|
Podcast Lecture Series
►Dr.
David Silberklang-
The Allies and the Holocaust
►Professor Walter Zwi Bacharach-
-The Holocaust Reflected Through Personal
Experience
-The Protocols-Fueling Antisemitic Myths
►Dr.
Robert Rozett-
Contemporary Antisemitism
►Prof.
Michael J. Bazyler-
Holocaust Denial Laws and Other Legislation Criminalizing Promotion of
Nazism
Child Survivors Conference
►Prof.
Aharon Barak
►Rabbi
Yisrael Meir Lau
From Recent Symposium: “Holocaust
Denial: Paving the Way to Genocide” Denial: Paving the Way to Genocide:
►Prof.
Yehuda Bauer-
Some Thoughts on Radical Islam
►Yigal
Carmon-
The Role of Holocaust Denial in the Ideology and Strategy
of the Iranian Regime
From Recent Conference: 60 Years
Marking the Nuremberg Trials:
►Michael
Marrus-
Different Perspectives: Lawyers and Historians Looking at the
Holocaust
►Lisa
Yavnai-
Vengeance or Justice? Trials of Kapos
►Hanna
Yablonka-
The Eichmann Trial: The Jewish Nuremberg?
►Serge
Klarsfeld-
The Primary Role of the Trials: Informing the French People About the Fate
of the Jews in France
|
Prof. Raul Hilberg 1926-2007
The Development of Holocaust Research-a Personal Overview
Remarks Delivered by Prof. Raul Hilberg at the "Holocaust Research in
Context" Conference that took place at Yad Vashem in 2004
How to Understand the Shoah?:
The Approach and Impact of Prof. Raul Hilberg (1926-2007)
and his Reception in Israel
Dan Michman
Professor of Modern Jewish History, Bar-Ilan University; and Chief
Historian, Yad Vashem
Raul Hilberg, Professor of Political
Science at the University of Vermont, Burlington,
USA, died last Saturday, August 4. He was definitely one of the most
influential scholars in Holocaust research in the world, in spite of the
fact that his list of publications was relatively short. But his
relationship with Israeli Holocaust research was ambivalent.
Hilberg fled as a child with his parents from Vienna to the US after the
Anschluss (the annexation of Austria by Nazi Germany in 1938). He was
recruited to the American army at the age of 18, towards the end of World
War II, and took part in the last American campaign on German soil.
Afterwards he started his studies at Columbia University in New York,
attending lessons taught by another refugge scholar, Franz Neumann.
Through Neumann’s mediation he became a member of the US War Documentation
project, working there for several years, and thus encountering masses of
German captured documentation. He became intrigued by these documents and
by the modes of functioning of the Third Reich as revealed by them, and
when he had to decide about a topic for his PhD-thesis in 1950, to be
supervised by Neumann, he chose to focus on the bureaucracy of Nazi
Germany. The major question propelling Holocaust research in its initial
post-war years, in history as well as in the social sciences, was: how
could a modern state and society turn into a barbaric though highly
efficient slaughtering machine? At that time, the term Holocaust was not
yet in use (Shoah was used only in the Jewish Yishuv in pre-Israel
Palestine), and the fate of the Jews was perceived as one, although
perhaps the most extreme, of many atrocities carried out by the Nazis.
When the term Holocaust became common, Hilberg himself was reluctant to
use it, although it appears in the title of his last book.
Hilberg finished his thesis in 1954, and later expanded it; the expanded
version, which became the masterly comprehensive study of the Shoah, The
Destruction of the European Jews, was published in 1961. Indeed, some
comprehensive histories of the Shoah had been published before – by Léon
Poliakov (1951), Gerald Reitlinger (1953), and Joseph Tenenbaum (1956) –
but Hilberg’s magnum opus served as the basic introductory study for all
who entered the field of Holocaust studies with an analytical and
scholarly approach since. The strengths – as well as the flaws – of
Hilberg’s study lie in two facts: a) that he approached the Shoah from the
angle of a political scientist, not as a historian; as such, he viewed the
Shoah as one clearly defined unit, stretching over the years in which
Nazism ruled Germany, i.e. 1933-1945, and tried to present a neat model.
b) that he focused on the bureaucracy of the state. Hilberg, a highly
analytical scholar, with enormous knowledge and an outstanding memory,
succeeded in depicting a very clear picture of the bureaucracy of a
modern, highly developed state, which adapted itself to the vague goals
set by the leader (Hitler). In his eyes, Hitler played actually a minor
role in the development, because he himself did not know at the beginning
(in 1933) where to lead. Antisemitism was not new, and racism existed also
elsewhere, such as in the United States. It was the bureaucracy that made
the difference. It turned into a “machinery of destruction” (the key term
developed by Hilberg), which escalated the whole process – in a linear
path, through clear bureaucratic stages (definition of “the Jews”,
expropriation, concentration, extermination) - from vague beginnings to
the enormous killing project which was symbolized by Auschwitz. From this
perspective, the lesson of the Shoah, although applied on the Jews, was
universal and related to the dangers of the modern state, which should
find ways to balance and control the almost unlimited power and ability of
the bureaucracy of the centralized state. An interesting example for the
functioning of an apparently unimportant bureaucratic institution was
presented by Hilberg in another amazing study carried out in the 1970s:
“German Railways, Jewish Souls”. In this study he showed how Reichsbahn
officials made the deportation system function smoothly and efficiently
(for instance: they proposed their SS clients reductions on transportation
if more Jews were pushed into trains, and exempted children under 4 from
payment), and thus contributed their share.
With the rapid development of Holocaust research from the second half of
the 1960s, Hilberg’s book became a “must” in academic courses on the topic
at universities. He therefore published an expanded 3-volume version in
1985, which was translated into many languages. In 2004 he published a
third revised version. In the updated and revised versions he added much
new material, but never changed his basic interpretation. He also hardly
related to historiographical disputes which affected Holocaust research.
Even if the focus of his research was the machinery of destruction, it was
he who introduced the categorization of three “players” in the Holocaust
arena, which became widely used: perpetrators, victims and bystanders.
The fate of his book in Israel was twisted. Shortly after finishing the
manuscript of his book, he presented it to Yad Vashem for publication
(1957), through the mediation of Philip Friedman, perhaps the most eminent
Holocaust historian at the time. Yad Vashem, headed by its chairman,
historian Prof. Ben-Zion Dinur, and its director, Dr. Jozeph Melkman
(later: Michman, father of the undersigned), first agreed, but later
declined. The reason was not the quality of the whole work – it was
evaluated as the best comprehensive study to date – but Hilberg’s
evaluation of Jewish behavior vis-à-vis the Nazis, especially the
Judenräte (Jewish Councils), whom he saw as a cog in the destruction
machine. He had written that
“If we… look at the whole Jewish reaction pattern, we notice that in its
two salient features it is an attempt to avert action and, failing that,
automatic compliance with orders. Why is this so? Why did the Jews act in
this way?… They hoped that somehow the German drive would spend itself.
This hope was founded on a two-thousand-year-old experience. In exile the
Jews had always been in a minority; they had always been in danger; but
they had learned that they could avert danger and survive destruction by
placating and appeasing their enemies…. This experience was so ingrained
in the Jewish consciousness as to achieve the force of law…. A
two-thousand-year-old lesson could not be unlearned; the Jews could not
make the switch [to resistance when their leadership realized]… that the
modern machine-line destruction process would engulf European Jewry ” (p.
666).
Hilberg had grown up in a Zionist revisionist family and youth movement
(adherents of Jabotinsky) in Vienna, and his (generalized) view of Jewish
behavior in the diaspora, as well as of the Jewish Councils, was in the
1950s the dominant one in Israel too,. He had hoped that the major
memorial site for the Shoah in the Jewish state would be the first place
to accept his book. Therefore, Hilberg could not understand the decision
of the Yad Vashem historians, who thought his was an unfair generalization
of Jewish behavior; he felt insulted and remained critical of Yad Vashem
for many decades to come. No other Israeli publisher took it upon himself
to publish the book. Later on, a second polemic would emerge. Hilberg was
a scholar of documents, mainly of German ones. He published also Adam
Czerniakow’s diary (together with Yad Vashem’s Joseph Kermisz), but
remained extremely critical of the value of survivor testimonies until his
death (see his Sources of Holocaust Research, 2001). Yad Vashem and Hebrew
University historian Prof. Israel Gutman, a participant of the revolt of
the Warsaw ghetto and a survivor of Auschwitz, was very much in favor of
using them, although with critical examination. They directly and
indirectly clashed on this on several occasions.
Nevertheless, in spite of what has recently been claimed by some, Hilberg
was never “banned”, neither did he sever contacts with Israeli scholars.
He wrote several articles for Yad Vashem publications and used its
resources, and his book was (and is) used throughout Holocaust education
at Israeli universities. Hilberg himself was invited to Yad Vashem several
times, and participated in its international conferences on the Jewish
Leadership (1977) and on the history of Holocaust historiography (2004).
On the last occasion the hall was packed during his concluding talk, which
was attended by about 500 people. Immediately after that last conference,
Yad Vashem decided, together with several universities and research
institutions, to finally undertake the translation of Hilberg’s book, and
he responded enthusiastically. While working on the manuscript, he
constantly made updates, and responded to questions raised by the Yad
Vashem experts; the Hebrew version, which will hopefully be ready in the
forthcoming year, will therefore be the most updated and precise version.
Unfortunately, he will not be able to be present at the closing of the
circle, to which he so much looked forward.
|

Prof. Raul Hilberg |