When it comes to history, things are obviously more
complicated. Happy-endings are not provided on call and there are no
convenient rules that children are never killed on stage and the hero
invariably wins. Nevertheless, both politicians and the media are adept
at considering the audience's demand.
They took some things into consideration this year when
89-year-old Ivan Demjanjuk was deported to Germany where he is accused
of complicity in the murder of thousands of Jews in the Nazi
concentration camp Sobibor. Objections because he's an old man can --
and should -- be rejected since crimes against humanity cannot be
subject to any time bar. It would not be politically correct either to
express surprise or objections over Germanys role in administering
justice. On the contrary, it is surely to be welcomed.
It seems likely that possible confusion over the charges was
also anticipated. Demjanjuk, after all, has already been tried,
effectively on the basis of the same evidence, although on different
charges. In 1988 he was sentenced to death in Israel, but 5 years later
acquitted after it transpired that he was not the brutal guard at
Treblinka, Ivan Grozny [Ivan the Terrible]. Consciously or not, there
are different motives for blurring the difference. Those protesting
Demjanjuk's innocence stress that he has already been acquitted and
believe that he is simply being persecuted. Or that it is an
anti-Ukrainian campaign. German investigators speak somewhat vaguely of
'new circumstances' and present new charges however they are unlikely
to be too concerned that the media constantly mention the bloody sadist
whom Demjanjuk was once wrongly alleged to be. It is, after all, vital
that this case "doesn't collapse".
I am also convinced that war criminals should answer for their
crimes, regardless of age, however this case elicits only a bitter
sense of failure and in no way triumph of justice. There are
effectively no new circumstances and the entire prosecution rests on an
Ausweiss, or pass, in Ivan Demjanjuk's name at the SS "Travniki"
training camp, a list of people brought to Sobibor, as well as the
testimony of a Ukrainian guard at Sobibor Hnat Danylchenko.
All of that was known to the US authorities before the trial in Israel, then later when Demjanjuk first had his citizenship reinstated, and then again taken away because the country has no intention of harbouring Nazi collaborators on its territory. That sounds noble, however not overly convincing after the enforced disclosure in 2005 of archival material (http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB146/index.htm) about the "CIA's secret documentary history of the U.S government's relationship with General Reinhard Gehlen, the German army's intelligence chief for the Eastern Front during World War II". Other documents published "show that at least five associates of the notorious Nazi Adolf Eichmann worked for the CIA, 23 other Nazis were approached by the CIA for recruitment, and at least 100 officers within the Gehlen organization were former SD or Gestapo officers".
In his recent book "Hunting evil", Guy Walters asserts that
despite the popular myth, most Nazis were not hunted down at all. He
cites the example of Friedrich Buchardt who as the head of an
Einsatzgruppe took direct part in the killing of tens of thousands of
Jews. After the War, we learn, he continued his career, working for
Britain's MI6.
Unlike these and many other cases where the Allies could not
have failed to know who they were dealing with, here it is known that
Demjanjuk was taken prisoner in 1942, but there are no living witnesses
who can refute, or confirm, his assertion that from 1942 to 1944 he was
in a prisoner of war camp in Chelm, and not at the Travniki Camp and in
Sobibor.
However we are offered one more argument: "All of Demjanjuk's
accusers, whether in the USA, in Israel, or now here in Germany,
maintain that no one could have endured the inhuman conditions in
Chelm" (http://www.zeit.de/2009/28/DOS-Demjanjuk)
The fact that he survived is thus proof against him.
The conditions for Soviet prisoners of war were indeed inhuman
and the mortality rate among them very high. I do not know whether
Demjanjuk was a guard in Sobibor, but unlike "all his accusers" can
only hope that in a prisoner of war's place, I would have refused the
chance to save my life. Judging from their certainty, I would hazard a
guess that they have not read the words of Varlam Shalamov, who spent
more than 20 years in Soviet labour camps: "The camps were a great test
of a man's moral strength, of ordinary human morality, and ninety nine
percent of people failed this test".
And Demjanjuk is not accused of moral failure, but of a crime
against humanity, of complicity in the murder of 29 thousand Jews. He
will stand not before God, but before human beings who apparently know
how Soviet prisoners of war lived -- and died, and do not for a second
doubt that they themselves would have passed that moral test with
flying colours.
All the media tell us that the trial of Demjanjuk will
probably be the last trial of "Nazis", and that it will be the final
stage of the process begun at Nuremberg. A leitmotiv of virtually all
articles of this topic has long been the number of "Hitler's helpers"
in other countries. We read, for example,
«Experts such as Dieter Pohl of the German Institute for
Contemporary History estimate that more than 200,000 non-Germans --
about as many as Germans and Austrians -- "prepared, carried out and
assisted in acts of murder." The authors of this article even raise the
disturbing question "was the so-called Final Solution in fact a
'European project that cannot be explained solely by the special
circumstances of German history'?" http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,625824,00.html
At the Nuremberg Tribunal the initiators of a heinous crime
against humanity were tried, together with people who were consciously
and voluntarily complicit in that crime. Another -- non-judicial --
process was at the same time underway with the Allies, including the
USSR, deciding who could be of service to them in conditions of a new
"cold" war. This was very often determined by political considerations
and not the need for de-Nazification and repentance. We are now seeing
a new generation of researchers and journalists for whom, distanced in
time and conditions, all seems simple. They draw bold conclusions about
the guilt of this or that group of people, claiming that they could
have done more to save Jews. Or, with the help of arithmetic, they
brush away complexity and blur fundamental moral concepts. Two hundred
thousand Germans, two hundred thousand non-Germans, yet no mention of
whether these were volunteers, active participants, or those facing a
choice between life and death.
Workers at the German factories producing Zyklon B for the gas
chambers could hardly have been totally oblivious as to why it was
being produced in such quantities. Do German intellectuals, including
Martin Heidegger, who helped the Nazis first remove Jews from their
posts, really not bear responsibility for the "Final Solution"? They
bear some, as, incidentally, do the intellectuals from other countries
who tried not to see or "broadcast" the crimes against humanity of
Stalin's regime.
It is difficult to believe that the French who sent 75
thousand French Jews "east" did not know deep down that they were
sentencing them to death, that is, that they were implicated in mass
murder. They did so voluntarily whereas in neighbouring fascist Italy
soldiers quite simply refused to carry out orders to hand Italian Jews
over to the Nazis.
There is nothing new here and all the information needed can
be found in any library or on the Internet. If the will is there, you
can also find out how the conditions differed for British and Soviet
soldiers in Nazi prisoner of war camps, or what people in Poland or
Ukraine risked when providing refuge for Jewish people.
Or you can choose the simpler, undemanding role of viewers,
observing how the heroes have finally caught the villain and justice
has been restored. All easy and painless.
It is not everything that is understood in comparison, and one
persons guilt is not diminished because others also sinned. It was
once justified to try to find "Ivan Grozny", bring a brutal sadist to
justice. They convicted the wrong man who was not executed only thanks
to the collapse of the Soviet Union and the discovery of material
demonstrating that a miscarriage of justice had taken place. At the
present time we are dealing, at most, with an anonymous functionary who
was in that way saving his life.
Obviously prisoners of war faced a moral choice, as did the
prisoners of Soviet labour camps, as did Heidegger when he personally
facilitated the dismissal of Jewish colleagues, as well as workers of
German factories which make the death machine possible. Some were
governed by career considerations or political expediency, while others
feared losing their job or simply wanted to survive. There were also
those who consciously and voluntarily carried out a terrible evil. They
also made their moral choice, as did those who for their own purposes
helped them to escape justice.
Instead of the culmination of the Nuremberg process and the
triumphant renewal of justice, we again have a show trial which elicits
a worried feeling that the organizers want an easy symbol and myth,
while both they and the public as a whole show a stubborn reluctance to
learn any real lessons.
Halya Coynash
Originally published in Ukrainian at: http://www.zaxid.net/article/48918/