The "pretense that the Holocaust is an American memory," Novick further argues, is a moral evasion.
It "leads to the shirking of those responsibilities that
do
belong to Americans as they confront their
past, their present, and their future." (emphasis in original)
5
He makes an important point. It is much
easier to deplore the crimes of others than to look at ourselves. It is also true, however, that were the
will there we could learn much about ourselves from the Nazi experience. Manifest Destiny
anticipated nearly all the ideological and programmatic elements of Hitler's
Lebensraum
policy. In
fact, Hitler modeled his conquest of the East on the American conquest of the West.
6
During the first
half of this century, a majority of American states enacted sterilization laws and tens of thousands of
Americans were involuntarily sterilized. The Nazis explicitly invoked this US precedent when they
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enacted their own sterilization laws.
7
The notorious 1935 Nuremberg Laws stripped Jews of the
franchise and forbade miscegenation between Jews and non-Jews. Blacks in the American South
suffered the same legal disabilities and were the object of much greater spontaneous and sanctioned
popular violence than the Jews in prewar Germany.
8
To highlight unfolding crimes abroad, the US often summons memories of The Holocaust. The more
revealing point, however, is
when
the US invokes The Holocaust. Crimes of official enemies such as
the Khmer Rouge bloodbath in Cambodia, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, the Iraqi invasion of
Kuwait, and Serbian ethnic cleansing in Kosovo recall The Holocaust; crimes in which the US is
complicit do not.
Just as the Khmer Rouge atrocities were unfolding in Cambodia, the US-backed Indonesian
government was slaughtering one-third of the population in East Timor. Yet unlike Cambodia, the
East Timor genocide did not rate comparison with The Holocaust; it didn't even rate news coverage.
9
Just as the Soviet Union was committing what the Simon Wiesenthal Center called "another genocide"
in Afghanistan, the US-backed regime in Guatemala was perpetrating what the Guatemalan Truth
Commission recently called a "genocide" against the indigenous Mayan population. President Reagan
dismissed the charges against the Guatemalan government as a "bum rap." To honor Jeane
Kirkpatrick's achievement as chief Reagan Administration apologist for the unfolding crimes in
Central America, the Simon Wiesenthal Center awarded her the Humanitarian of the Year Award.
10
Simon Wiesenthal was privately beseeched before the award ceremony to reconsider. He refused. Elie
Wiesel was privately asked to intercede with the Israeli government, a main weapons supplier for the
Guatemalan butchers. He too refused. The Carter Administration invoked the memory of The
Holocaust as it sought haven for Vietnamese "boat people" fleeing the Communist regime. The
Clinton Administration forgot The Holocaust as it forced back Haitian "boat people" fleeing
US-supported death squads.
11
Holocaust memory loomed large as the US-led NATO bombing of Serbia commenced in the spring of
1999. As we have seen, Daniel Goldhagen compared Serbian crimes against Kosovo with the Final
Solution and, at President Clinton's bidding, Elie Wiesel journeyed to Kosovar refugee camps in
Macedonia and Albania. Already before Wiesel went to shed tears on cue for the Kosovars, however,
the US-backed Indonesian regime had resumed where it left off in the late 1970s, perpetrating new
massacres in East Timor. The Holocaust vanished from memory, however, as the Clinton
Administration acquiesced in the bloodletting. "Indonesia matters," a Western diplomat explained,
"and East Timor doesn't."
12
Novick points to passive US complicity in human disasters dissimilar in other respects yet comparable
in scale to the Nazi extermination. Recalling, for example, the million children killed in the Final
Solution, he observes that American presidents do little more than utter pieties as, worldwide, many
times that number of children "die of malnutrition and preventable diseases" every year.
13
One might
also consider a pertinent case of
active
US complicity. After the United States-led coalition devastated
Iraq in 1991 to punish "Saddam-Hitler," the United States and Britain forced murderous UN sanctions
on that hapless country in an attempt to depose him. As in the Nazi holocaust, a million children have
likely perished.
14
Questioned on national television about the grisly death toll in Iraq, Secretary of
State Madeleine Albright replied that "the price is worth it."
"The very extremity of the Holocaust," Novick argues, "seriously limit[s] its capacity to provide
lessons applicable to our everyday world." As the "benchmark of oppression and atrocity," it tends to
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"trivializ[e] crimes of lesser magnitude."
15
Yet the Nazi holocaust can also sensitize us to these
injustices. Seen through the lens of Auschwitz, what previously was taken for granted — for example,
bigotry — no longer can be.
16
In fact, it was the Nazi holocaust that discredited the scientific racism
that was so pervasive a feature of American intellectual life before World War II.
17
For those committed to human betterment, a touchstone of evil does not preclude but rather invites
comparisons. Slavery occupied roughly the same place in the moral universe of the late nineteenth
century as the Nazi holocaust does today. Accordingly, it was often invoked to illuminate evils not
fully appreciated. John Stuart Mill compared the condition of women in that most hallowed Victorian
institution, the family, to slavery. He even ventured that in crucial respects it was worse. "I am far
from pretending that wives are in general no better treated than slaves; but no slave is a slave to the
same lengths, and in so full a sense of the word as a wife."
18
Only those using a benchmark evil not
as a moral compass but rather as an ideological club recoil at such analogies. "Do not compare" is the
mantra of moral blackmailers.
19
Organized American Jewry has exploited the Nazi holocaust to deflect criticism of Israel's and its own
morally indefensible policies. Pursuit of these policies has put Israel and American Jewry in a
structurally congruent position: the fates of both now dangle from a slender thread running to
American ruling elites. Should these elites ever decide that Israel is a liability or American Jewry
expendable, the thread may be cut. No doubt this is speculation — perhaps unduly alarmist, perhaps
not.
Predicting the posture of American Jewish elites should these eventualities come to pass, however, is
child's play. If Israel fell out of favor with the United States, many of those leaders who now stoutly
defend Israel would courageously divulge their disaffection from the Jewish state and would excoriate
American Jews for turning Israel into a religion. And if US ruling circles decided to scapegoat Jews,
we should not be surprised if American Jewish leaders acted exactly as their predecessors did during
the Nazi holocaust. "We didn't figure that the Germans would put in the Jewish element," Yitzhak
Zuckerman, an organizer of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, recalled, "that Jews would lead Jews to
death."
20
During a series of public exchanges in the 1980s, many prominent German and non-German scholars
argued against "normalizing" the infamies of Nazism. The fear was that normalization would induce
moral complacency.
21
However valid the argument may have been then, it no longer carries
conviction. The staggering dimensions of Hitler's Final Solution are by now well known. And isn't the
"normal" history of humankind replete with horrifying chapters of inhumanity? A crime need not be
aberrant to warrant atonement. The challenge today is to restore the Nazi holocaust as a rational
subject of inquiry. Only then can we really learn from it. The abnormality of the Nazi holocaust
springs not from the event itself but from the exploitive industry that has grown up around it. The
Holocaust industry has always been bankrupt. What remains is to openly declare it so. The time is
long past to put it out of business. The noblest gesture for those who perished is to preserve their
memory, learn from Their suffering and let them, finally, rest in peace.
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Footnotes:
1
Adam Hochschild,
King Leopold's Ghost
(Boston: 1998).
2
Wiesel,
Against Silence, v.
iii, 190; cf. v. i, 186, v. ii, 82, v. iii, 242, and Wiesel,
And the Sea,
18.
3
Novick,
The Holocaust,
230 - 1.
4
New York Times
(25 May 1999).
5
Novick,
The Holocaust, 15.
6
John Toland,
Adolf Hitler
(New York: 1976), 702. Joachim Fest,
Hitler
(New York 1975),214,650.
see also Finkelstein,
Image and Reality,
chap. 4.
7
See, for example, Stefan Kühl,
The Nazi Connection
(Oxford 1994).
8
see, for example, Leon F. Litwack,
Trouble in Mind
(New York: 1998), esp. chaps 5-6. The vaunted
western tradition is deeply implicated in Nazism as well. To justify the extermination of the
handicapped — the precursor of the Final Solution — Nazi doctors deployed the concept "life
unworthy of life"
(lebensunwertes Leben).
In
Gorgias,
Plato wrote "I can't see that life is worth living
if a person's body is in a terrible state." In
The Republic,
Plato sanctioned the murder of defective
children. On a related point, Hitler's opposition in
Mein Kampf
to birth control on the ground that it
preempts natural selection was prefigured by Rousseau in his
Discourse on the Origins of Inequality.
Shortly after World war II, Hannah Arendt reflected that "the subterranean stream of western history
has finally come to the surface and usurped the dignity of our tradition"
(Origins of Totalitarianism,
ix).
9
See, for example, Edward Herman and Noam Chomsky,
The Political Economy of Human Rights, v.
i: The Washington Connection and Third World Fascism
(Boston 1979), 129 - 204.
10
Response
(March 1983 and January 1986).
11
Noam Chomsky,
Turning the Tide
(Boston: 1985), 36 (Wiesel cited from interview in the Hebrew
press). Berenbaum,
World Must Know,
3.
12
Financial Times (8
September 1999).
13
Novick,
The Holocaust, 255.
14
See, for example, Geoff Simons,
The Scourging of Iraq
(New York: 1998).
15
Novick,
The Holocaust,
244, 14.
16
On this point, see esp. Chaumont,
La concurrence,
316 18.