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Peter Novick:
When Did the Holocaust Start?
by William Halvorsen

Some years ago,
a leading Holocaust historian, Deborah Dwork spoke at a memorial
to "Crystal Night" in British Columbia, the night in November 1938
when Nazi mobs, inspired by the murder of a German foreign official
by a Polish Jew, destroyed hundreds of Jewish stores and shops.
According to the account of one who was at the memorial, she said
that Kristallnacht was "the end of the beginning, and the
beginning of the end." Although many in the audience were doubtless
moved to tears by this empty antithesis, it did remind me of an
interesting question. Assuming that we can agree on what the Holocaust
was, when did it start?
There are many
answers to that question. A lot of them have to do with events in
the Second World War. Some will date the beginning of the Holocaust
to September 1939, when the Germans attacked Poland; others to the
invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941; still others to the Wannsee
Conference of January 1942. Some will key the Holocaust to important
dates in the Third Reich: for example, to Hitler's accession of
power in 1933, or the Nuremberg Laws of 1935. In fact, if you consult
some Holocaust chronologies, they will frequently have the birth
of Adolf Hitler as the starting point, and some have the birth of
Jesus of Nazareth at the top of the list, on the assumption that
the Holocaust was ultimately the result of Christian anti-Semitism.
Of all the achievements of Peter Novick's Holocaust in American
Life (New York: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1999), one has tended
to be overlooked. The book provides a bracing antidote to the usual
sickly, sentimental dross of Holocaust literature. Exploding several
Holocaust myths in the process, the book also provides some strong
context for defining just when it was that the Holocaust began.
Exploding Myths
There is much merit
to Novick's book. In the first place, it is the first attempt to
describe how the idea of the Holocaust acquired the prominent place
it now holds in American life, and, as argued elsewhere, even in
our political life. His diachronic treatment of how the Holocaust
concept developed is a useful supplement to Samuel Crowell's
Gas Chamber of Sherlock Holmes, which performs the
same service for the idea of mass gassing.
While Novick's myth
busting is carried out with a certain amount of suppressed glee
and good humor, it should be said right away that he does everything
possible to distance himself from Holocaust revisionists. Novick
discusses them only twice in his 300 page plus book, and in both
cases only to dismiss them as "screwballs," "nutcases," "fruitcakes"
and even "crazed." Given the general tenor of his comments elsewhere,
it seems a little strange that Novick, a historian at the University
of Chicago, would engage in such silly name-calling unless he wished
to distance himself from accusations made about his own work.
For example, in one
part of his book Novick engages the famous Martin Niemoeller quote
— you know the one: "First they came for X, then they came for Y,
then they came for me, and there was no one left." Novick shows
how the quote has been mangled and re-arranged by several groups,
depending on the needs of their constituents, so that the original
sequence of Communists, social democrats, trade unionists, and Jews
frequently moves the Jews up to first place, adds Catholics in places
like Boston, adds homosexuals in some locations, and prudently dumps
Communists from the list altogether — as for example in the United
States Holocaust Museum, which, as a national museum that gets two-thirds
of its budget from the taxpayers, ought to know better.
Elsewhere, Novick touches
on the standard "eleven million" Holocaust victims, the idea that
there were six million Jewish victims and almost-but-not-quite as
many non-Jewish victims of Nazism. Novick reveals what revisionists
have noted for years, that Simon Wiesenthal simply made the number
up, partly, one suspects, to give non-Jews an "almost" equal stake
in the non-stop vilification of German-speaking people. Novick's
revelation already appears to have had some repercussions: for a
long time, the Nizkor Internet site, a sort of clearing-house for
anti-German propaganda, including soap recipes and such, boasted
a banner dedicating the site to the "eleven million victims of Adolf
Hitler and the Nazi regime." The banner has recently been changed.
When It Started
On a more constructive
level, Novick goes to show how the concept of the Holocaust gradually
gained ground in public awareness. He notes that in the 1950's American
Jews tended not to stress the special quality of Jewish suffering,
because that might have drawn attention to the fact that many Eastern
Jews were sympathetic to Communism at a time when International
Communism was the bogeyman of most Americans, many terrified by
Khrushchev's threat to "bury us," and as result burying themselves
in expensive back-yard bomb shelters.
What caused the situation
to change, in Novick's view, was the television coverage of the
show trial of Adolf Eichmann in 1961. To meet the need for an English
word to translate the Hebrew "Shoah" (catastrophe, destruction),
the word "Holocaust" popped up, and has been with us ever since.
To be sure, as Novick notes, even then the Holocaust did not receive
capitalization; that doesn't seem to have happened until after the
Six Day War of 1967, in which Israel mobilized its people with
beaucoup amounts of gas chamber rhetoric, soon to be followed
by Nora Levin's derivative history, The Holocaust,
in 1968. Of course, one of the people who is bound to be disappointed
by Novick's narrative is Elie Wiesel, who has for years "admitted"
that he invented the term, and has repeatedly apologized for it,
in a typical strategy of inflating his own importance.
Some Implications
There are some important
results from Novick's reconstruction. Among other things, it helps
explain why Holocaust revisionism emerged from the backwater into
international prominence in the early 1970's. If it is true that
political manipulation of the recently named "Holocaust" coincided
with the Israeli wars of 1967 and 1973, that would help explain
why an opposition to it would arise at about the same time (although
I think the Ostpolitik of Willy Brandt of the early
'70's, which involved then West Germany in abject and groveling
apologies for World War II atrocities, as well as the acceptance
of the postwar order, had something to do with revisionism's growth
in Germany).
A further implication
is that, if the Holocaust is in fact a postwar idea developed in
the 1960's for the purposes of manipulating opinion for political
purposes, then it would follow that "Holocaust Denial" is either
an attempt to oppose such manipulation, in which case Novick himself
is a "Denier," or it means that revisiting the scope and extent
of Nazi atrocities has nothing to do with the Holocaust as such,
it's just ordinary historical revisionism. No kidding.
There are some elements
in Novick's book that might be surprising to moderate revisionists.
For example, at one point, Novick finds archival support for the
idea that Rabbi Wise deliberately misrepresented atrocity rumors
that he was receiving in late 1942; this tends to go against the
more charitable interpretations of Samuel Crowell.
And then of course there
is the part where Novick engages the issue of Jewish involvement
with Communism. He had an opportunity to make a broad statement
here, but failed to do so. In fact, even though both Nazism and
Communism were responsible for the deaths of millions of people,
the individuals attracted to those movements shouldn't be condemned
out of hand. At least they shouldn't at this late date.
For a lot of decent
Germans, and a lot of decent Jews, Nazism and Communism respectively
were answers to living in a modern world. Our attitude at the end
of the millennium should not be to say that anyone who was a Nazi
was automatically bad, and in the same way we shouldn't automatically
try to conceal Jewish-Communist affiliations. In reality, there
were good Nazis and bad Nazis, good Jewish Communists and bad ones.
To be sure, the ideas of both systems are unworkable and obnoxious
to most, but that's not the point. We should get away from the cartoon
depiction of evil Nazis and evil Jewish Communists, and just deal
with people: some truly bad, but most just trying to get by.
Of course, to do that
right we would have get rid of the idea that "evil" and "evil ideas"
are the cause of historical events, and take seriously the probability
that reality is a lot more complex than many on both sides of the
Holocaust "controversy" want to admit. Novick's book is a promising
start on that road; let's hope he has the wherewithal to continue
to work at it.
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