Selection from The Case of Adolf Eichmann, by Victor Gollancz, London, 1961"Do Not Kill Adolf Eichmann""THERE ARE POINTS OF SIMILARITY, it is true, between the Nazi wickedness and other wickedness at various periods of the world's history. The Jews, for instance, slaughtered the Amalekites down to the last man, woman and child because their god, they believed, had ordered his chosen people to do so, just as the Nazi slaughtered millions of Jews because their god, they believed, had ordered HIS chosen people to do so.............."Never stir up mire," said a great Hasidic rabbi: "fix your mind not on past human sin, but on God and His goodness." We should do well to follow his advice. There is only so much room in our consciousness: the more we live in the presence of evil, the less we live in the presence of good. What I should like to hear broadcast is not the story of Nazi obscenities, but the story of Elizabeth Pilenko, who comforted a terrified Jewess at the entry to a gas chamber and then took her place; or of Rabbi Baeck, who after the death of his wife and 4 sisters was himself awaiting death in Thereseinstadt when he was liberated by the Russians: the Commanding officer suggested that a number of Germans who had taken refuge in the camp should be killed by the Jews, but the Rabbi firmly refused and restrained those of his own people who had thoughts of revenge. To be reminded of human goodness positively encourages, for the most part, the good in us: to be reminded of human wickedness at best negatively warns us against it, and may even, by a process of morbid fascination, reinforce our own evil....yesterday's cruelty should be forgotten as soon as is humanly possible, for nothing can be done about it. "Let the dead bury their dead": let the living beware of ignoring the living by concentrating on the dead. I think of Ben Gurion with the greatest respect, but his reasons for bringing Eichmann to trial show a fundamental misconception of what our epoch requires. He wants young Jewry to know beyond question what their people have suffered. Dear God, do they not know already? There can hardly be a Jew, whether in Israel or in the rest of the world, but particularly in Israel, without a mother or father, a daughter or son, a friend or close relative, who bears no mark, if still alive, of the Nazi inferno........ But even if it were true that Jews, and young Jews in particular, were insufficiently informed about the suffering of their people, how could insistence on it be desirable? Would it make them spiritually healthier-better poised, better integrated, more at peace with themselves and the world? Or would it, on the contrary, reinforce those deforming emotions of insecurity, inferiority, superiority and all the rest of it to which history, since the beginning of our era, has doomed so many of them? The answer is the latter: but it is the former that jewish salvation imperatively demands....... This, however, must be said: what needs to be encouraged in the young people of Israel today is not an intensification of racial or particularist solidarity but a passion for human solidarity, for the solidarity of the whole human race: not a steadily growing nationalism, if war is to be avoided in the Middle East and so perhaps in the world, but a steadily diminishing one. For the final lesson of Auschwitz is really this: no one will ever be assured of life, freedom, and honour until every sort of particularism is abolished everywhere..... I have no doubt that...the Eichmann trial will end by increasing rather than diminishing antisemitism, little though overt protestations may initially suggest it. The more Jewish suffering is in the news, the more people tend to react to it with a sort of bored exasperation: "Some of them really are rather unpleasant" is what they are apt to begin thinking, or even "Some may have deserved what they got." "...The fact is that antisemitism-the very symbol of human unregeneracy and unlikely to cease altogether much this side of the millenium-can never be combated by a self conscious insistence on Jewish suffering or an equally self conscious parade of the "Jewish contribution to history". It can be combated only by making no effort to combat it: only by an endeavor, undertaken with no ulterior motive, "to love mercy and walk humbly with thy God." I come to the trial itself...the whole thing is a vast illegality. There is a precedent for it, of course, if a partial one, namely Nuremberg, but I am unaware that this evil example has ever been regarded, by legal opinion or the common feeling of mankind, as establishing a principle thereafter valid for international law. Objections to the current proceedings may be summarized under 3 heads:
A last question must be asked, before we come to the pith and core of this pamphlet. We must ask, is Eichmann guilty? Guilty of what? Not of this particular crime, or of that particular crime, or of all the crimes put together, in perhaps the lengthiest Bill of Indictment ever offered to a Court of Justice. There could be little interest in asking that, for the essence of the matter at issue might easily disappear in a maze of legal technicalities. ...... As to the guilt not of Germans collectively but of a very great number of individual Germans, this needs no mention: though in Germany too, as well as almost everywhere else, a small minority worked with unceasing devotion to save Jewish lives...... Should Eichmann be killed? no. Six million times no.....I say to Ben Gurion, with the deepest sympathy and respect, "DO NOT KILL ADOLF EICHMANN."IF SIX MILLION HAVE BEEN SLAUGHTERED, what can it profit to make the number six million and one? Will THIS lighten the awful darkness of cruelty and hatred that Auschwitz will cast over history, forever unrelieved unless something can be done to relieve it? Only one thing can lighten that darkness, can redeem and restore, however infinitesimally in mere numerical comparison, the human name: I mean a power, in whose dear ones have suffered so unthinkably, to spare-even to forgive, though I tremble to say it, for I would not add to their feeling of outrage-the very symbol of their agony. I am always asking myself whether I should feel differently about all this if my wife had been tortured before my eyes at Auschwitz or Treblinka. I daresay I should: no one can measure his own weakness. But there are those who, mourning a murdered sister or son, have yet been able to plead for the murderer: there was Rabbi Baeck at Theresienstadt: and I cannot escape the conviction that if Israel-conditioned though she be, by a wrong unique in history, to revenge herself for it-could leap into spiritual freedom and choose mercy, then, by very reason of that uniqueness, the prophecy might yet be fulfilled, "salvation is of the Jews." It will be asked what alternative I would propose to a sentence of death. To answer this is no part of my purpose. I plead for one thing only: that Eichmann's judge's may act in the spirit of what is best in the Old Testament as well as in the New-in the spirit of "Forsake evil; do good, and live" and of "Go and sin no more." Source: The Case of Adolf Eichmann |
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Committee
for Open Debate on the Holocaust, Bradley R. Smith, Director - Post
Office Box 439016, San Ysidro, CA 92143 |