When I reached 75, I promised myself never to read another short story, novel, or nonfiction about the Holocaust. Having read Hitler's Willing Executioners, I thought I'd learned it all, and who needs the grief?
Then, whilst reading on my NOOK, I mentioned that book to a visitor. When I called it up, Backing Hitler:Consent and Coercion in Nazi Germany came up as "People who like this..." My finger tapped on it, and this book began to download.
Robert Gellately's writing grabs your attention and his studies grab your guts. You may think you know all about the Shoah, but, believe me, you don't. Gellately has done in depth what, apparently, nobody ever thought of before:trawling newspapers from Hitler's rise to the Allies at the gates in April 1945. He does not discuss only the Jews, but the Poles, Jehovah's Witnesses and the myriad others sent to the camps. Being a bona fide Aryan didn't mean you were safe, either from being killed or deported. All persons could be dispatched without any evidence. If you rail against the lengthy trials and legal niceties in the USA, read what happens when a society forfeits the right to a fair trial. The Germans did that willingly. In fact, given that outright lies and false charges were investigated by the Gestapo, Germans indulged in a frenzy of denouncing their friends, neighbor, and spouses throughout Hitler's reign. Interestingly, for the most part, the Gestapo waited for citizen denouncements to arrest people. They were not proactive in searching out forbidden activities.
It wasn't just Nazi Party members who sabotaged justice. It was ordinary citizens. Thus, they collided with the Nazis to maintain a repressive and unjust society
Gellately's not only read the daily newspapers circulating in Germany from 1993-1945, he examined Gestapo files. The ordinary citizen learned a lot of what the Nazis were doing by glowing reports in the papers.
After the War, I met German students and academics who all said they didn't know about the camps. How could they not? Gellately' examines the numbers of camps in Germany. They were built on the outskirts of major cities and towns. Moreover, their prisoners were used for slave labor in those places. People saw them in their striped garb, often being brutalized by guards. They knew about the camps. They couldn't not have known. Again by their denunciations of others, they colluded with the camp system. They deliberately denounced people, knowing they'd be sent to the camps often with no evidence. Be grateful for the hearsay bans in American courts
Gallately researched the camps themselves. They weren't just Dachau, Auschwitz, and other well known sites. There were hundreds of camps, all in and around cities. And, each camp spawned sub-camps, as many as 50, even 100. They supplied the labor for the German war machines and farms . Yes, the Germans knew.
The most shocking--and affecting-- chapter showed that when German defeat was nigh, on orders from Himmler, the prison guards and overseers indulged in a frenzy of accelerated killings. When they couldn't kill fast enough, they took prisoners on death marches, summarily shooting anyone who lagged behind. In full view of citizens, they would beat people to death for no reason. Actually, there was a reason: Hitler's regime gave license to sadists and other depraved people.
The question for me still remains of how a highly educated and cultured society could be turned into beasts if their government condones it. Not only condones, but urged it. Gallately can't answer that. Nor can I