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The Changing Definition of "Holocaust"
Neighbors: The Destruction of the Jewish Community in Jedwabne,
Poland, Jan T. Gross, Princeton University Press, Princeton
and Oxford, 2001
By Richard A. Widmann
Although erroneously charged with "denying"
the Holocaust, revisionists have for years actually only sought
to redefine "Holocaust." In the standard historiography, “Holocaust”
is defined as the systematic destruction of over six million European
Jews by the Nazis before and during World War II. Oftentimes the
primary method of murder, gas chambers, is also worked into the
definition. Revisionists have for years argued that the killings
that did occur were in fact not systematic. They have also asserted
that the number six million is a wild exaggeration and that the
tales of mass gassings are simply false. For any one of these observations,
revisionists have been denounced, imprisoned, beaten up, and otherwise
persecuted in countries that were once considered to be the most
enlightened in the world.
When Jan Gross sat down to write Neighbors, the
story of the destruction of the Jews of Jedwabne, Poland, it is
unlikely that he considered that his work was a revision of the
Holocaust. Certainly he would be surprised to be called a revisionist
and most likely horrified to be called a "Holocaust denier." Understanding
however, that Neighbors did not fit into an existing
paradigm, Gross points out that his book "belongs... to a genre
- only now beginning to receive appropriate scholarly attention
- that belabors the 'perpetrators-victims-bystanders' axis. But
it shows that these terms are also fuzzy and can be read as a reminder
that each episode of mass killing had its own situational dynamics."
(p.12-13)
Gross's book challenges the standard definition of "Holocaust."
Gross shows, rather conclusively, that a large number of Jews (approximately
1,600) were murdered in Jedwabne Poland on July 10, 1941. After
an orgy of killing, the remaining population were herded into a
barn and died when it was set ablaze. What makes Neighbors
interesting and even controversial is that Gross proves that the
murderers were not in fact German Nazis but rather the civilian
Polish population.
For Gross, this episode, certainly one of many such episodes
that occurred during this dark epoch is an important piece of the
Holocaust puzzle. Yet, of course, the horrors of July 10, 1941 were
clearly not systematic, they didn't involve gas chambers, and most
importantly the murders were not committed by Nazis. By the conventional
definition, if in fact this tragedy was a Holocaust episode, the
Germans had to be responsible. But, they were not. Therefore
we are entering a time when mainstream authors have recognized how
untenable the current definition of "Holocaust" is. What is needed
is, as revisionists have argued, a simpler definition. Clearly for
Gross, the "Holocaust" is “the tragedy that befell Europe's Jews
during the Second World War.” With such a definition, the Jedwabne
story begins to provide focus to the happenings of the time. Without
such a redefinition, the time and its events remain incomprehensible.
Although Gross has provided a valuable service in mainstreaming
a redefinition of "Holocaust" and revealing that the events in Jedwabne
were carried out by the Polish population, the book relies on the
same clouded reasoning as so many other books by conventional Holocaust
historians. Perhaps grasping that the events at Jedwabne did not
tie-in with the orthodox wisdom, Gross attempts to provide his own
method of explaining the Holocaust:
"It is clear, from what happened in Jedwabne, that we must approach
the Holocaust as a heterogeneous phenomenon. On the one hand,
we have to be able to account for it as a system, which functioned
according to a preconceived (though constantly evolving) plan.
But, simultaneously, we must also be able to see it as a mosaic
composed of discrete episodes, improvised by local decision-makers,
and hinging on unforced behaviors." (pp. 124-25)
This strained definition is representative of Gross's reasoning
throughout Neighbors. He tells a story that charts
new territory, but almost afraid of its significance, he performs
cartwheels to fit it back into more acceptable terms.
At several points, Gross explains that the Germans weren't involved,
"As to the Germans' direct participation in the mass murder of Jews
in Jedwabne on July 10, 1941, […] one must admit that it was limited,
pretty much, to their taking pictures." (p. 78) Gross even goes
so far as to admit that the outpost of the German gendarmerie "was
the safest place in town for the Jews, and a few survived only because
they happened to be there at the time." (p. 78) Elsewhere however,
Gross tries to implicate the Germans by claiming that "the tragedy
of Jedwabne Jewry is but an episode in the murderous war that Hitler
waged against all Jews." (p.78)
Perhaps one of Gross's worst bits of reasoning involves his view
of survivor testimony. He argues that the Holocaust is such a unique
event that testimony must be believed even if it is "incredible."
Gross writes, "All I am arguing for is the suspension of our incredulity."
(p. 141) He explains his method as follows:
"When considering survivors' testimonies, we would be well advised
to change the starting premise in appraisal of their evidentiary
contribution from a priori critical to in principle affirmative.
By accepting what we read in a particular account as fact
until we find persuasive arguments to the contrary, we would
avoid more mistakes than we are likely to commit by adopting
the opposite approach, which calls for cautious skepticism toward
any testimony until an independent confirmation of its content
has been found." (p.139-40)
With such a standard established, Gross's acceptance of some
of the fantastic stories surrounding the Jedwabne episode are understandable.
He builds his case primarily around the report of Szmul Wasersztajn.
This document is filled with many "incredible" details, some of
which could not have been known first-hand. Although the basic story
may be true, revisionists and other thinking people must remain
skeptical of some of the details not to mention Gross's method itself.
Although Neighbors could have been a more reasoned
book, it is valuable for having begun to clear up this one episode
in the long stream of episodes which make up the Holocaust story.
As more mainstream authors grasp the importance of Gross's distinction
from the dogmatic definition of "Holocaust," it is clear that the
story of the tragedy of Europe's Jews during the Second World War
will become more comprehensible. Shedding the mythical, the absurd
and the propaganda-driven elements of the Holocaust story will not
only make contemporary European history more understandable but
will bankrupt the activities of Holocaust lobby. Neighbors
is one more step towards correcting the historical record of the
Holocaust in light of a more complete collection of historical facts.
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