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Authors: Deborah E Lipstadt

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58.
Arendt to Jaspers, Aug. 6, 1961; Feb. 19, 1966; both in Arendt and Jaspers,
Correspondence
, pp. 445, 628; Elźbieta Ettinger,
Hannah Arendt / Martin Heidegger
(New Haven: Yale University Press, 1995), p. 114.

59.
Leora, Bilsky,
Transformative Justice
(Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2004), pp. 94–95.

60.
Alfred Kazin,
New York Jew
(New York: Knopf, 1978), p. 218.

61.
Arendt to Jaspers, Oct. 1, 1967, in Arendt and Jaspers,
Correspondence
, pp. 674–75; Arendt to McCarthy, Oct. 17, 1969; Oct. 16, 1973; both in
Between Friends
, ed. Brightman, pp. 249, 349–50.

62.
Yosef Gorny,
Between Auschwitz and Jerusalem
(London: Vallentine Mitchell, 2003), p. 45.

63.
Notes for a lecture given at Wesleyan University, January 11, 1962, in Young-Bruehl,
Hannah Arendt
, p. 339. Young Bruehl observes that she made this statement before
Eichmann in Jerusalem
was written.

Conclusion

1.
Hausner,
Justice in Jerusalem
(New York: Holocaust Library, 1968), p. 452.

2.
Though the trial did strengthen Germany’s commitment to finding and prosecuting war criminals, some of these investigations, such as the one Lothar Hermann read about in the newspaper, were already in the planning stages prior to the proceedings in Jerusalem. Jeffrey Herf, “Politics and Memory in West and East Germany Since 1961,”
Journal of Israeli History
, vol. 23, no. 1 (Spring 2004), pp. 40–64; Mary Fulbrook,
German National Identity After the Holocaust
(Cambridge, U.K.: Polity Press, 2002), pp. 70–71.

3.
Tom Segev,
The Seventh Million
(New York: Henry Holt, 1991), p. 361.

4.
Hasia Diner,
We Remember with Reverence and Love
(New York: NYU Press, 2009); David Cesarani, “Introduction,” in
After Eichmann
, ed. Cesarani (New York: Routledge, 2005), pp. 1–3; Anita Shapira, “The Holocaust: Private Memories, Public Memory,”
Jewish Social Studies
, vol. 4, no. 2 (1998), pp. 40–58.

5.
Dalia Ofer, “The Strength of Remembrance,”
Jewish Social Studies
, vol. 6, no. 2 (2000), p. 37.

6.
Divrei HaKnesset (Records of the Knesset
), vol. 9, pp. 1655–57; vol. 26, pp. 1386–88; vol. 31, pp. 1264, 1306; vol. 80, pp. 564–66.

7.
Boaz Cohen, “The Birth Pangs of Holocaust Research in Israel,”
Yad Vashem Studies
, vol. 33, pp. 203–43.

8.
For a more complete discussion of the treatment of the Holocaust in American popular culture, see Jeffrey Shandler,
While America Watches
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1999).

9.
Haim Gouri,
Facing the Glass Booth
(Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 2004), p. 324; Sidra DeKoven Ezrahi,
By Words Alone
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1980), p. 206ff. The recollections by Beisky, Gutman, and Wigoder are in
The Trial of Adolf Eichmann
[video recording] (Burbank: PBS Home Video, 1997),
http://remember.org/eichmann/participants.htm
.

10.
Jacob Robinson,
And the Crooked Shall Be Made Straight
(New York: Macmillan, 1968), p. 138; Leora Bilsky,
Transformative Justice
(Ann Arbor: University of Michigan, 2004), p. 111.

11.
Moshe Prager in
Davar
, May 12, 1961, in Idith Zertal,
Israel’s Holocaust and the Politics of Nationhood
(New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005), p. 96.

12.
Ben-Gurion quoted in Yechiam Weitz, “The Holocaust on Trial: The Impact of the Kasztner and Eichmann Trials on Israeli Society,”
Israel Studies
, vol. 1, no. 2 (Fall 1996), p. 17.

13.
Hanna Yablonka, “The Development of Holocaust Consciousness in Israel,”
Israel Studies
, vol. 8, no. 3 (Fall 2003), p. 11; Dorothy Rabinowitz,
New Lives
(New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1976), pp. 18–19.

14.
Hannah Yablonka,
The State of Israel vs. Adolf Eichmann
(New York: Schocken, 2004), p. 231.

15.
Ibid., p. 165; Hanna Yablonka, “Development,” pp. 16–17.

16.
Gouri,
Facing the Glass Booth
, pp. 274–75.

17.
Ravikovitz in Ezrahi,
By Words Alone
, p. 206; Bilsky,
Transformative Justice
, p. 97.

18.
Anita Shapira, “The Eichmann Trial,” in
After Eichmann
, ed. Cesarani, p. 33; Alan Mintz, “Foreword,” Gouri,
Facing the Glass Booth
, pp. x-xi; Hanna Yablonka,
Israel vs. Eichmann
, p. 162; Bilsky,
Transformative Justice
, p. 102.

19.
Yablonka,
Israel vs. Eichmann
, pp. 248–49;
EIJ
, p. 271.

20.
Bruno Bettelheim, “The Informed Heart,” in
Out of the Whirlwind
, ed. Jacob Landau (New York: UAHC, 1968) pp. 40, 44, 47; Raul Hilberg,
Politics of Memory
(Chicago: Ivan R. Dee, 1996), pp. 154–55; Rabinowitz,
New Lives
, p. 174ff.

21.
Paul Jacobs, “Eichmann and Jewish Identity,”
New Leader
, July 3, 1961, pp. 14–15.

22.
Shoshana Felman,
The Juridical Unconscious: Trials and Traumas in the Twentieth Century
(Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2002), p. 127.

23.
In
Irving v. Penguin UK and Lipstadt
my defense team decided not to call survivors as witnesses. We did not want to suggest to the judge that we needed witnesses of fact, which is what survivors would have been, in order to
prove
the existence of the Holocaust. We presented the Holocaust as an established fact that needed no validation. We wanted the focus to be solely on Irving and his lies. Furthermore, since Irving was representing himself, we did not want to subject elderly survivors to a cross-examination, which we feared would be designed by Irving to humiliate and confuse them.

CHRONOLOGY

 

 

 

 

March 19, 1906
 
Adolf Eichmann born in Solingen, Germany, part of the Rhineland. His family moves to Austria when he is seven years old.
October 14, 1906
 
Hannah Arendt born in Hannover, Germany.
1915
 
Ottoman Empire begins to deport and massacre Armenians. The Armenian genocide, as it was later known, continues for several years, resulting in the displacement and murder of much of the Armenian population of central and eastern Anatolia.
November 2, 1917
 
The British government, having occupied Palestine, then part of the province of Syria in the Ottoman Empire, issues the Balfour Declaration, promising “the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people.”
1929
 
Arab riots in Safed and Hebron, organized by radicals in the Palestinian nationalist movement.
1931
 
Heinrich Himmler establishes the Sicherheitsdienst (SD) under Reinhard Heydrich; the Schutzstaffel (SS) unit that gathered intelligence on opponents of Hitler both within and outside the Nazi Party.
April 1, 1932
 
Eichmann joins the Nazi Party in Austria. He joins the SS seven months later.
January 1933
 
Adolf Hitler is appointed chancellor of Germany.
1933–34
 
Himmler and Heydrich take over the political police forces, renamed the Gestapo. With the Gestapo’s function of combating actual political opponents of the Nazi regime, the SD, still under Heydrich’s command and tied to the Gestapo by his leadership, investigates and gathers intelligence on groups of real and perceived opponents of Nazi Germany, including the Jews.
August 1933
 
After the Austrian government begins a crackdown on the Nazi Party, Eichmann leaves for Germany.
1933
 
Hannah Arendt, fearing arrest by the Nazi regime, leaves Germany for Paris.
1934
 
Eichmann applies to join the SD and is accepted.
1935
 
Hitler issues the Nuremberg Race Laws, depriving German Jews of their citizenship.
1935
 
Eichmann transfers within the SD to section II 112, which monitors Jewish organizations.
January 1938
 
Eichmann is promoted to SS-Untersturmführer (SS second lieutenant).
March 1938
 
German troops enter Austria; Hitler announces that Austria is now united with Germany. Eichmann is transferred to Vienna with instructions to streamline the process of expelling Jews from Austria.
August 1938
 
Creation of Central Bureau for Emigration of Jews from Austria. Eichmann is in charge of this human “conveyor belt.”
November 9, 1938
 
Following the murder of a German diplomat in Paris by a Jew avenging his parents’ deportation from Germany to the Polish border, the Nazi regime conducts a massive, coordinated wave of
violence against Reich Jewry. Known as Kristallnacht, the Night of Broken Glass, the event results in the murder of nearly one hundred Jews and the destruction of synagogues and Jewish personal property.
September 1939
 
Germany invades Poland; Britain and France declare war on Germany.
October 1939
 
Eichmann orchestrates the expulsion of thousands of Jews and Roma (Gypsies) from Germany, Austria, and Bohemia-Moravia to Nisko, a distant area of Poland where they endure significant hardship. Eichmann implements a previously scheduled deportation transport to Nisko even after Hitler orders a halt to the deportations.
1939–40
 
With the formation of the Reichssicherheitshauptamt (RSHA), the Reich Main Security Office, Eichmann transfers from the SD (RSHA III) to the Gestapo (RSHA IV).
1941
 
Hannah Arendt emigrates from France to the United States. Eichmann transfers from RSHA IV D4 (deportations) to RSHA IV B4 (Jewish affairs).
September 1941
 
First mass gassings at Auschwitz.
November 1941
 
Eichmann is promoted to SS-Obersturmbannführer (SS lieutenant colonel).
1941
 
Former mufti of Jerusalem Hajj Amin al Husseini, after participating in a failed pro-German coup in Iraq, flees to Italy and remains in exile in Italy and Germany until the end of World War II.
December 1941
 
Abba Kovner, leader of the Vilna (Vilnius) resistance fighters, calls for active resistance against the Nazis.
December 1941
 
Gassings using vans at Chelmno, Poland.
January 1942
 
Wannsee Conference, in which RSHA chief and SS General Reinhard Heydrich notified other Nazi civilian leaders of plans for the Final Solution. Eichmann helps prepare Heydrich’s materials for the conference and writes up the minutes afterward.
1942–44
 
Eichmann, as director of the Reich Main Security Office section IV B4 (Jewish affairs), organizes the deportations of Jews from Europe, with the exceptions of the Generalgouvernement, the occupied Soviet Union, and Serbia, to killing centers, killing sites, and camps.
1944
 
The Polish-born jurist Raphael Lemkin publishes his
Axis Rule in Occupied Europe
, in which he introduces the word “genocide,” which he coined to describe the extermination of an entire people.
March 19, 1944
 
Germans occupy Hungary. Eichmann arrives accompanied by detachment of a dozen deportation experts with the intent of deporting all the Hungarian Jews to Auschwitz-Birkenau and the Austro-Hungarian border.
April–May 1944
 
Concentration of Hungarian Jews by Hungarian gendarmerie begins in the provinces.
May 15–July 9, 1944
 
Hungarian gendarmerie, working with Eichmann’s RSHA Special Detachment of SS functionaries, deports some 440,000 Hungarian Jews from Hungary. The vast majority arrive at Auschwitz-Birkenau, where the SS selects about 110,000 for forced labor and sends the rest to the gas chambers. July 7, 1944, Hungarian leader Miklós Horthy stops the deportation of Hungarian Jews. Eichmann helps contravene the order and additional trains are dispatched. (Two final trains are dispatched by Eichmann in August.)
August 18, 1944
 
As a result of negotiations between Eichmann and Israel Kasztner, the first of two transports of Hungarian Jews leaves, ostensibly for Switzerland. The train is sent instead to Bergen-Belsen, where its passengers remain for approximately five months before they are then dispatched to Switzerland. Many of the passengers pay large sums for places on the train.
October 15, 1944
 
Germans support Hungarian fascist Arrow Cross coup d’état to overthrow the Horthy regime in Hungary. Eichmann returns to Budapest to organize evacuation of able-bodied Hungarian Jews by foot to the Austrian border, from whence the Germans would deploy them for forced labor. The conditions of the march and the number of corpses left on the road induced Auschwitz Commandant Rudolph Höss to complain about the brutality.
November 1944
 
Arrow Cross regime orders a halt to the evacuation marches. Eichmann returns to Berlin.
November 1944
 
Himmler orders the destruction of the gassing facilities at Auschwitz-Birkenau after one of them is destroyed during an
armed revolt of the Jewish inmate Sonderkommandos in October.
May 7, 1945
 
Germany unconditionally surrenders to the Allies. Eichmann is captured by the Allies shortly thereafter.
November 20, 1945
 
International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg, Germany, opens. Twenty-four Nazi leaders are indicted for crimes against humanity, war crimes, crimes against peace, and conspiracy.
August 1946
 
Nineteen Nuremberg defendants convicted; twelve of them sentenced to death.
November 29, 1947
 
United Nations votes to partition Palestine into Jewish and Arab states.
May 14, 1948
 
Israel declares its independence.
1950
 
Eichmann, having escaped from Allied custody, leaves Germany for Argentina.
1951
 
Hannah Arendt publishes
The Origins of Totalitarianism
.
1952
 
Eichmann’s wife and children disappear from Germany and reappear in Argentina.
May 1953
 
Israel establishes Yad Vashem, a national Holocaust museum and research center.
1953
 
Malchiel Gruenwald publishes a leaflet accusing Israel Kasztner, by then an official of the Israeli government, of collaboration with the Nazis; the government sues Gruenwald for libel on Kasztner’s behalf.
June 22, 1955
 
Judge Benjamin Halevi finds in favor of Gruenwald on most counts.
March 3, 1957
 
Kasztner is shot by Ze’ev Eckstein; he dies of his wounds shortly thereafter.
January 17, 1958
 
Israel’s Supreme Court overturns Halevi’s verdict in Kasztner case, posthumously clearing his name.
May 11, 1960
 
Eichmann is captured by Israeli operatives in Argentina.
May 23, 1960
 
David Ben-Gurion announces that Eichmann is in the hands of Israeli security services and will be tried by Israel.
April 11, 1961
 
Eichmann trial opens in Jerusalem and is broadcast by radio and television around the world.
June 20, 1961
 
Eichmann speaks in his own defense at his trial.
December 11, 1961
 
Eichmann found guilty by the court.
December 15, 1961
 
Eichmann sentenced to death.
May 29, 1962
 
Israel’s High Court rejects Eichmann’s appeal.
May 31, 1962
 
Eichmann executed at midnight at Ramle Prison.
February 16, 1963
 
The New Yorker
publishes the first of Hannah Arendt’s series of five articles on the Eichmann trial.
December 1963
 
Beginning of the Auschwitz trial, in which twenty-two defendants were tried in Frankfurt. The twenty-month trial was one of many and one of the most publicized trials of Nazi offenders before a West German court.
1979
 
A presidential order signed by Jimmy Carter establishes the United States Holocaust Memorial Council.
1980
 
U.S. Congress funds the establishment of the United States Holocaust Memorial Council.
April 1993
 
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum dedicated in Washington, D.C.
BOOK: The Eichmann Trial
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