. But he perceives a need, evidently, to balance the assertion with a greater emphasis on the singularity of the Jews."

Geras says that he will try at some point to offer his own analysis of why the Jews were exterminated. Since I am not familiar with his work, I hesitate to predict what shape it will take. I suspect that there will be liberal appropriation of the type of idealist obfuscation contained in Goldhagen. That would be unfortunate. What is needed to understand Nazism is not essentialist readings of German history, but a more acute historical materialist understanding of these tragic events.

When I was in grade school in the 1950s in the Catskill mountains in upstate New York, there were large numbers of Jews who spent their summers there and shopped in my father's fruit store. I remember seeing the tattoos of numbers on many of their forearms and asked my father what they represented. It was very unusual for a Jew to be tattooed because orthodox rituals stipulated that you must be buried with the same outward appearance you were born with. He explained to me that these Jews had been in concentration camps and murdered by the millions. The shoppers with tattoos were "survivors." I did not understand this. What was their crime to be punished so?

In the 1950s, a time of deep material abundance and spiritual poverty, there was something else that I could not understand. We had to practice nuclear air-raid drills in our school. We had to "duck and cover" in the basement of the building. This would protect us from a H-bomb. This seemed crazy to me. If the United States and the USSR had an all-out nuclear war, wouldn't everybody die? A blacklisted Hollywood screenwriter wrote "The Boy With Green Hair" in these years to dramatize what I and every other 7 year old was thinking.

Why would anybody consider the possibility and prepare for nuclear war, which would be a new Holocaust of even greater dimensions than the Nazi murder of the Jews. This Holocaust would kill everybody on the planet and all living things. Measured by the ordinary laws and values of capitalist society, this made no sense at all.

No, it did not make any sense whatsoever, but the Pentagon was planning on just such scenarios. Not only was it escalating the arms race, it engaged in nuclear brinksmanship over and over again. Nixon argued for an A-bomb attack on the Viet Mihn forces at Dien Bhien-Phu in 1954. Kennedy brought the world to the brink of war in his confrontation over Cuban missiles. While nuclear war did not occur, the chances were not so remote as to be beyond comprehension.

The American government was not run by madmen, who were representative of "undigested barbarism." Oliver Stone, the film-maker who is supposedly highly sensitive to madmen, has made films which attempt to burnish the reputation of Nixon and JFK alike. "Our" capitalist politicians would never blow up the world, would they? Well, yes they probably wouldn't.

But try to imagine a United States in steep economic decline, mired in imperialist war on three continents. Instead of Bill Clinton in the White House, imagine Pat Buchanan or David Duke instead. He is advised by Christian fundamentalists in the Cabinet who believe that we are in the "final days" before Armageddon. If the reward of Christian soldiers is life eternal at the right hand of Jesus Christ, perhaps all-out nuclear war against Communist or Muslim infidels "makes sense."

The point is that capitalism has a deeply irrational streak. The system is prone to wars and economic crisis. It should have been abolished immediately after World War One. The only reason that is wasn't is that the revolutionary movement came under the control of Stalin, who time and time again showed that he did not understand how to defeat capitalist reaction. The success of Hitler is directly attributable to the failure of the German Communist Party to fight him effectively.

Unless the socialist movement finds a way to put an end to capitalism and disarm the war-makers, the survival of the planet remains in question. While we can not "explain" the genocide adequately no matter how sharp our theoretical weapons, one thing is for sure. We have a sufficient explanation for the need to abolish capitalism: it is an inherently irrational system which threatens the human race.

Louis Proyect

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The Goldhagen Controversy: One Nation, One People, One Theory?

By fritz stern.

Hitler's Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust

Hitler's Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust

By daniel jonah goldhagen.

Holocaust literature abounds, as survivors seek to bear witness and historians try to understand. So far the very magnitude of the satanic murder has inspired a kind of awed reticence about pronouncing overarching explanations. Now a 37-year-old political scientist from Harvard claims: "Explaining why the Holocaust occurred requires a radical revision of what has until now been written. This book is that revision." Hitler's Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust, published in this country in April and in Germany in early August, has become an international sensation, a bestseller on both sides of the Atlantic.

The book is a deliberate provocation -- I consider this a neutral judgment. Provocations can shock people out of their settled, comfortable views; they can also be self-promoting attacks on earlier work and professional standards. Goldhagen's title is provocative and delivers his thesis: the executioners of Jews were willing murderers, who willingly chose to torment and kill their victims; they were ordinary Germans, not Nazi monsters, not specially trained or indoctrinated by party membership or ideology, but simply acting out of what Goldhagen calls the common German "eliminationist mind-set." And being "ordinary" Germans responding to a common "cognitive model" about Jews, their places could have been taken by millions of other ordinary Germans.

Goldhagen's book comes in two related parts: the explanatory model, or "the analytical framework," as he also calls it, and the empirical evidence. The parts are joined by a single intent: the indictment of a people. The duality of presentation marks the style as well. Goldhagen depicts horror and renders judgment in evocative and compelling phrases. He bolsters polemical certainty with concepts drawn from the social sciences, relying on the vaporous, dreary jargon of the worst of academic "discourse." Unintelligible diagrams distract, even as horrendous photographs confirm. "The book's intent is primarily explanatory and theoretical," he notes. Theory explains and, as there is a persistent mismatch between the powerful, unsparing description of Holocaust bestiality and simplistic theoretical explanation, theory triumphs. Astoundingly repetitive, the book has 125 pages of notes but, regrettably, no bibliography.

To say it at once: the book has some merit, especially in the middle section, which depicts three specific aspects of the Holocaust, and it has one overriding defect: it is in its essence unhistorical. It is unhistorical in positing that one (simplistically depicted) strain of the past, German antisemitism, explains processes that the author strips of their proper historical context; it is unhistorical in over and over again presenting suppositions as "incontestable" certainty. Sir Lewis Namier, a great English historian, once remarked that " . . . the historical approach is intellectually humble; the aim is to comprehend situations, to study trends, to discover how things work: and the crowning attainment of historical study is a historical sense -- an intuitive understanding of how things do not happen. . . . " Goldhagen's tone mocks humility, and he seems to lack any sense "of how things do not happen," of how complex human conduct and historical change really are.

THE GERMAN IDEOLOGY

Goldhagen begins with a disquisition of some hundred pages on what he believes is the peculiar character of German antisemitism, emphasizing medieval Christian hostility to Jews and concluding that in the largely secularized Germany of the nineteenth century this doctrinal hostility sharpened into a racial one, demonizing Jews as alien, as the enemy that needed to be eliminated. This version is of course dangerously close to the old clichŽ that a clear line of authoritarian, antisemitic thought runs from Luther to Hitler and was largely responsible for the triumph of Nazism.

Goldhagen draws on the rich literature about German antisemitism even as he dismisses it, distills what is useful for his thesis while ignoring whatever might contradict or complicate it, and then celebrates the originality of his own version. The result is a potpourri of half-truths and assertions, all meant to support his claim that German antisemitism was unique in its abiding wish to eliminate Jews, its "eliminationist mind-set." He suggests that one needs to look at Germans as anthropologists look at preliterate societies; they are not like "us," meaning Americans or Western Europeans.

He considers but dismisses the need to compare German antisemitism to other varieties, although we know that antisemitism was endemic in the Western world. Some scholars, including George L. Mosse and Zeev Steinhell, have plausibly argued that before 1914 French antisemitism was more pervasive and more aggressive than German antisemitism (on the other hand, French defense of Jews was more vigorous than similar efforts in Germany). Or take a perhaps even more revealing comparison: a leading historian of Germany, James J. Sheehan, wrote in 1992 that "animosity towards Jews [in the pre-1914 era] was substantially stronger in Austria than in Germany," and estimated "that whereas Austrians made up less than 10 per cent of the population of Hitler's Reich, they were involved in half the crimes associated with the Holocaust." Goldhagen certainly knows that thousands of non-Germans were willing executioners, willing auxiliaries to the Holocaust. But their motivation or, indeed, their historical role, is of no interest to him.

Even in his discussion of German antisemitism he fails to make the necessary distinctions. There was a wide range of attitudes toward Jews, from those few who did indeed see them as the enemy and chief corrupters of their society -- as "vermin" to be exterminated -- to those men and women who welcomed Jews but regretted what they saw as Jewish "pushiness" or preeminence in some realms. Goldhagen takes remarks out of context and treats almost equally the ranting of the rabble-rouser and the private musings confined to a writer's diary. Everything is grist for his mill.[1]

A Goldhagen version of antisemitism in twentieth-century America might lump Eleanor Roosevelt's early remarks about "Jew-boys" in Franklin's law school class with Henry Ford's championing of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion or Father Coughlin's tirades. Only by summary judgment and indifference to nuance can Goldhagen contend that in the nineteenth century "German society . . . was axiomatically antisemitic." And hence, "It is thus incontestable that the fundamentals of Nazi antisemitism . . . had deep roots in Germany, was part of the cultural cognitive model of German society, and was integral to German political culture . . . It is incontestable that this racial antisemitism which held the Jews to pose a mortal threat to Germany was pregnant with murder" (my italics). Incontestable? I would say unprovable and implausible.

GERMAN JEWS

The very Germany Goldhagen discusses was the country in which Jews had made the most extraordinary leaps to cultural and economic prominence. But Goldhagen omits this integral element of history. After emancipation and after legal equality was decreed in 1869, German Jews began their astounding ascendancy. Their achievements were the envy of Jews elsewhere. It is perfectly true that any hope they had for complete acceptance remained unfulfilled. They knew that they were being treated as second-class citizens, and their very successes heightened their vulnerability. But this was a society at once dynamically expanding and severely weakened by internal strains; it seems odd to single out "eliminationist antisemitism" as the key social dynamic and say nothing of the still sharp antagonisms between Protestants and Catholics, or the intense class conflict that Germans called "the social question" and that weighed on them far more than "the Jewish question" did.

The salience of German antisemitism varied with the mood and condition of German politics. During the Great War these politics became radicalized, and by 1917, when hope for total victory turned to apprehension of defeat, an enraged right wing fastened on violent, chauvinist, antisemitic beliefs; but for many other Germans defeat was the result of internal enemies, the Weimar Republic was a Jewish excrescence in German politics, and both Marxism and Bolshevism were Jewish machinations. Men and women on the left or liberal end of the German political spectrum rejected these delusions and defended the Republic, in which Jews had achieved a certain political prominence. Of all this Goldhagen says very little; the Great War, during which both Jewish patriotism and German antisemitism flourished as never before, is mentioned in only one paragraph. This distorted view of German political culture is unconvincing in its simplicity.

HITLER AND ANTISEMITISM

Scholars have long debated whether Hitler's antisemitism was central to his electoral victories at the end of the Weimar years. It is generally accepted that the more the National Socialists tried to widen their appeal, the more they muted their antisemitic theme. In one of Hitler's key addresses in 1932, for example, he hardly alluded to Jews at all. Yet Goldhagen insists: "The centrality of antisemitism in the Party's world, program and rhetoric -- if in a more avowedly elaborated and violent form -- mirrored the sentiments of German culture." Actually, it exposed the sentiments of only some Germans. In the last free elections in 1932, some 67 percent of the German electorate did not vote for Hitler, although no doubt even among these there were groups that harbored suspicion and dislike of Jews. Perhaps many Germans had some measure of antisemitism in them but lacked the murderous intent that Goldhagen ascribes to National Socialism. Put bluntly: for Goldhagen, as for the National Socialists, Hitler was Germany.

But was antisemitism the sole or even the most important bond between Hitler and the Germans? Was it responsible for the failure of Germans to protest the first terrorist measures of the regime, the suppression of civil rights, the establishment of concentration camps in March 1933? The existence of the camps was made public specifically because they were intended to destroy political enemies and to intimidate potential opposition. From the very beginning the Nazis used every vicious means of humiliation and terror -- in public sometimes, within the insulated realm of the camps always -- against all opponents, real and imagined, German or German Jew, man or woman. They unleashed their pent-up savagery on Socialists and Communists (with the greatest brutality if they happened to be Jews as well). Men were beaten in these camps, and murdered -- yet silence was pervasive among the Germans, who had begun to exult in their society's outward order and slowly returning prosperity and power. Would Goldhagen not acknowledge the likelihood of some link between Germans so sadistically falling upon their fellow Germans and their treatment of people whom they came to demonize -- Jews and Slavs in particular?

The silence, and in some cases the easy acquiescence of the German elites, including those in churches, universities, and the civil service, have long been considered moral and civic failures of portentous importance. They saw their own freedoms threatened, their own principles violated; yet they showed, in Norbert Elias's phrase, "a lust for submission." They met with silence the first extrusionary acts against Jews; only very few protested when colleagues were removed from their posts or lost their jobs, when friends were ostracized, when all Jews were made the target of steady abuse. One must remember that active protest against the National Socialist regime in the spring of 1933 would not have demanded martyrdom -- far from it. The price for the exercise of decency rose only when the regime became stronger.

Goldhagen argues that the road to Auschwitz was straight, and he pays little heed to the improvisations and uncertainties of the regime's first five years. Yet policies during that period aimed at the extrusion, not the extermination, of Jews, at their isolation and impoverishment, so as to drive them out of the country. Goldhagen rightly emphasizes both the antisemitic propaganda of the time and the way Jews were already to some degree "fair game"; yet in Germany there were few acts of spontaneous violence against them, as compared to the explosion of sadistic antisemitism in Austria immediately following the Anschluss. Nevertheless, for Goldhagen it is in Germany that the "eliminationist" mindset was most virulent.

Goldhagen rightly ponders the Germans' responses to the Reich pogrom in November 1938 known as Kristallnacht, with its burning of synagogues, smashing of Jewish property, and public arrest of some 30,000 male Jews who were then herded into concentration camps. He notes that "the world reacted with moral revulsion and outrage, the German people failed to exhibit equivalent revulsion and outrage -- and principled dissent from the antisemitic model that underlay the night's depredation -- even though what had occurred was done in their name, in their midst, to defenseless people, and to their countrymen" (Goldhagen's italics). But Goldhagen has been at pains to demonstrate that Germans had never regarded Jews as their countrymen. He continues: "This, perhaps the most revealing day of the entire Nazi era, the day on which an opportunity presented itself for the German people to rise up in solidarity with their fellow citizens, was the day on which the German people sealed the fate of the Jews by letting the authorities know that they concurred in the unfolding eliminationist enterprise, even if they objected, sometimes vociferously, to some of its measures." What a historical aberration! What chance was there for a people "to rise up" against a firmly entrenched terrorist regime that, moreover, had just scored the most extraordinary peaceful triumphs of incorporating Austria and emasculating Czechoslovakia -- and all this with the passive or even active support of the western democracies. The November horror occurred six weeks after the Munich Conference and a month before the signing of a special Franco-German friendship treaty. If Germans "concurred in the unfolding eliminationist enterprise," why did the National Socialist regime make such strenuous efforts to hide its later crimes from them, to carry them out, as the famous phrase put it, "in night and fog," to place the early extermination camps outside the borders of the Reich? Was it afraid of phantoms?

Moreover, Goldhagen slights the acts of decency that did occur, every act at the risk of horrible retribution. (In general, these acts of decency and defiance have received too little attention, especially in Germany itself.)

American readers will soon be able to read German works in translation that either supplement or balance Goldhagen's version of events. The diaries of Victor Klemperer, kept in secret from 1933 to 1945 and only now published, have been a bestseller in Germany. They record the sentiments and sufferings of a Jewish professor married to a Christian; they offer a nuanced picture of both the Germans' brutality and callousness toward Jews and their moments of decency and quiet help. Wolfgang Sofsky's The Order of Terror: The Concentration Camp, appearing in the United States this fall, is a major study that characterizes the camp as the emblematic institution of the Nazi regime and insists "that the universe of the concentration camp is unprecedented in its torture and destruction," in its organized effort at degradation and murder. Goldhagen's one-sided remarks about the antisemitic attitudes and even murderous complicity with the regime of some of the heroic men who tried to kill Hitler in July 1944 receives more thorough and balanced attention in Joachim Fest's Plotting Hitler's Death: The Story of the German Resistance.

FOLLOWING ORDERS?

Less than half of this irksomely repetitive book deals with Goldhagen's own research into three specific aspects of the Holocaust: the murderous conduct of police battalions (the ordinary men of the title), the misnamed work camps that were way stations on the road to death, and the death marches at the end of the war. Goldhagen focuses on the perpetrators, particularly on their putative motives, and gives most terrifying, memorable accounts of their wanton cruelty. He reminds us that a very large number of Jews perished not in the gas chambers but by means of executions, planned starvation, and induced disease, always amidst unspeakable bestiality.

Goldhagen examines the lives and cruelties of the men of the 101st Police Battalion -- a reconstruction made possible by the thorough record of a German prosecutorial investigation conducted after 1945. These men, most of them from the lower or lower-middle class in Hamburg, tended to be older than soldiers; most of them were family men and only a few of them were members of any Nazi organization. In 1992, Christopher R. Browning published Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland, a meticulous study of precisely this same police battalion of 500 men, in which he examined their backgrounds and vicious deeds, their massacres of Jews -- men, women, and children in Poland -- just because they were Jews. The commander offered his men nonpunitive exemption from such horror as killing mothers and babies, but most men participated (as happened elsewhere), some with apparent sadistic satisfaction, some even though they had wives with them in Poland who knew and on occasion saw what their husbands did.

Goldhagen analyzes much of the same material but fiercely rejects Browning's account of the murderers' motives. Browning acknowledges the effect of the relentless Nazi propaganda against the Jews but wisely considers what other factors may have been responsible, including the fear of breaking ranks, acknowledging "weakness," and, in a few cases, considerations of career advancement. Goldhagen will have none of this. He insists on a monocausal explanation: antisemitic beliefs alone accounted for this behavior. Browning thinks that "the historian who attempts to 'explain' [this behavior] is indulging in a certain arrogance." True.[2]

Next Goldhagen analyzes some of the so-called work camps, in which Jews were treated as worse than slaves, whipped to perform such senseless tasks as carrying rocks from one end of the camp to the other and back again. They were meant to die at hard, purposeless labor; they were starved, beaten, and killed, caught in a hell ruled by dogs and the whims of all-powerful sadist-guards (not all of them German). Jews were destined for extermination in these work camps, even as the Reich suffered from a labor shortage that led it to exploit more than seven million foreign slave laborers. Goldhagen emphasizes the economic irrationality of this strategy, citing it as proof once again of the primacy of the German drive to exterminate Jews. True, but there were many other instances of both economic irrationality and cruelty to non-Jews that were just as injurious to German interests.

The book's most gripping chapter concerns the death marches that began in the winter of 1944 and spring of 1945, when Jews, separated from non-Jewish fellow prisoners, were hounded from camp to camp as the Allied armies closed in on Germany. Goldhagen concentrates on one hellish march in particular, the 22-day trek from the Helmbrechts camp in Franconia to a place some 120 miles away, across the Czech border. The march "began and ended in slaughter." From the first, Jews were beaten, killed, or left to freeze, starve, and die under conditions far worse than the abominations that non-Jews suffered. All this in spite of the fact that Himmler had given orders -- for his own opportunistic reasons -- to cease killing Jews. The guards on this march disregarded the orally transmitted order and indulged in crazed sadism, women guards showing special cruelty. (A few Germans tried to throw the prisoners scraps of bread, but the guards brutally prevented such succor.) Goldhagen's passion finds its best expression in this and other accounts of harrowing horror. He recounts these scenes of utter inhumanity with admirable fortitude. But the ever- repeated judgment is of course less compelling: "These Germans . . . were voluntaristic actors . . . Their trueness to meting out suffering and death was not an imposed behavior; it came from within, an expression of their innermost selves."

Reviewers have commented on the originality of his treatment of the death marches. Actually, Martin Gilbert's Holocaust -- a book Goldhagen does not mention -- gives an overview of the marches from accounts of the few survivors, focusing on the victims and not on the few known perpetrators.

All these acts of barbarism, these human enactments of the worst of Hieronymous Bosch's nightmares, were committed by Germans (and, Goldhagen notwithstanding, by non-Germans) who, according to Goldhagen, felt neither shame nor compunction. The Jew was the enemy, at once all-powerful and subhuman; the demonization had struck roots. Goldhagen wants to correct a perspective that focuses on "the desk murderers." The Holocaust was more than a bureaucratic operation; it was not the work of so many banal cogs in the wheels of evil. But while he rightly points to the thousands of individual tormentors and murderers, Goldhagen tends to underplay the powerful role of the state apparatus that gave those murderers license, one that involved the collaborative efforts of the rulers of the Reich and their servants, officials in multiple ministries, party desk officers, the government, the army, the judiciary, and the medical establishment.

Goldhagen singles out those murderers who were "ordinary Germans" and who, he insists, were motivated solely by their "cognitive model" of the Jew. He then moves from specific and harrowing examples to a grotesque extrapolation: having examined the acts of some hundreds or perhaps even thousands of people, he insists that almost all Germans were moved by the same hatred, approved the killing, would have acted in like fashion if chance had so decreed. As he writes, " . . . the institutions treated here . . . should permit the motivations of the perpetrators in those particular institutions to be uncovered, and also allow for generalizing both to the perpetrators as a group and to the second target group of this study, the German people." The leap from individual cases to the German people at large is unpersuasive, but necessary for his indictment of his "second target group."

Some 50 years ago, at the end of the war, this view of the uniqueness of German criminality was commonly held. It was once a comforting certainty that Germans and only Germans were capable of such organized atrocities -- for which Goldhagen is the first to assign a single motive. But in time the interpretation of the Holocaust became more differentiated, less self-exculpatory; we also know more about atrocities today, whether in Cambodia, Biafra, or Bosnia.

Can one even try to explain the Holocaust (the horror of which for many, myself included, somehow eludes understanding) without regard to its historical context? Should one? The Inferno occurred at a given historical moment, at a time of mounting barbarism and moral indifference, which had returned to Europe in unimaginable force during the Great War, barely diminished in the interwar years, and reached an apogee during this second world war. National Socialism, we know, was at once Germany's most criminal and most popular regime, Hitler the century's most charismatic leader. The terror that he launched in Germany spread to conquered Europe: German troops of various formations extended the terror to Poland, Russia, Greece, everywhere. Thus villages were burned, hostages shot, and men, women, and children hounded, starved, separated, and killed -- all that and everywhere. There were thousands of massacres in Poland, and 2.5 million Russian prisoners of war were deliberately starved to death. The links that connect this pervasive brutality to the systematic extermination of European Jewry cannot be found in specific documents or individual decisions, but can those links be doubted? Furthermore, scholars have now established that both Germans and non-Germans knew far more far earlier about the Holocaust and the atrocities in the east than was once assumed. But most of these people worried about their own predicaments and tried to preserve their complacent self-regard, their moral self-esteem, by choosing not to know or believe -- a denial that has marked much of the world in our century. In brief: the Holocaust took place in the long night of organized bestiality. That is its context.

THE CONTROVERSY

Hitler's Willing Executioners and its reception in this country aroused instant concern in Germany. As early as April, the German media organized extensive discussions on the book; some of the talk was favorable, as were the first reviews in America, but much of it was critical, sometimes in an ad hominem way.[3] In early August, just before the German translation was published, Die Zeit, Germany's celebrated weekly, which had already given uncommon, perhaps unwarranted, attention to the book, allotted Goldhagen exceptional space to respond to what he called "The Failure of the Critics." In his response, Goldhagen attacked all his critics and rejected all their arguments -- with dazzling arrogance. He accused them not only of failing to answer central questions, but even of failing to ask them: "If then they are confronted with a book that delivers precisely these answers, then they react in a rage that makes one think of people who want to silence someone because he touches on a long-preserved taboo." But these scholarly critics include precisely those liberal German historians who for decades have done the most to analyze and document the nature and atrocities of the Third Reich, who by meticulous research have established the complicity of so many German individuals and institutions, including the churches and the Wehrmacht. Goldhagen nowhere acknowledges the immense, courageous labors of these German historians and writers, who have presented their people with as stark and honest a portrait of their past as is possible -- and have done so to the irritation of many "ordinary Germans" who would prefer not to be reminded of the uniqueness of that past.

Der Spiegel, which also has extensively covered the sensation that is Goldhagen, reports that the German translation (which I have not seen), with a new introduction by the author, modifies or mutes some of his more sweeping allegations. In his many interviews he has taken pains to highlight the exculpation that appears in a mere note at the end of the American edition, where he writes that he did not mean "to imply that a timeless German character exists. The character structure and the common cognitive models of Germans have developed and evolved historically and, especially since the loss of the Second World War, have changed dramatically." In his appearances in September before German audiences, Goldhagen denied ever having had the notion of collective guilt and seemed eager to attenuate such sentences in the book as "Germany during the Nazi period was inhabited by a people animated by beliefs about Jews that made them willing to become consenting mass murderers." His subject of course touched the deepest German questions of guilt and individual responsibility, and did so, apparently, in a fashion different from the book. It would seem that he tried to please his German audiences.[4]

Hitler's Willing Executioners was a best-seller in this country, and it sold 80,000 copies in the first four weeks after its publication in Germany. Some Germans have remarked to me that whatever the book's flaws, it should be welcomed because it will reinvigorate the debate and stimulate new scholarship. Der Spiegel has made this same point, as has the distinguished American historian Gordon Craig. But the book also reinforces and reignites earlier prejudices: latent anti-German sentiment among Americans, especially Jews, and a sense among Germans that Jews have a special stake in commemorating the Holocaust, thereby keeping Germany a prisoner of its past. The book is now a major datum in German-American relations. Perhaps it could be viewed as an academic equivalent of the simplistic television series "Holocaust," which also had an enormous impact.

The astounding reception of so polemical and pretentious a book can hardly be attributed solely to its topic or thesis. Shrill and simplistic explanations of monstrous crimes obviously command attention. But there is more at work here: the author's ceaseless boast of radical originality was endorsed on the book's jacket by two well-known scholars, both distinguished in fields other than German history -- and between them praising Goldhagen's work as "phenomenal scholarship and absolute integrity . . . impeccable scholarship, a profound understanding of modern German history . . . obligatory reading." The American and German publishers touted the book with all the great promotional power at their command. Perhaps Goldhagen's manipulated, public-relations-orchestrated success tells us more about the culture of the present than the book's substance tells us about the horrors of the past.

[1] A sample of Goldhagen's modus operandi is his only reference to Thomas Mann: "Thomas Mann, who had already long been an outstanding opponent of Nazism, could nevertheless find some common ground with the Nazis . . . 'it is no great misfortune that . . . the Jewish presence in the judiciary has been ended.' The dominant cultural cognitive model of Jews and the eliminationist mindset that it spawned was dominant in Germany." A note indicates that he takes the citation from an essay of mine in which I quoted passages from Mann's journal.

I consider Mann, married to Katia Pringsheim, the daughter of a prominent Jewish family, perhaps the best example of the ambiguity and complexity of German antisemitism, and I cited this passage, written in the early months of the regime, precisely because of its fascinating vacillation of tone and meaning. The very next-indeed, inseparable-sentence, which Goldhagen omits, suggests Mann's own distaste at his thoughts, which he characterizes as "secret, disquieting, intense," but the passage concludes with his musing that the process of historical change, just recently initiated by the Nazis, had in it "nonetheless things that are revoltingly malevolent, base, un-German in the highest sense. But I am beginning to suspect that their process could well be of that kind that has two sides."

Another example: he mentions the late Israeli scholar Uriel Tal's comment on liberal disappointment with Jews in the late nineteenth century but omits that Tal observed in the same context: "Political and racial antisemitism during this period [the Second Reich] failed to exert any appreciable public influence, and whatever effectiveness it had was limited to short intervals and restricted regions."

Such procedures from someone who can be so censorious of others. In 1989 Goldhagen reviewed an earlier thesis-driven book on the Holocaust saying: "But it is itself an artful construction of half-truths, itself in the service of an ideology. And it is riddled with extraordinary factual errors which amount to a pattern of falsification and distortion."

[2] In an extremely odd note, Goldhagen dismisses Browning, saying that the plausibility of "his explanation depends upon a person's own understanding of the cynicism of people. Scholars who believe that for a promotion or for a few marks, these Germans were willing to slaughter Jews by the thousands should also believe that for tenure at a university . . . virtually all their colleagues today, and they themselves, would mow down innocent people by the thousands."

[3] The first book about the book has just appeared, a collection of critiques published in Germany, also with a provocative title: Julius H. Schoeps, ed., Ein Volk von Mšrdern? Die Dokumentation zur Goldhagen-Kontroverse um die Rolle der Deutschen im Holocaust (A people of murderers? Documentation concerning the Goldhagen controversy about the role of the Germans in the Holocaust), Hamburg: Hoffmann und Campe, 1996.

[4] According to German press reports, he did so triumphantly. In my brief visit to Germany in early October, I was told that his charm, telegenic presence, and conciliatory manner enthralled his public and bested his critics. German commentators remained puzzled, as I am, by the discrepancy between the public acclaim and the scholarly criticism, coming especially from the liberal side, and by the discrepancy between the writer's arrogance and the speaker's appealing modesty.

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April 1, 1996 Challenging A View Of the Holocaust By DINITIA SMITH AMBRIDGE, Mass., March 26 -- In his immense, angry new book, Daniel Jonah Goldhagen has challenged a fundamental assumption of the Holocaust, that Germans blindly followed orders, or were coerced by their superiors, in murdering Jews. In "Hitler's Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust" (Alfred A. Knopf) Mr. Goldhagen argues that thousands of Germans, even though told by their superiors they could refuse orders to kill Jews, eagerly participated in the slaughter, and killed zealously, with unnecessary brutality. "I say these people believed what they were doing to Jews was the right thing," Mr. Goldhagen, an assistant professor of government and social studies at Harvard University, said last week in his office. "The most committed anti-Semites in history come to power and turn a private fantasy into the core of the state," said Mr. Goldhagen, the son of a Holocaust survivor. Mr. Goldhagen's book portrays a Germany even before the Nazi period "pregnant with murder," in the grip of a "hallucinatory anti-Semitism," a society in which anti-Semitism was a "culturally shared cognitive model," a profoundly ingrained, reflexive response. The book, 461 pages of text, 141 pages of footnotes and appendices, is one of the most scathing indictments of ordinary Germans during the Nazi period to be published. Scholars like Hannah Arendt have depicted Germans as mindless bureaucrats following orders, incarnations of "the banality of evil." The historian Raul Hilberg has documented the widespread German complicity in the slaughter of Jews. And Christopher R. Browning, in his book "Ordinary Men," examined some of the same material as Mr. Goldhagen, including records of Reserve Police Battalion 101, whose members murdered hundreds of thousands of Jews in Poland and Ukraine. But no other major book has made the point with such force that there was something basic in the German character that brought about the Holocaust. "This book is a challenge," said the 36-year-old Mr. Goldhagen. "I put forward the conventional explanations. And I say they're all wrong." Prominent scholars have already begun to criticize Mr. Goldhagen's conclusions. "I refuse to accept that any nation has national characteristics," said Istvan Deak, professor of history at Columbia University in New York. "We can only say many Germans participated. To say that anti-Semitism is a German specialty is wrong. To say this is somehow a national characteristic is unhistorical." As for the newness of Mr. Goldhagen's thesis, Walter Laqueur, a historian and author of "The Terrible Secret," said, "That the Germans were eager participants -- there are any number of books by people who survived which attest to this." Next Monday, at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, scholars at a symposium on "Hitler's Willing Executioners" will have a chance to debate Mr. Goldhagen's theories. Mr. Goldhagen describes the members of Police Battalion 101, a kind of reserve unit assigned to do police work in the conquered territories, as ordinary German husbands and fathers. They were told by their commanders that they did not have to kill Jews. Still, they entered into a "Dantesque production" of killing, immersing themselves in blood, and inviting their wives and children to watch. It was, Mr. Goldhagen writes, as if humanity had entered "a new moral order." But their actions, he says, were the result of a German society saturated with anti-Semitism. Even Karl Barth, the Swiss theologian who taught in Germany in the early 30's and became an opponent of Nazism, had "a deep-seated anti-Semitism," Mr. Goldhagen writes. Barth denounced Jews in a 1933 sermon as "an obstinate and evil people," Mr. Goldhagen adds. "Most anti-Semites just want to get Jews out of the country, but to Germans, Jews were metaphysical enemies," Mr. Goldhagen said in his office. Some Germans protested the killing of Poles, Mr. Goldhagen notes, and of handicapped people, but not of Jews. Even members of the anti-Hitler Resistance were anti-Semitic. Finally, when Heinrich Himmler, chief of the SS, hoping to negotiate with Americans at the end of World War II, forbade the further killing of Jews, some Germans kept on. In many ways, Mr. Goldhagen's book is a search for answers to unanswerable questions. He is the son of Erich Goldhagen, a survivor of the Romanian-Jewish ghetto in Czernowitz, now in Ukraine. The elder Goldhagen recently retired as a professor from Harvard, where for 25 years he taught a course on the Holocaust. Daniel Goldhagen dedicates his book to his father, his "constant discussion partner." "My father said almost nothing about his own time," Daniel Goldhagen said. "It was simply very painful. He lost most of his extended family." Recently, Erich Goldhagen said from Cambridge: "I'm a survivor. I don't like to talk about my experiences for obvious reasons." Yet, he said, "Our house was saturated in the subject." In the Goldhagen household, Daniel Goldhagen said, the Holocaust was not a tale to lament. "The framework was intellectual." The second oldest of four children, Daniel Goldhagen grew up in Newton, Mass., where he played high school basketball. "I still read the sports page first thing," he said. Mr. Goldhagen followed his father to Harvard. Even while he was an undergraduate, Germany seemed to exercise an inexorable fascination for him. He spent a year there in college. His senior thesis was "an intellectual biography" of Gen. Otto Ohlendorf of the SS, who was convicted at Nuremburg and executed. For the thesis, he used letters collected by his father. Yet, said Mr. Goldhagen, "when I went to graduate school, I had no intention of writing on the Holocaust." Then, in 1983, he attended a lecture by the Holocaust scholar Saul Friedlander. In the discussion that followed, "everyone was talking about why the order was given, but not about why it was carried out." Mr. Goldhagen calls it "one of those light bulb moments." His research into the question of why took him to Germany once again, to the central office for investigating Nazi war crimes, in Ludwigsburg, where for 14 months he immersed himself in the testimony of killers. "Being in Germany was very normal for me," Mr. Goldhagen said. Yet the past was ever present. "For instance, when you drive from Stuttgart to Munich, you pass Dachau." But, he said, "you have to develop a degree of detachment." Much of Mr. Goldhagen's day is spent working in a building originally given to Harvard as a tribute to German culture. His office is in the Center for European Studies, a grand, neo-Renaissance villa. There, he writes under a self-portrait of the artist Felix Nussbaum, a Belgian Jew killed in Auschwitz in 1944. As Mr. Goldhagen works, Mr. Nussbaum stares out of the frame, haunted, sallow, furtively displaying his Jewish identity card. In August, Mr. Goldhagen's book will be published in Germany. "I hope the reaction is based on the veracity of the book," he said. "My account raises difficult issues that Germans need to address." He calls his thesis "radical." "Everyone is ready to believe perpetrators of other mass slaughters wanted to do it," he says. "Do you know anyone who says that the Serbs didn't want to murder Muslims? Only with Germans do we say they were obedient to authority. There is a reluctance to believe that people who are core members of Western civilization would do such a thing." What, then, does his book say about modern Germany? "Germany is a very changed country," he replied. "After 1949, it was against the law to make an anti-Semitic statement. It's very hard for an individual to maintain views the whole world is saying are wrong. Germany is the great success story of the post-war period. The Germans have remade themselves into liberal democrats." Mr. Goldhagen smiled, and gave a small shrug. "They're like us," he said. Return to the Books Home Page

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German Historians versus Goldhagen

Avraham barkai.

  • Daniel Jonah Goldhagen, Hitler's Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1996) (Goldhagen, Hitler’s Willing Executioners ).
  • Report by Maria Mitchell and Peter Caldwell, list H-GERMAN (Dan Rogers, editor), April 11, 1996 (international discussion group in the Internet).
  • Hitlers willige Vollstrecker. Ganz gewöhnliche Deutsche und der Holocaust , Aus dem Englischen von Klaus Kochmann (Berlin: Siedler Verlag, 1996).
  • Fritz Fischer, Griff nach der Weltmacht. Die Kriegszielpolitik des kaiserlichen Deutschlands 1914/18 (Düsseldorf: Droste Verlag, 1961).
  • See: " Historikerstreit ." Die Dokumentation der Kontroverse um die Einzigartigkeit der nationalsozialistischen Judenvernichtung (München: Piper, 1987); Richard J. Evans, In Hitler's Shadow , West German Historians and the Attempt to Escape from the Nazi Past (New York: Pantheon Books, 1989).
  • Volker Ullrich, "Hitlers willige Mordgesellen," Die Zeit, April 12, 1996; reprinted in Julius H. Schoeps, ed., Ein Volk von Mördern? Dokumentation zur Goldhagen — Kontroverse um die Rolle der Deutschen im Holocaust (Hamburg: Hoffman & Campe, 1996) (Schoeps). Some of the articles were apparently edited by their authors prior to their publication in the collection compiled by Schoeps. The passages quoted here are from the edited version, Schoeps, pp. 55ff.
  • Frank Schirrmacher, "Hitlers Code," Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung , April 15, 1996, in Schoeps, p. 105.
  • Frankfurter Rundschau , April 12, 1996.
  • Eberhard Jäckel, "Einfach ein schlechtes Buch," Die Zeit , May 17, 1996, in Schoeps, pp. 187-192.
  • Goldhagen, Hitler’s Willing Executioners , p. 9.
  • Wolfgang Scheffler, "Ein Rückschritt in der Holocaustforschung," Der Tagesspiel , Berlin, September 3, 1996. The quotation in the following paragraph is from this source.
  • Notable examples of this approach are Martin Broszat, Der Staat Hitlers: Grundlegung und Entwicklung seiner inneren Verrfassung (München: Deutsche Taschenbuch Verlag, 1969), and Hans Mommsen, Beamtentum im Dritten Reich (Stuttgart: Deutsche Verlags Anstalt, 1966).
  • See the pioneering study by Adam, which is still frequently quoted, Uwe Dietrich Adam, Judenpolitik im Dritten Reich (Düsseldorf: Droste Verlag, 1972).
  • Monika Richarz, "Luftaufnahme--oder die Schwierigkeiten der Heimatforscher mit der jüdischen Geschichte," Babylon, Beiträge zur jüdischen Gegenwart , 8/1991, p. 30.
  • Norbert Frei, "Ein Volk von 'Endlösern'?". Süddeutsche Zeitung , April 13/14, 1996, in Schoeps, pp. 93-98.
  • Ingrid Gilcher-Holtey, "Die Mentalität der Täter," Die Zeit , June 7, 1996, in Schoeps, pp. 210-213.
  • Hans Mommsen, "Schuld der Gleichgültigen," Süddeutsche Zeitung , July 20, 1996.
  • Idem, "Im Räderwerk," Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung , September 7, 1996. Needless to say, Mommsen is referring to Hannah Arendt's book Eichmann in Jerusalem, A Report on the Banality of Evil (New York: Viking, 1963). See the German translation with an extensive, if somewhat critical, preface by Mommsen: H. Arendt, Eichmann in Jerusalem. Ein Bericht von der Banalität des Bö sen , Mit einem einleitenden Essay von Hans Mommsen (München: Piper, 1986).
  • Mathias Bröckers, "Das Böse ist niemals banal," Tageszeitung , September 10, 1996.
  • Hans Mommsen, "Die dünne Patina der Zivilisation," Die Zeit , August 30, 1996.
  • See Avraham Barkai, "Regierungsmechanismen im Dritten Reich und die 'Genesis der Endlösung'," Jahrbuch des Instituts für deutsche Geschichte , XIV, Tel Aviv (1985), pp. 371-384, especially p. 379f. Idem, “The Führer State: Myth and Reality," Studies in Contemporary Jewry II (1986), pp. 291-298.
  • "Wenn die Dinge so einfach lägen..." Berliner Zeitung , July 24, 1996.
  • In the interview of September 7, 1996 (see note 19 above).
  • Volker Ullrich, "Goldhagen und die Deutschen," Die Zeit , September 13, 1996 (summary report on Goldhagen's lecture tour in Germany).
  • Walter Manoschek, "Der Judenmord als Gemeinschaftsunternehmen," Profil , 18, April 29, 1996, in Schoeps, pp. 155-159. The Volksstrum were units of older soldiers, past conscription age, who were drafted during the last months of the war and served in Germany.
  • Ulrich Herbert, Best. Biographische Studien uber Radikalismus, Weltanschauung und Vernunft (Bonn: Dietz, 1996).
  • Idem, "Die richtige Frage," Die Zeit , June 14, 1996. The quoted passage is from the expanded version in Schoeps, pp. 214-224.
  • Hans-Ulrich Wehler, "Wie ein Stachel im Fleich," Die Zeit , May 14, 1996. The quoted passage is from the expanded version in Schoeps, pp. 193-209.
  • See note 25 above. Unless otherwise indicated, the passages quoted below are from the same source.
  • Charlotte Wiedemann, "Im Land der Täter," Die Woche nr. 38, September 13, 1996.
  • Gunter Hofmann, "Die Welt ist, wie sie ist," Die Zeit , September 27, 1996 (all the passages quoted below are from this article).
  • Josef Joffe, "Das Goldhagen-Phänomen," Süddeutsche Zeitung , September 11, 1996.
  • Jürgen Habermas, “Geschichte ist ein Teil von uns. Warum ein ‘Demokrtiepreis’ für Daniel J. Goldhagen? Eine Laudatio,” Die Zeit nr. 12, March 14, 1997.

Few debates among professional historians have provoked as much agitation as has the controversy touched off by Daniel Goldhagen's book 1  immediately after its publication early in 1996. The debate between historians got off to an early start in the United States, where intense media coverage and, in particular, the symposium held in early April at the Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C., brought the story to public attention. The symposium participants were treated to appearances by several of the world's most eminent Holocaust scholars, including Konrad Kwiet of Australia, Christopher Browning and Richard Breitman of the United States, Hans Heinrich Wilhelm of Germany, and Yehuda Bauer of Israel. Although this article does not deal with the debate in the United States, the summary prefacing the report on the symposium and circulated on the Internet a few days after its conclusion, remains pertinent to our topic: ``The symposium ... shed much light on the gap between academic history and popular history and the passions with which the Holocaust is inevitably debated. The audience on the whole supported Goldhagen and reacted sharply to his critics.’’ 2

The controversy in Germany, which began even before the German translation of the book was released in September 1996, 3  developed into a highly-charged dispute. The opening salvo was fired by the prestigious Hamburg-based weekly Die Zeit , which boasts a circulation of nearly 500,000. The editor of the political-literature section set the tone for the discussion by asserting that "great historical debates are always conceived in provocation." Such was the case with Fritz Fischer's book, which aroused the ire of conservative historians in the early 1960s by contending that German statesmen and military commanders were responsible for the outbreak of World War I. 4  Another comparable event was the "historians' controversy" inspired by the letter to the editor of Ernst Nolte and the ensuing reply by Jörgen Habermas: 5

“Now, ten years later, the signal has been given for the second, even more acrimonious, historians' debate...Despite all the arguments advanced [against Goldhagen's theses] this is an important book that merits discussion...Once the ceremonies marking the fiftieth anniversary of the end of the war were over, many in our country seemed assured that at long last we had managed to leave behind th[is] painful subject and, free of the burden, we could now give ourselves up to new "normalcy." But a brilliant scholar from Harvard has now come forth to tell us that a long time will pass before we could disengage ourselves from the most harrowing chapter of our history.” 6

Authors of the initial, irate reactions in the German press scoffed at the claim about the importance of the book and the need for its public discussion. At least in one respect, however, at the time of this writing, there emerges considerable resemblance between the "historians' controversy" then and the current furor over Goldhagen's book: both debates took place in the public mass media, in daily and weekly newspapers with mass circulation, as well as— even more than ten years ago— on radio and TV, rather than on the pages of scholarly historical periodicals. However, today, the journalists' and columnists’ share of the limelight is considerably greater than it was in 1986- 87.

In fact, the initial press reports were outspokenly dismissive; employing at times quite "un-diplomatic" language, to put it mildly. The coeditor of the respected conservative Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, for example, minced no words when he wrote that "there is nothing new in all this," and expressed astonishment at "the chutzpah" (die chuzpe, in the original) with which Goldhagen chose to ignore "the abundance of findings [available] in the humanities scholarship." 7  Frankfurter Rundschau, the "competitor from the left" of the Zeitung, was even more frank: "Only very seldom does the question of what is truly new [in Goldhagen's book — A.B.] appear in the debates held in the U.S., because more often than not the discussion goes on between Jewish non-historians, in other words journalists and columnists, and themselves." 8

Soon it became clear, however, that the attempts to silence the debate on Goldhagen's book at the early stage through such peremptory arguments had failed. Since the appearance of the initially dismissive articles, the German press has been flooded with responses penned by historians, political scientists, and ordinary readers. Goldhagen's visit to Germany in early September 1996 turned into an immensely successful promotion tour for his book, which, at the time of this writing, has sold well over 100,000 copies. For a full week the German mass media gave full coverage of his appearances before audiences of thousands in various cities throughout the country. His debates with key figures of German historical scholarship were broadcast on television, with most commentators agreeing that the visit had become a "triumphal parade." After his departure the media continued to dwell on what meanwhile had been dubbed the "Goldhagen phenomenon." Heated debates no longer involved the book's contents and arguments but began to focus instead on the significance of the German public's reaction to its various layers and to the author himself. This subject, however, important as it may be, transcends the confines of this article, as the main concern here is the views of German historians as they were expressed during the debate in their country.

Summary Dismissal

At first, German historians, too, tended to brush aside Goldhagen's book as the unfledged, pretentious product of a young Ph.D. student, who hardly merited the title and certainly not the distinction awarded to him by his alma mater. Eberhard Jäckel, one of the most distinguished scholars of Nazi ideology and the Nazi regime, penned a single small article entitled “Simply a Bad Book,” and, at the time of this writing, has not returned to the fray. Jäckel dismissed the book outright, primarily because of the overblown conclusion portraying all Germans as inveterate Antisemitic "eliminationists":

“It is always the Germans that are being talked about...if not all of them then at least the vast majority. It was they who wanted it to happen and therefore ended up with mass murder...Goldhagen repeatedly insists that the Germans and their Antisemitism, both before and during the Nazi period, must be "studied anthropologically." In so doing he lays bare the cornerstone of his approach. The term anthropology may mean different things. [Among others] it is also part of the biological science investigating inherited, not acquired, traits of human beings. There from sprouted the race theory which, in turn, spawned the racist Antisemitism. Goldhagen treads perilously close to this biological collectivism.” 9

Having identified the principal flaw in the reviewed author's approach, Jäckel proceeded to take Goldhagen to task for the self-assertive and imperious attitude shown in his book toward historians and other scholars who preceded him, his disregard and selective use of their work, and his practice of "harvesting from [scholarly] literature (mainly the outdated) that which suits his purposes." Although this article is not meant as yet another review of Goldhagen's book or his defense against his critics (whose views are discussed below), Jäckel's two principal objections deserve broader treatment since they appear frequently in review articles— although often more bluntly phrased. Our discussion shall be informed by a close reading of Goldhagen's book, both the original and the German translation.

Accusations of arrogance and condescension are not baseless. Beginning with the “Introduction” and throughout the book's chapters, the reader cannot but be struck by the brash, even impudent, formulations which do, in fact, lighten the critics' labors. The spectacle of a young Ph.D. student taking prominent historians to task for having missed the point is hardly a trivial matter, particularly if we bear in mind that the historians in question have devoted many years of their lives to the study of the Holocaust and the Nazi regime and have attained a level of undisputed accomplishment in this field. In fact, Goldhagen goes so far as to proclaim his book a necessary revision of all previous scholarship: "Explaining why the Holocaust occurred requires a radical revision of what has until now been written. This book is that revision." 10

Passages like these are, in fact, grist for the mill of the author's critics. They, in turn, reproach him for drawing on secondary literature, especially in his Ph.D. dissertation, instead, as befitting a historian, of bringing to light new documentary evidence and other primary sources. Other critics, however, admit that this critique is unfair. Jäckel himself, history professor at the University of Stuttgart, reveals that Goldhagen invested a great deal of time and effort in combing the archives in the neighboring town of Ludwigsburg for the files of trials that had taken place in the Federal Republic of Germany. Jäckel met with him frequently, guiding and encouraging the young scholar. Those familiar with the book cannot but admit that its author drew extensively on postwar interrogation protocols and trial proceedings in order to assemble most of his documentation on atrocities and killings perpetrated by German police squads in occupied areas, in labor camps, and during the death marches close to the end of the war. Some critics do, in fact, concede that these chapters break new ground in the research literature and bring to light hitherto unknown information. But, as we shall try to show below, the critics remain divided over the significance of detailed accounts of atrocities and their contribution to our understanding of historical events.

Arguably, the person who can best appreciate the value of this kind of primary source work is Wolfgang Scheffler, one of the first German historians to publish articles and a teacher's guide with a collection of documents on the Holocaust, with a circulation of tens of thousands of copies. For over thirty years, Scheffler gave testimony as an expert witness at trials of Nazi criminals in Germany and other countries. In a blistering review of Goldhagen's book, he describes himself as:

“one who has spent almost his entire working life studying files of German prosecuting agencies in order to uncover the violent crimes of NationalSocialists, and [a person] who has long since been aware of the fact that often a huge chasm yawns between the knowledge generated by these documents and the status of published research findings.”  11

Scheffler concedes that Goldhagen has studied the files, but castigates him for refusing to try

"to accommodate his thought to the conditions of the period [under study] and understand them... Instead he follows his prejudices and therefore does not understand a thing...He mines the files, employing the principle that 'the main thing is that it fits my central arguments.’”

Other arguments by Scheffler amount to a summary dismissal of the book, although he promises to confront Goldhagen's findings in scholarly literature. The outspoken and disparaging tone of Scheffler's argument indicates a lingering sense of insult. This probably also accounts for the complete silence, at least at the time of this article, on the part of some of the most prominent historians of the Nazi regime and the Holocaust, such as Hermann Graml and Wolfgang Benz.

The Historiographical Generation Gap

Most German historians studying Nazism and the Holocaust, however, went beyond a one-time, peremptory dismissal of the book. Even those who wrote matter-of-fact reviews, sometimes favorable in parts, also take issue with the presumptuous manner in which Goldhagen presents his findings and conclusions. These reviewers nonetheless find them worthy of serious consideration. To this end the editor of Die Zeit did, in fact, avail himself of his declared mission; namely, to provoke extensive and thorough debate on the central question posed by Goldhagen: What prompted tens of thousands of "completely ordinary Germans" to commit ghastly atrocities with cruelty, even murderous lust, while millions of others became aware of the atrocities while maintaining a silence that signified consent?

Most participants in the debate admit, at least in part, that German scholars on the whole suppressed this question until the early 1980s, and even afterward failed to address it with due seriousness. In fact, during the two decades after the war, no historical Holocaust research worthy of its name had been carried out in Germany. Veteran German historians, including some Jewish scholars who returned from exile, chose either to preoccupy themselves with manifestations of resistance during the Nazi era that had recently ended or to engage in bland apologetics about the "German catastrophe." Only when the younger generation of historians, most of them born in the 1930s, began filling academic posts vacated by their older colleagues, did studies dealing with the persecution of German Jews and the Holocaust of European Jewry begin coming out. From then on their research and findings have become a permanent and important fixture on the landscape of the international historiography of the Nazi regime and the Holocaust.

Until recently, however, the dominant, though by no means exclusive, distinguishing characteristic of German scholarship has been its focus on describing the institutions and patterns of bureaucratic administration of the Third Reich. 12  A partial explanation for this trend can be found in the fact that most German historians who addressed these issues during this period advocated the approach of the influential school of "social history" centered at the University of Bielefeld. The so-called "functionalist" or "structuralist" approach to the question of the "Final Solution" fits in well with the general perspective of this school, even though it is not necessarily derived from it.

The influence of the "social history" approach is clearly felt in the first studies about the persecution and destruction of German Jews dating from this period, particularly in the preoccupation with the legal system and antiJewish decrees and the struggles surrounding these legal measures within the regime's ruling circles and the Nazi party. 13  Later, this body of historical work was supplemented by prolific "remembrance literature," which dealt with Jews as objects and victims of persecution, particularly on a local and regional level. The number of publications belonging to this genre of historical writing has reached several thousand and continues to grow.

One should not underestimate the good intentions of locally based individual researchers and "research groups" who were prompted to erect textual memorials and recreate the final years of Jewish communities that had lived and perished in their cities and towns. At the same time, however, only a handful of these commemorative publications measure up to the standards of historical scholarship.

Monika Richarz, the German historian and an authority on the history of German Jews, addressed the problems besetting this particular genre:

“Efforts by local researchers and the institutions which support them do not guarantee full and complete uncovering of all the aspects of the NationalSocialist past of their localities. On the contrary: the political tendency of the authors to transpose the issue from the history of criminal perpetrators to that of the victims is quite manifest. They chronicle in detail the sequence of persecution of local Jews and go to great lengths to rescue from oblivion the names of all the deportees to death [camps]. Names of local perpetrators, however, are not mentioned. There were crimes but no one committed them— criminal acts without criminals...Shedding light on the victims makes it possible to cast a shadow over the criminals. In this fashion Jewish history is turned into a fig leaf." 14

Only recently can one discern a certain shift of orientation in the writings of younger German historians, most of them born in the 1950s. In the area of local history, too, studies have come out which ask questions about the deeds of the oppressors and those who benefited from the persecution and dispossession of local Jews. Apparently the generation of grandchildren is less inhibited than that of their parents, and they feel less restrained from scrutinizing the deeds of the German population as a whole during the Nazi reign. Evidence of this change of heart is apparent in the debate on Goldhagen's book, not only in the pages of scholarly journals but in the public domain as well.

The Hub of the Debate: Antisemitism and the Holocaust

Initially, historians of the younger generation, too, tended to belittle the scholarly significance of the book, believing that it could be brushed aside with relative ease. Nonetheless, even early on some of them sensed the magnitude of the moral and scientific challenges it posed. Due to the confines of this paper, we cannot possibly encompass all the voices in the debate that ensued in the German press for more than four months prior to the publication of the German translation; only the better known names will be discussed.

Norbert Frei, born in 1955, and recently appointed professor of history at the University of Bochum, spoke disparagingly of the "sonorous theses" that Goldhagen needed in order "to find an audience in the over-competitive media market of the Nineties" and of the sales' pitch of his American publisher, which clamorously extolled "Goldhagen's provocation." At the same time, however, Frei places in sharp focus the key issue of the controversy:

“Daniel Goldhagen's comprehensive account is basically framed by a single idea which he pursues with great vigor, sometimes by means of an alarmingly hermetic argumentation: all studies of Nazi Jewish policies are faulted with striking disregard for the powerful impact of an Antisemitic world-view.” 15

Having taken Goldhagen to task for what he believes is "the argument on the separate German path (Sonderweg) brought to the extreme," Frei proceeds to take stock of the importance of the chapters describing the murder spree of police squads and the horrors of labor camps and death marches. In so doing he ties the fear of denunciation that enveloped Jews hiding in Germany and those who assisted them "to that 'genocidal mentality’ ( Mentalität des Genozids ) rightly described by Goldhagen as widely spread in Germany— certainly more widespread than claimed by the historiography that tried to suppress the level of identification with Hitler and the Nazi regime." 16

Frei was among the first who responded to the initiative of Die Zeit' s editor, and his brief article steered the discussion mainly to the political-public track. Other historians, writing in Die Zeit and other newspapers, devoted much more space to rebuttals of arguments put forward by Goldhagen in the first chapters of his book. These chapters were designed to substantiate the thesis on "eliminationist Antisemitism" and trace its historical development since the nineteenth century, not only as a continuation of the traditional Christian-Jew hatred, but as a German development sui generis .

Criticism of the first section of the book is by no means a difficult task: these “pre-historical” chapters are evidently, also in the opinion of this author, the weakest of the lot, and the critics are right in pointing out that they are based primarily on dated, secondary research literature on the history of Antisemitism. Goldhagen's demurrals notwithstanding, the analogy drawn by his critics to the view "from Martin Luther to Hitler," so popular in the 1930s and 1940s, is not without foundation. Goldhagen's protestation against these allegations, in which he claims that he does not argue in favor of a German Antisemitic "national character" but deals instead with the "mentality" of the Germans and its evolution in the period in question, remains unconvincing. After all, how does the existence of such a "mentality," capable of remaining dormant for decades only to burst forth unbridled as soon as the Antisemitic, racist regime removes the conventional moral barriers, fit in with the blanket "certificate of purity" granted by Goldhagen to democratic Germans "cleansed of Nazism" in our day?

Evidently, Goldhagen had need for these theoretical-historical chapters to demonstrate the existence of a singular German Antisemitism. He designates it "eliminationist Antisemitism," but fails, as his critics are correct in pointing out, to subject it to the test of comparison with Antisemitism in other countries, even though he is aware of its existence elsewhere. The logic of his inquiry demands this sleight of hand, since it aims at explaining the savagery of "ordinary Germans" in committing acts of mass murder.

There is no need, in fact, to embark on a long historical voyage into the past in order to substantiate the book's central thesis whereby "Hitler's willing executioners," those tens, or hundreds of thousands of "ordinary Germans" who perpetrated atrocities "in the field" were driven by Antisemitism. The debate over this key issue often ignores the difference between the concepts and research methods used by Goldhagen as a sociologist and political scientist, on the one hand, and those employed as tools of the trade by the historians who debate him, on the other hand. The latter charge him with failing to corroborate his thesis and of shifting the burden of proof to those who contest it. This argument, however, overlooks the difference between historians’ research methods and those employed by sociologists, anthropologists, and political scientists. By Goldhagen's methodological standards, the massive documentary material generated by the trials of war criminals constitutes a "random representative sample" of the entire population of "ordinary Germans." This allows him to construct a general "cognitive model" and conclude that all, or a "vast majority" of "ordinary Germans" succumbed to Antisemitic views and emotions. This extrapolation, in turn, enables him to argue that they would have behaved similarly to the actual perpetrators had they been given the assignment of mass murder. Arguably, the definition of the sample as "representative" remains controversial, but, from his intrinsic methodological standpoint, Goldhagen can legitimately claim that no further proof is needed. Those who reject this claim are, in his view, duty-bound to come up with another "sample" and a different "model."

Another German historian who dwelled on "the methodological challenge...that Goldhagen's book poses before the science of history" is Ingrid Gilcher-Holtey, born in 1952, professor of history at the University of Bielefeld. Having disputed Jäckel's peremptory dismissal of the book as "a relapse into the research situation of the fifties, the most primitive of stereotypes," she condemns professional historians for refusing to try to deal earnestly with what she considers Goldhagen's innovative methods:

“The author seeks to explain the Holocaust by uncovering the cognitive and mental make-up (Struktur) of the murderers. What kept them going? What permitted them to commit mass murder? Why and how was it possible to do away with the prohibition of murder in Christian ethics?...The anthropological perspective employed by the author to explore the subject of his study is informed by the explanatory logic of the history of mentality which until now has not been often put to use in the research on Antisemitism and NationalSocialism. Undoubtedly, the world-view and motivations of Nazi functionaries have been scrutinized, but the cognitive and mental make-up of "ordinary Germans" employed by the extermination machinery has not been systematically studied...From this point of view the underlying cause that forms the core of Goldhagen's discussion is a novel way of posing the question and his arguments force [us] to deal with the insufficiently explored dimension of the explanation of actual murder of Jews and its acceptance.” 17

Despite Gilcher-Holtey's assertion that "the author does not look for a new explanation of the political process that culminated in the destruction of the Jews and the industrialization of mass murder, and is not interested in making a new contribution to the argument between 'intentionalists' and 'structuralists'," it is a fact that leading adherents of the "functionalist" school in Germany felt themselves under attack and formed the spearhead of the campaign against Goldhagen and his book. The most prominent among them is the veteran historian Hans Mommsen of the University of Bochum, a highly accomplished scholar who has published numerous studies dealing with the rise of the Nazi regime and how it functioned. Mommsen is regarded as a pillar of German Holocaust scholarship.

Of course, opposition on the part of "functionalists" is not a coincidence. In the debate on the "genesis of the Final Solution" Mommsen and his colleagues developed the theory of "cumulative radicalism" to account for the sequence of the persecution of the Jews. It was the internal, selfpropelled dynamics of "cumulative radicalism" that led to the mass murder without any advance planning or explicit orders from on high. According to this explanation, what drove the process forward was the technocratic striving for efficiency on the part of state and Nazi-party machines, which competed among themselves for the favors and appreciation of their bosses, foremost Hitler, for their contribution to the solution of "the Jewish question." The victories and conquests of the first years of the war brought ever larger numbers of Jews under Nazi rule, thus creating the conditions that facilitated mass murder. In this explanatory scheme, very little importance, if any, was attached to ideological fanaticism, particularly the Antisemitism of hardworking and determined bureaucrats.

Three months after the debate was launched by Die Zeit , Mommsen responded in a long article, 18  a declaration of principles of sorts, in which he attached much greater importance to the Antisemitic ideology than he did in his writings in the 1970s and 1980s. Taking note of the tremendous impact made by Goldhagen's book, "first of all in the United States but also in other Western countries," Mommsen drew the following conclusion:

“We realize that the recurring moral impact of the German murder of Jews does not slacken even after many decades. Regardless of our judgment of the book, which in many respects lags behind the latest advances in research, it nonetheless forces us to confront anew the question of how in a civilized country like ours destruction of millions of people, in particular Jews, was made possible without any serious attempts to halt the crime. Farsighted persons could anticipate that widespread discrimination of the Jewish population would ultimately lead to extermination by appraising the unbridled Antisemitic incitement propaganda of the regime, and the cynicism and hatred that accompanied dispossession and social ouster taking place in full view of the public...Threat of extermination had long since been staple of the lexicon of racist Antisemitism...After 1933 the Nazi regime removed the legal barriers against the threat of violence and actually began carrying it out against Jewish citizens...who, as Hannah Arendt established long ago, were turned by the unrestrained Antisemitic propaganda into outcasts (vogelfrei) in the full meaning of the term. Interestingly, Mommsen draws on Hannah Arendt once again in a later interview in which he declares himself "committed to the complex interpretative matrix of Hannah Arendt's thesis on the banality of evil which, it seems, remains beyond the grasp of the general public, whereas Goldhagen's reduction [of it to] pure Antisemitism presents a relatively trouble-free solution." 19

The renewed popularity of Hannah Arendt in Germany transcends the confines of this paper, and perhaps merits separate analysis. We may only hazard a guess that the political context of a "reunited" Germany, in which "victims of the violent regimes" of Nazism and of "the German Democratic Republic" (GDR) are commemorated in the same breath, did play a part here, just as the political context of the Cold War in the 1950s and 1960s lent credence to Arendt's theory of "totalitarianism," which became quite popular. In any event, Arendt's controversial account of Eichmann's trial certainly fits the mold of the "functionalist" thesis, which lays the blame for mass murder at the door of middle-level bureaucrats about whom we cannot even be certain that they "obeyed orders." One of the left-wing commentators on the Goldhagen controversy was frank when addressing this point:

“In 1964 Hannah Arendt supplied the required explanation [in the form] of her theory of "banality of evil"...The responsibility for Nazi terror did not lie with the abject character and morals of the Germans, but with their having been enlisted in the totalitarian bureaucratic apparatus. Stereotypes of the "desk criminal" who signs with equanimity orders of murder and deportation, and of a "book-keeper mentality" of underlings ensconced in their routines— these stereotypes made a career as explanatory models and in this fashion the evildoer and the ugly German disappeared...This explains the lasting popularity of Arendt's thesis in Germany; elsewhere hardly anyone took this banality nonsense seriously because evil is never banal. 20

In another article Mommsen acknowledges Goldhagen's achievement in that he "assiduously dwelt on [the fact that] implementation of the Holocaust was the work of a very large group of people and that the secret was not sufficiently well-kept." At the same time, however, Mommsen insists that a "majority of the population either did not know about the crimes or could not surmise its full scope." 21

“Therefore Goldhagen's attempt to draw conclusions from the large number of perpetrators of the Holocaust [and extrapolate] them to the entire nation, accusing it of informed consent; is of little help from the methodological point of view...It is more logical to analyze the intermediate stratum, in other words, the mentality of "desk criminals" molded by bureaucratic perfectionism...The real stimulus for the Holocaust originated with the fanatical anti-Semites who constituted a minority of 20 percent at the most even within the party. It was they who found prominent advocates in [the persons of] Hitler, Himmler, and, generally, Nazi satraps…The minority of racist, fanatical anti-Semites...had always refueled the “cumulative radicalization” that characterized the regime. The method of differential analysis employed by recent Holocaust research posits Antisemitism as a necessary but by no means sufficient condition for implementing "the final solution."...The institutional structure of compartmentalization, designed to achieve permanent rivalry...set a course which inevitably terminated in the extermination of the Jews. For this reason the bureaucratic administrative factor was of at least equal significance as the mounting hatred of Jews within Nazi leadership." 22

Attentive readers cannot but notice quite a few differences, at least in emphasis, in these formulations by Mommsen, as compared to his articles published in the early 1980s, where one would look in vain for arguments such as "Antisemitism was a necessary but not sufficient condition" for the destruction of the Jew. 23  The functionalist thesis downplayed the importance of the ideological factor, including Antisemitism. However, recent studies by young historians, mostly German, have uncovered evidence of widespread acquiescence among Germans, which grew in scope, paralleling the economic and political achievements of the regime. Popular support also involved ideological identification, reinforced by a sophisticated system of indoctrination whose reach extended even to the very young.

As already noted, the historians of the "generation of grandchildren" have shown greater boldness in asking basic questions. Their research brought to light evidence of popular acceptance of persecution and deportation of Jews, and documented the benefits derived by "ordinary Germans" from the institutionalized plunder known as "Aryanization." The part played by the German army in extermination, both on the command level and operationally, has also been established by recent research. It is not surprising then, that Goldhagen's book provoked little emotional or substantive resistance among these historians.

A good illustration of this intergenerational difference of approach is exemplified in the debate between Mommsen and Frei in a joint newspaper interview. 24  Mommsen rejects the charges against

“...the functionalists of allegedly having forgotten the part played by Antisemitism. Of course, this self-evident issue was not always referred to in detail as a preliminary condition, but now a mistaken impression has gained hold that Antisemitism did not receive historical treatment.”

Frei concedes that "the Holocaust research of the last two decades should have paid a little more attention to the aspect of Antisemitism," though he rejects Goldhagen's simplistic explanation whereby "Jews were murdered because Antisemitic Germans wanted to murder them."

More significant differences between the two interlocutors emerge with respect to the issue of detailed descriptions of atrocities. Mommsen refers to Goldhagen's efforts in this area as

“...voyeurism. In contrast to us, Mr. Goldhagen does not flinch from dwelling at length on acts of sadism as they occurred, in order to work up psychological resistance to Nazi crimes. We, however, learned that this effect provokes everything— except rational political and moral confrontation with history. For this reason historians have so far refrained from this voyeurism...If everything is described as Goldhagen does, it may evoke a counter-reaction of habituation to violence in politics.” 25

Frei responded as follows:

“It can also be argued that we, the historians, missed something here...Don't you think that the question of how to describe the crimes is, among others, a problem of generations?...In the early sixties [the historians] deliberately opted for the model of the level-headed approach of the legal system. I do believe that this approach also amounted to an attempt by scholars to protect themselves from horrible things. For researchers in those days, [persons] who had experienced National-Socialism as young people, this self-protection was important. More important than it is for historians born in the 1960s.” 26

In the same interview, Hans Mommsen brushed aside Frei's postulation that scholars provide "as direct an account as possible of gruesome details" and, in a later interview in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, he expressly spoke against those who claim that the time has come 

“...to open the Pandora’s box...because the history of the Second World War— not only from the German point of view— inspires so much horror that normal people will turn away from it. One can go on expanding [the list of] acts of savagery that Goldhagen describes...also in other contexts...in which others than Jews were murdered...even though these savage and ghastly acts, which no one doubts, did not constitute the singular feature of these crimes...In National-Socialism we are dealing with a new form of mass murder and violence against people who lived and thought differently, a form in which the factors of spontaneous emotions were not as useful as the bureaucratic efficiency and perfectionism in execution. After all, the key perpetrators, such as Heydrich, Eichmann or Himmler, did not personally aim the rifles and they are not the type of criminals that the German public, following Goldhagen, appears to have preferred to preoccupy itself with.” 27

During a public debate with Goldhagen in the Jewish Community Center in Berlin on September 6, 1996, Jürgen Kocka also took Goldhagen to task for having shifted the focus to "primitive executions by police squads and camp guards, and during death marches," while downplaying the industrialized murder in extermination camps, "where they worked differently." Although it is true that Goldhagen did not address this topic in his book, it is also clear why Kocka's argument aroused the ire of the audience: after all, neither was the "industrialized murder" that the "functionalists" bring up as evidence to buttress their views perpetrated by impeccable "desk murderers" wearing kid gloves. This murder, too, was actually committed by a mass of Germans, assisted by local collaborators, acting with savagery at all stages, beginning with the rounding up of the Jews, assembling the deportees and packing them into transport freight cars, and culminating with the selections on the "ramp" in Auschwitz or driving them through the "green tunnel" of Treblinka.

In Kocka's view, the attraction of the book lies in the veracity of the descriptions of "the realities of daily existence of the murderers...and their acts." The German historian considers this preoccupation characteristic of, though not necessarily flattering to, "the younger generation of scholars whose depictions of atrocities approximate the aesthetics of mass media." 28

Scholars who, in recent years, have specialized in case-studies of various aspects of the Holocaust system took a less critical view of Goldhagen, even though they, too, take exception to some of his overblown premises. Walter Manoschek, born in 1957, lecturer at the University of Vienna, studies mainly the roles of the Austrians and the regular army in the destruction of Jews. Recalling the exhibition “Vernichtungskrieg. Verbrechen der Wehrmacht 1941-1944,” staged in Hamburg in 1995, he maintains that "as research gets more detailed the overall picture grows more frightening." Even more troublesome, according to Manoschek, is the fact that, as a group, the perpetrators can be said to represent a microcosm of German society, a cross section of the "German Volksgemeinschaft." As for the special part played by the Austrians, Manoschek has this to say:

“Goldhagen's mono-causal thesis on the will to extermination intrinsic to the inhabitants of Greater Germany falls short of accounting for the destruction of the Jews...Nonetheless this thesis cannot but shock us, the Austrians. For, in reality, the Antisemitic program of the Nazis before March 1938 [annexation of Austria — A.B.] did not differ from the proposals that Social-Christians had been advancing in Austria since time immemorial...The pogroms of the "Anschluss" days were "native work" which did not need instructions from German Nazi institutions. Even in early 1945, local gendarmes, together with members of the Hitlerjugend and Volkssturm men, openly murdered in the streets tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews deported to the Mauthausen concentration camp. It appears that only in this generation is it possible to deal comprehensively with the involvement of the Volksgemeinschaft in the racist extermination policy." 29

Similarly, we should consider the views of Ulrich Herbert, born in 1951, professor of history at the University of Freiburg. Herbert acquired a reputation for his studies of the exploitation of workers from occupied countries by the German war economy, and, recently, for his biography of one of the "desk murderers," which indicts their conventional portrayals as technocrats bereft of any ideological motivation. 30  Although he agrees with most of Goldhagen's critics with respect to numerous mistakes and exaggerations plaguing his book, Herbert nonetheless adds:

“All the same, the fervor and unanimity of the critics inspire a certain unease... Despite all the author’s overstatements and analytical imprecision, the book did play a part in that at long last a public debate is held on the question that has been all but forgotten in the last decades despite the fact that it forms the core of the unbelievable events, reaching to the heart of German selfunderstanding: the question of the scope and prevalence of Jew-hatred in the German population and the importance of Antisemitism in initiating and perpetrating the murder of millions.”

Having outlined his views on the link between widespread anti Semitism and the Holocaust of European Jewry, Herbert draws the following conclusion:

Let us not be mistaken: murder of the Jewish people was certainly not carried out by "all the Germans" and did not feed on "eliminationist Antisemitism" allegedly deeply embedded in German culture for hundreds of years. A considerable proportion of the German population, however, held extreme views, of varying intensity, against the Jews...The number of Germans who were active accomplices in murders may have not reached millions, but we must presume it did encompass tens of thousands...These linkages will preoccupy us Germans for a long time to come, past all the emotionallycharged debates on current topics.”  31

By and large, the responses by younger historians follow the pattern of matter-of-fact criticisms of some central theses presented by Goldhagen, and a rejection of the preemptive dismissal of his book by other critics, while stressing the importance of the questions he asks both for the specialist and, above all, for the German public. This type of response, however, was by no means confined to the younger people. One of the most eminent representatives of the older generation of historians, Hans Ulrich-Wehler, aged sixty-six and the founder and uncontested leader of the Bielefeld school, responded in a similar vein. Noting the German press's criticism of "the enthusiastic applause of American journalists and polemicists," Wehler advises his compatriots to take note of the beam in their own eyes. 32

The echo reverberating in the thicket of the German press is definitely not a cause for satisfaction. With irritating speed and spectacular self-assurance, which often helps to conceal ignorance on matters of substance, a consensual defensive reaction (Abwehrkonsens) [against the book] has set in. Again and again we are being told that the book doesn't offer any new empirical findings;...and, since interpretation is "a pure folly, of course"..., [we] can calm down and move on to other matters on the current agenda. While the first part of this description remains spectacularly incomplete, misleading, even not true, the second one merits detailed discussion... The public impact [of the book] is there for all to see and it acts as a prickle goading [us] to face anew the most painful questions which are far from being thought through. All the justiFfied counter-arguments notwithstanding, [we] should have given it our blessing as a welcome outcome, rather than spontaneously erecting barriers against any substantive debate. In this country we also should have acted with greater tolerance and accorded respect to the manifestly moral outrage of the author.

Wehler then proceeds to enumerate "six reasons...to take seriously parts of Goldhagen's empirical analysis and several of the questions he asks." He draws attention to the fact that, among thousands of dissertations in departments of history at German universities, conspicuously absent are monographic studies of acts committed "in the field" by policemen during mass murders, of atrocities in labor camps and during death marches at the end of the war.

“In the antechambers of the infernal kingdom of gas chambers and liquidation operations there stretched an endless landscape of daily savagery against women, children, the elderly and the defenseless...Is not Goldhagen justified in insisting that this savagery, that emerged suddenly as a mass phenomenon [and lasted] years among sons of a formerly civilized people, still stands in need of explanation?... Instead of taking under scrutiny the "banality of evil" of the typical bureaucrats of "the final solution," such as Eichmann and his ilk, [Goldhagen set out] to present a more visual picture of hundreds of thousands of individual murderers...Can such an intention be casually brushed aside? Both methodologically and empirically this is a Herculean task, but definitely a legitimate one all the same. The same goes for the question which has been continuously debated since the 1930s, namely, how deeply was Antisemitism rooted in the mentality of millions of Germans, and did it facilitate and make possible the transition...to the general final solution...Not one from among the enviably omniscients makes it easier for himself by dismissing the entire book out of hand, from the heights of adequate expert knowledge, but possibly also in the service of latent defense mechanisms designed to finally distance ourselves from the horrors of our past.”

Having said this, however, Wehler launches a devastating attack against the theoretical underpinnings of Goldhagen's book, particularly those concerning the singularly German "eliminationist Antisemitism," the absence of comparative analysis with Antisemitism among other nations, his failure to address the political factors behind the Nazi rise to power, and, finally, the "certificate of purity" granted by Goldhagen to the postwar German Federal Republic and its residents.

The Political — Public Debate

As the sample of responses quoted above indicates, the initial tendency of several journalists and a number of reputable historians to sweep Goldhangen's book under the rug immediately upon its publication in English ran aground. To those who still harbored doubts, the political-public nature of the debate became clear in early September 1996 at the latest, during Goldhagen's tour of the country close on the heels of the publication of the German translation. To the surprise of many, it emerged that preoccupation with the questions raised by the author was hardly confined to "American columnists, most of them Jewish," and that sensitivity to these questions existed in their country, too— a sensitivity that could not be attributed to "antiGerman political resentment."

The thick and expensive volume of the German translation of the book sold nearly 100,000 copies in the first week, and the printing presses could not cope with the demand for new editions. Four public panel discussions were held before packed houses; the last discussion took place in the Munich symphony hall to a sold-out crowd of 2,500, with a large number of would-be listeners left outside.

Beginning with his first panel appearance in Hamburg, Goldhagen met with a warm welcome and profuse expressions of assent— none of which made the task of the historians debating him any easier. The numerous newspapers that covered the debates, both the public ones and the discussion panels broadcast by TV networks, were equally sympathetic. The subtitles of the article in Die Zeit , summing up Goldhagen's visit, dispelled any lingering doubts: "The tour (Die Tournee) has turned into triumphal procession!"; "The historians criticize...the public greets the book as a liberating factor. 33

To the surprise of the moderator and the audience, the participants in the Hamburg panel exchanged compliments and apologies, with Goldhagen casting a spell over the audience with his relaxed style of reply. Here and there he admitted that "perhaps I should have written it differently," but refused to yield on the fundamentals of his approach. In contrast, the panel discussion held the next day in the hall of the Jewish Community Center in Berlin turned into a vociferous confrontation with Hans Mommsen, backed, as mentioned above, by Jürgen Kocka. Mommsen vehemently objected to the generalizations and methodological shortcomings besetting Goldhagen's book. His colleague, however, the historian Wolfgang Wippermann, commended the author for having "contributed to the well-being of the political culture of our country" by bringing to a halt the trend toward historicization and relativization of the Holocaust and restoring the cardinal question to the center of the research agenda: Why could the Holocaust happen only in Germany and not in another country? The reporter who covered the venue commented on the stormy ovation with which the audience responded to this statement, saying:

“It has become clear this evening that as attacks by historians against Goldhagen mount, the audience's support for him grows. By assiduously insisting on personal responsibility of the perpetrators he strikes a more responsive emotional chord in the audience than do Mommsen and Kocka in their search for structures and complex political conditions.”

Sympathy toward Goldhagen was clearly in evidence also in more restricted venues such as discussions with students and scholars, as well as on the eve of his public appearance in Frankfurt. The Die Zeit reporter attributed this, in some part, to Goldhagen's personal "telegenic radiance," but primarily to the fact that,

“At long last someone speaks out here on what until now has been a kind of taboo: that the distinction between "Nazi criminals" and "normal Germans" is wrong, and that the willingness to murder millions of Jews was to be found within German society...The fact that someone says this simple truth has a liberating effect on many Germans. The fears that Goldhagen's research is liable to rekindle anti Semitic emotions [this much was hinted also by Hans Mommsen — A.B.] have turned out to be groundless.”

The article dwells briefly on Goldhagen's evening appearance in Munich; like elsewhere, the audience was solidly behind him, whereas "historians on the dais treated him with great respect, lovingly offering him suggestions for corrections, expressing only cautious criticism." The article sums up the whole visit as follows: "Not only was Goldhagen surprised and impressed by so much friendly attention and shows of sympathy...The unusual resonance [of his visit] proves that even after the reunification and celebrations of the fiftieth anniversary of the end of the war, confronting the Holocaust did not disappear from the political agenda."

No German newspaper— from large, respected dailies down to marginal weeklies and small local papers— failed to report on Goldhagen's appearances. By and large, accounts of the discussions and reactions of the audience accord with the Die Zeit coverage. Surprisingly, commentaries accompanying the reports display only minor variations. "What has happened?" asked the journalist Charlotte Wiedemann in an article summing up the tour: 34

Oddly, fifty-one years after the war a thirty-seven year old American arrives in Germany and asks: "Did the perpetrators think what they were doing was right?" He keeps asking in Hamburg, Berlin and Frankfurt, and every time a total silence sets in for a moment in the room...German professors, their hair grown white during decades of distinguished Holocaust research, argue that this is too simple a question: the persons who raises it exaggerates the importance of Antisemitism as the driving force...he lags behind recent research advances [offering] “multi-casual explanations,” overlooks the methods employed by the regime, the group pressure, the “cumulative radicalization.” But after all this the small question still hangs in the air... It is possible that the so-called Goldhagen debate is also a historians' controversy. But above all it is a discussion involving morality and responsibility... At this point it is quite clear who exactly has committed himself to the acrimonious public argument against Goldhagen: the first line consists neither of people of the right or the new right, nor the professional end-linedrawers, but, first of all, the historians from the social-liberal, even leftist camp, who thirty years ago attacked the lie of the lives of their parents. Speaking in Hamburg the historian and publicist, Goetz Aly, provided a concise description of the vacuum thus created: "I told my parents: You knew! Now, my sixteen-year-old daughter comes back from school and asks: Did grandpa take part in this? The 'no' answer is too simple." Here Aly makes a surprising statement: "We must thank Goldhagen for bringing it up to the surface." The previous historians' controversy had to do with historicization, with the vague situating of the Holocaust, with drawing the line. The elated exclamation of the Berlin historian Wolfgang Wipperman "Nolte did not win because Goldhagen came!" can be taken as an overstatement, but if only a little remains of the unease caused by the American [historian], the line will not be drawn for a long time...It appears that the only distinction that would have been denied to Goldhagen in Germany would be his Ph.D.”

The "Goldhagen Phenomenon"

I have quoted at length from two newspaper stories dealing with Goldhagen's tour in Germany because they offer us a reliable account of public reactions— so different from those of his scholarly colleagues— to his appearances and his book. To the best of this author's knowledge, the quoted passages are representative, in essence, of the coverage in most of the German mass media. After Goldhagen's return to America, both the experts and press in Germany continued to preoccupy themselves with the author and his book. Both center on the fact that despite the consensus regarding the scientifically problematic nature of the book (even those who acknowledged the significance of some of its findings admit this much), it met with such a broad public acceptance.

In late September 1996, the annual German Historians' Congress took place in Munich; like previous such venues, this one, too, was widely attended, with the program offering a smorgasbord of topics. The presiding committee rejected the proposal to hold a discussion on Goldhagen's book; one participant responded with a prank by entering Goldhagen's name on a secret ballot slip as candidate for the post of chairman of the Historians' Association. Moreover, a high proportion of the participants "voted with their feet" by crossing the street to the hall where two publishing houses assembled a discussion panel that the presiding committee refused to hold. On this occasion the provocation was delivered by Professor Moshe Zimmerman:

“He [Zimmerman — A.B.] sees himself facing "a united front of angry scholars"... even the general audience considers him an "outsider" [English word in the original — A.B.] only because of his claim that the theses of Goldhagen are being suppressed in Germany. The "experts" have failed. Having set up in Germany a "taboo zone" around Antisemitism, and having lived in the "historians' ghetto"...the "experts" turned out to be a disappointment. To this Zimmerman added a threat, saying he would duly report to his students on the historians' conference: in the course of discussion in Munich on "Wars in Modern Times" no one as much as dropped a word about the Second World War...You've been caught! Historical scholarship in Germany liberates itself from the concern over its past!“ 35

This account of the Munich discussion, together with commentary by its author, are of great interest. The confrontation between Zimmerman and his German colleagues, he felt, involved a collision of resentments "the depth of which could hardly be fathomed," and neither was the debate between German historians free of it:

“In Munich too some Historians decry [the fact that] Goldhagen's theses are staged for the [benefit of] the media, that behind him stands the American identity crisis and "racism" against Germans. Others can only suspect Antisemitism in everyone who simply thinks that these theses are too simplistic and counter-productive. In this fashion the entire debate turns into a row among the Germans over the treatment of their past, well beyond Goldhagen's book...This is a catastrophe, says Wolfgang Benz, Director of the Center for the Study of Antisemitism in Berlin. He did not air his views on the book, but certainly considers it demagogical...And the East-Germans? Not one of their historians stepped forward to present serious arguments in the debate on Goldhagen. Did they turn mute because of the declared antifascism ritual?...A minority of [Western] historians took part in the discussion, some offended, some sad, some impotent...The embittered Hans Mommsen said that after this discussion "it is easier for him to understand" why the Germans chose Hitler. These days they give evidence of their guilt feelings and flee inward, to irrationality. His generation learned that there was no meaninglful history ( sinnbezogene Geschichte ). The young who applaud Goldhagen are still in need of this experience. Is it possible that so much rage and frustration stem not only from injured selfesteem?...Hans Mommsen says somewhere that he admires the younger people for their capability for the "toughness" that is needed to write about crimes with direct realism. This sounds as if Goldhagen inadvertently discovered something real: that what the social and structural history model of explaining the Holocaust did, after all, all the good reasons notwithstanding, was to offer a small and permissible escape. Hans Mommsen: even today we must not open the "Pandora box." "Should we prohibit the young to read our books?" he asks irritably. Reinhard Rürup replies that "of course" the box needs to be opened, hard as it is...Everybody listens intently to a history teacher, saying that an explanation of the Holocaust through structural history prompts her students to ask what can an individual person do anyway if the power of structures is so overwhelming... After fifty years [people] again try to understand the perennial question... "Why the Germans?" It can be argued that this is the true German question. This is not a "Failure" of the experts, as Moshe Zimmerman's indictment would have it. More to the point, it can be seen as a minor tragedy. But they do not deserve to be put in the docket as if they have always endeavored to lift the blame.

The article extensively quoted above does, in the view of this author, accurately reflect the mood among fairly broad circles of German historians and publicists and their readers. Similar musings can be found in numerous texts dealing with the "Goldhagen phenomenon." The author of an article thus entitled 36  goes even further, despite the fact that he, too, keeps in mind "serious flaws" in the book and in its methodological approach:

“Still people were fighting over entrance tickets and responded with stormy applause, fifty-one years after Hitler. And why? Because scholarly discourse does not cope with the sense of horror...The shocking narrative of police battalions and death marches touched an exposed nerve; repression was replaced by emotional participation...It is comforting to see that the Germans of today did not react with rejection and mounting defenses. One can even take little pride in this reaction. The young generation which was brought up on sterile linguistic formulas such as "on behalf of the Germans" or "Hitler and his murderers" left the cocoon and identified itself with the author and the victims...While grandparents keep silent and parents can only point out their being born late, the children want to rediscover the old crime... Only when the horror is given name and face does it touch one's soul, a feat that thousands of footnotes cannot accomplish. The glass bell has shattered again and people do not recoil from the shards. Scientific research seems to have "tamed" the horror, but Goldhagen broke the door again. It is to his credit that he succeeded. The fact the "ordinary Germans" of today are prepared to follow in his footsteps speaks in their favor."

Did Goldhagen's book really open a new "historians' controversy" in Germany? The argument saying that "there is not enough scientific fuel [in the book]" is countered by Wehler, who maintains that neither was the "controversy" of 1986/7 a "purely scholarly debate, but, above all, a political discussion involving principles grounded in partially historical arguments." True, the previous "historians' controversy" raged in the press and fizzled out, so it appears, after the decisive victory of the historians who came out against Nolte and his supporters. Whether or not the victors expressed the opinion of a majority of "ordinary Germans" remains unclear. There was no follow-up to speak of on the controversy in the "respectable" scholarly literature. Numerous articles and books by Nolte, which came out later, placed him in the eyes of many beyond the pale, an outcast on the right-wing fringes close to those who deny the Holocaust. The specter of that "controversy" nonetheless continues to haunt scholars and their disquisitions.

Did Goldhagen really "vanquish" Nolte? Will his book continue to be discussed in historical scholarly treatises armed with footnotes? Will it prove impossible, at least from now onward, to write treatises and propound theories on the Holocaust in which Antisemitism plays a minor or even negligible role among the profusion of other complex factors? Only the future will tell.

At the time this article was going to press, we learned that the prestigious journal Blätter für deutsche und internationale Politik awarded its “Democracy Prize” to Daniel Goldhagen. The prize is awarded sporadically, only when a truly deserving laureate is found. In justifying their choice, members of the jury said that the prize was given to Goldhagen because, inter alia, "through his indepth description, pervaded by moral strength, he significantly stimulated public consciousness in the [German] Federal Republic...and sharpened the sensitivity to the background and limits of German 'normalization.' "

The laudatory remarks were made by the well-known philosopher Jurgen Habermas. The full text of his speech, an incisive essay in its own right, which certainly deserves separate attention, was published by Die Zeit . 37  The following excerpt encapsulates Habermas' reasons for giving the prize to Goldhagen:

“[Awarders of the prize] cannot and do not wish to involve themselves in scholarly disputes. [Similarly to other countries], in Germany, too, important historians have attained substantial recognition, many of them did so by investing considerable effort throughout their academic careers in researching and explaining the Nazi period and the tangled pre-history of the Holocaust to the public...The question is not who from among the historians deserves the attention of the reading public at large, but rather how should one evaluate the extraordinary attention of interested citizens actually lavished on Daniel Goldhagen's book. The emblematic significance of giving the prize is an acknowledgment that the public response provoked by the book and its author in the Federal Republic was deserved and should be welcomed... ...Such a wide response to this kind of a book could only be expected. It is enough if one understands the coincidence of two things: Goldhagen's analytical case-studies and the expectations of the public which is interested in casting light on this criminal chapter of its history. Goldhagen's studies fit exactly the mold of the questions that have polarized our private and public discussions for the last fifty-years...”

Translated by Jerzy Michalowicz

Source: Yad-Vashem Studies , Vol. 26, Jerusalem, 1998, pp. 295-328.

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Paperback Nation on Trial Book

ISBN: 0805058729

ISBN13: 9780805058727

Nation on Trial

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A devastating refutation of one of the most talked-about and influential books of our time, Daniel Jonah Goldhagen's "Hitler's Willing Executioners". Here, two leading critics challenge Goldhagen's... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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IMAGES

  1. Die Goldhagen-Debatte 1996

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  2. Coursework Historians Browning and Goldhagen

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  3. Sarah Goldhagen

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  4. I. Introduction: Goldhagen's Psychological Thesis

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  5. El debate Goldhagen

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  6. Yad Vashem Online Store. The Goldhagen Phenomenon in Yad Vashem Studies

    goldhagen thesis

VIDEO

  1. Daniel Goldhagen's "Worse than War"

  2. Das Tagesschau 24 im Gespräch mit Daniel Goldhagen: Völkermord

  3. Tochnyi Weekly Feb 11

  4. Worse Than War

  5. A Nation On Trial

  6. Daniel Goldhagen

COMMENTS

  1. Hitler's Willing Executioners

    Hitler's Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust is a 1996 book by American writer Daniel Goldhagen, in which he argues collective guilt, that the vast majority of ordinary Germans were "willing executioners" in the Holocaust because of a unique and virulent "eliminationist antisemitism" in German political culture which had developed in the preceding centuries.

  2. A nation on trial : the Goldhagen thesis and historical truth

    Goldhagen, Daniel Jonah. Hitler's willing executioners, Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Causes, Antisemitism -- Germany, War criminals -- Germany -- Psychology, National socialism -- Moral and ethical aspects Publisher New York : Metropolitan Books; Henry Holt Collection internetarchivebooks; printdisabled Contributor Internet Archive Language ...

  3. A Nation on Trial

    It is Goldhagen's thesis that the "central causal agent of the Holocaust" was the German people's enduring pathological hatred of the Jews (Hitler's Willing Executioners [hereafter HWE]: 9). To cite one typical passage: [A] demonological antisemitism, of the virulent racial variety, was the common structure of the perpetrators' cognition and of ...

  4. GOLDHAGEN'S HITLER'S WILLING EXECUTIONERS NORMAN G. FINKELSTEIN and

    3For a critical assessment of Goldhagen's evidence, cf. Norman G. Finkelstein and Ruth Bettina Birn, A Nation on Trial: The Goldhagen Thesis and Historical Truth (New York, 1998). I am grateful to Norman Finkelstein for his critical comments on my re-view of Goldhagen's book. His first point may be a matter of misunderstand-ing more than ...

  5. A Nation on Trial: The Goldhagen Thesis and Historical Truth

    A magisterial example of historiographical criticism. Finkelstein not only demolished Goldhagen's thesis, but he demonstrates Goldhagen's evidence actually refutes his own thesis. And Finkelstein, the author of the essential Holocaust Industry, does much more. Harvard gave Goldhagen a Ph.D. for this literary hoax which gives the Protocols ...

  6. Daniel Goldhagen

    Daniel Goldhagen was born in Boston, Massachusetts, to Erich and Norma Goldhagen.He grew up in nearby Newton. [4] His wife Sarah (née Williams) is an architectural historian, and critic for The New Republic magazine. [5]Daniel Goldhagen's father is Erich Goldhagen, a retired Harvard professor. Erich is a Holocaust survivor who, with his family, was interned in a Jewish ghetto in Czernowitz ...

  7. Yisrael Gutman, 'Goldhagen

    Goldhagen — His Critics and His Contribution. Since its appearance Daniel Jonah Goldhagen's book, Hitler's Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust 1 has reached a vast public in the United States and in other countries. It has prompted a public tempest and set off a tumultuous polemic among experts.

  8. 'Ordinary Germans' before Hitler: A Critique of the Goldhagen Thesis

    4. The central image of the Jews held them to be malevolent, powerful, and dangerous. (77) If this were an accurate picture, Germany would have been an extremely unpleasant country for Jews to inhabit, even before. the advent of Adolf Hitler, and Goldhagen might have been. expected to offer testimonies to this effect.

  9. A Nation on Trial: The Goldhagen Thesis and Historical Truth

    The most shocking recent example is this book, which consists of two essays that try to show that the "Goldhagen thesis" about the German political culture of anti-Semitism that made it possible for so many "ordinary Germans" to carry out the extermination of the Jews is worthless. Daniel Goldhagen's Hitler's Willing Executioners: Ordinary ...

  10. A Nation on Trial : The Goldhagen Thesis and Historical Truth

    An immediate national best-seller, the book went on to create an international sensation as the German public applauded Goldhagen's thesis.Now, in A Nation on Trail, two leading critics challenge Goldhagen's findings and show that his work is not scholarship at all. With compelling cumulative effect, Norman G. Finkelstein meticulously documents ...

  11. Goldhagen's Willing Executioners

    Finkelstein said he was working on a book about Harvard Professor Daniel Jonah Goldhagen's Hitler's Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust. Goldhagen, he declared, was a ...

  12. Willing Executioners?

    The Goldhagen Thesis. and Historical Truth. By Norman G. Finkelstein. and Ruth Bettina Birn. 148 pp. New York: Metropolitan Books/ Henry Holt & Company. Cloth, $22.95. Owl Books/Henry Holt & Company.

  13. A Nation on Trial: The Goldhagen Thesis and Historical Truth

    This book contains two essays which are effectively extended reviews of the the Daniel Goldhagen book "Hitler's Willing Executioners". Goldhagen presented a monocausal thesis which explained the holocaust as resulting from a uniquely German strand of virulent anti-semitism which dismissed the attempts of other writers to place the holocaust in a much more complex context including ...

  14. PDF Daniel J. Goldhagen Christopher R. Browning Leon Wieseltier

    Introduction. On April 8th, 1996, the United States Holocaust Research Institute hosted an evening of dialogue to examine the issues raised by Daniel Goldhagen's deliberately provocative book, Hitler's Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust, in which the author seeks to challenge the canons of Holocaust scholarship and to ...

  15. Goldhagen in Germany

    Daniel Jonah Goldhagen's Revisionary Account of the Holocaust: The Book and Its Thesis In the Spring of 1996 Daniel Jonah Goldhagen published a book called Hitler's Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust in which he argued that scholarship on the Holocaust needed revision. Most scholars assume that the German all but total elimination of European Jewry was the consequence ...

  16. Willing Executioners?

    We are now so far afield from the Goldhagen thesis that it is a relief to reach the critique by Ruth Bettina Birn. She is the author of many studies of the Nazi SS and police and, despite some recent Jewish protests, serves as chief historian in the War Crimes and Crimes Against Humanity section of Canada's Department of Justice.

  17. Daniel Jonah Goldhagen's 'Crazy' Thesis: A Critique of Hitler's Willing

    The merit of his thesis, Goldhagen contends, is that it recognizes that 'each individual made choices about how to treat Jews.' Thus, it 'restores the notion of individual responsibility'. (Reply, p. 38) Yet if Goldhagen's thesis is correct, the exact opposite is true. Germans bear no individual or, for that matter, collective guilt.

  18. Goldhagen's thesis (by L. Proyect)

    Goldhagen's thesis. One of the big differences between workers and middle-class intellectuals is that workers tend to fight against injustice collectively rather than individually, whether on their own behalf or on others. While Steven Spielburg chose to make a movie about the industrialist Schindler's fight to save Jewish lives, nobody dreams ...

  19. Where There's a Will There's a Why: The Goldhagen Debate

    ation of Goldhagen's thesis has given way to attacks on his scholarly etiquette, his personal motives, his university, and even his doctoral committee. Two real issues have been touched on in the Goldhagen debate thus far; and a third is likely to dominate the debate in the future. One is the value

  20. The Goldhagen Controversy: One Nation, One People, One Theory?

    Daniel Goldhagen's book on the Holocaust--condemning the German "eliminationist" mindset toward Jews--has become an international bestseller and a datum in German-American relations. Pity, because it is a simplistic, monocausal, and unhistorical explanation of one of the most complex horrors in history. For Goldhagen, as for the Nazis, Hitler is Germany.

  21. Challenging A View Of the Holocaust

    Mr. Goldhagen's book portrays a Germany even before the Nazi period "pregnant with murder," in the grip of a "hallucinatory anti-Semitism," a society in which anti-Semitism was a "culturally shared cognitive model," a profoundly ingrained, reflexive response. ... As for the newness of Mr. Goldhagen's thesis, Walter Laqueur, a historian and ...

  22. German Historians versus Goldhagen

    Few debates among professional historians have provoked as much agitation as has the controversy touched off by Daniel Goldhagen's book1 immediately after its publication early in 1996. The debate between historians got off to an early start in the United States, where intense media coverage and, in particular, the symposium held in early April at the Holocaust Museum in Washington, D

  23. A Nation on Trial: The Goldhagen Thesis... book by Norman ...

    The first is by Norman Finkelstein, himself a Jew and descended from survivors of the Holocaust. The second is by Ruth Bittina Birn, another expert on the historical tragedy which subsisted in the Third Reich. Both essays attempt to show through actually examining the historical record the house of cards which the Goldhagen thesis proves to be.