| 25th
January, 2005
MAL
FLETCHER
 |
PICTURE:
Gijs van Dijk(stock.xchng)
"We
each need to remind ourselves how vulnerable we are
to the same fear, intolerance and blame which drove
human beings to become part of a massive exercise
in wickedness."
-
Mal Fletcher
|
This coming
Thursday (January 27th), the world will remember once again
the horrors perpetrated at Auschwitz. It is the 60th anniversary
of the liberation of the infamous concentration camp.
Whether we like it or not, we need to recall the events of
Auschwitz and the other camps.
We each need to remind ourselves how vulnerable we are to
the same fear, intolerance and blame which drove human beings
to become part of a massive exercise in wickedness.
Sadly, recent studies have shown that as many as 45 per cent
of Britons do not know what Auschwitz represents, or why it
is significant in Europe’s history. One can only guess
at the numbers of people across Europe as a whole, or even
the world, that may not be aware of this Polish region’s
bloody past.
It is important that we hold these events in remembrance because
they remind us of the depths to which human beings can sink
if their worst inclinations are not held in check.
Auschwitz and its fellow camps represent the greatest crime
against humanity in all of human history.
As a result of the Auschwitz tragedy, the word ‘genocide’
found its way into everyday language. It refers to the systematic
destruction of a people solely because of religion, race,
ethnicity, nationality, or sexual preference. The Holocaust
was genocide on a scale unmatched in history.
The Holocaust story is about a progression from one level
of inhumanity to another. It started with blame and xenophobia,
which led to vilification and persecution.
Finally, an insane lust for revenge against imagined social
crimes brought forth exile and mass murder.
It is the fact that the story unfolded progressively that
should give us most pause for thought. It didn’t start
with the Zyklon-B gas chambers, but with prison camps for
holding mainly Polish prisoners.
 |
PICTURE:
Krista Davis (stock.xchng)
What
Were The Key Events?
There can be no doubt that Hitler was the grand architect
of the so-called ‘final solution’ which
led to the crimes of Auschwitz and its fellow camps.
His influence and connivance are clear throughout
the unfolding saga of destruction. As early as 1935,
just two years after he came to power as the German
Chancellor, anti-Semitic laws were passed by the Reichstag
and Jews lost their citizenship and civil rights.
In 1937, the Buchenwald concentration camp opened
and one year later, anti-Semitic laws were extended
to cover the newly annexed Austria. November 9, 1938
saw the infamous Kristallnacht (Night of Broken Glass),
where anti-Semitic rioters destroyed Jewish institutions
in Germany and Austria. At the same time, 26,000 Jews
were sent to the concentration camps and Jewish children
were expelled from schools. One month later, all Jewish
property and businesses were expropriated by the government.
As the war continued through 1940, mobile killing
squads (Einsatzgruppen) followed the German army into
conquered lands, rounding up and massacring Jews and
other "undesirables". In July of 1941, Goering
instructed Heydrich to carry out the ‘final
solution to the Jewish question’. The deportation
of German Jews began and Jewish people in Odessa,
Kiev, Riga and Vilna were massacred. Mass killings
using Zyklon-B began in Auschwitz-Birkenau during
January 1942, as Nazi leaders attended a conference
aimed at coordinating the ‘final solution’.
By the end of July, 100,000 Jews from the Warsaw Ghetto
had been deported to the Treblinka death camp. The
Warsaw Ghetto was exterminated after an uprising early
in 1943 and the following year 476,000 Hungarian Jews
were sent to Auschwitz. As the war drew toward a close
in 1944, the Nazis tried to hide evidence of the death
camps. In 1945, as the Allies advanced into Germany,
the Nazis forced camp inmates into death marches.
The British liberated the Bergen-Belsen camps in April
of that year and the Nuremberg War Crimes Trial began
in November.
- Mal Fletcher
|
In the early days of the Nazi occupation of Poland, Auschwitz
was identified as an area well suited to prison camps that
could house slave labour. Large German corporations drew up
elaborate plans for factories where prisoners from the nearby
camp would provide free labour.
This idea soon fell out of favour, but the drive to kill prisoners
who were unable to work picked up speed.
This led to experiments on how best to wipe out large numbers
of prisoners. At first, they were simply lined up and shot.
This practice was stopped, however, when military officers
complained about the negative psychological effect it was
having on their soldiers. Nobody cared about the victims.
Nazi camp leaders conducted crude experiments with various
gases, such as carbon monoxide. Even explosives were used,
with hideously bloodthirsty results.
An observant German officer noted that a chemical used to
kill pests in Germany’s public buildings might well
be used on human beings. At that point, killings went to a
whole new level.
In all, the Nazis annihilated around six million Jews, which
represented two thirds of the Jewish population in Euro pre-World
War II. Among their victims were 4,500,000 Jews from Russia,
Poland and the Baltic region; 750,000 from Hungary and Romania;
290,000 from Germany and Austria; 105,000 from The Netherlands;
90,000 from France; 54,000 from Greece.
Along with the Jews, they systematically slaughtered another
nine to ten million people, including Gypsies, Slavs, homosexuals,
and the disabled.
It wasn’t just Nazi officers and soldiers who were party
to the crime, but shopkeepers, train drivers, delivery-men,
people from all walks of life.
There were, of course, many unsung heroes within the German
population, people who did make a stand against Nazi tyranny.
Yet so many people were prepared to sweep the suspicions they
felt and the stories they heard under the carpet. They allowed
themselves to be manipulated by unscrupulous leaders who played
to their feelings of victimization.
Excusing their own feelings of hatred and refusing to be accountable
for their emotions, they cited citing spurious personal or
historical grievances as an excuse for acts of pure malice.
They blamed others for the problems they faced instead of
accepting personal responsibility and control.
These are traits we might all recognize from time to time
in ourselves. Often, only faith in God can help us overcome
our own worst inclinations.
As William Styron once pointed out, the question is not ‘Where
was God at Auschwitz?’ but ‘Where was man at Auschwitz?’
Mal Fletcher is the founder and director of Next Wave
International, a Christian mission to contemporary cultures
with a special focus on Europe.
Reproduced
with permission from www.nextwaveonline.com.
Copyright Mal Fletcher 2005.
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