"The Good Old Days": The Holocaust as Seen by Its Perpetrators and BystandersErnst Klee, Willi Dressen, Volker Riess Free Press, 1991 - 314 sivua The title comes from the cover of a private photo album kept by concentration camp commandant Kurt Franz of Treblinka. This gruesomely sentimental and unmistakably authentic title introduces an equally disturbing collection of diaries, letters home, and confidential reports written by the executioners and sympathetic observers of the Holocaust, illustrated with numerous photographs they themselves took as "souvenirs" of their "achievements." The most arresting images document the early massacres in the Baltic states, where executions were a public entertainment. In Lithuania, Jews were clubbed to death with crowbars before cheering crowds, while mothers held up their children to see the spectacle and German soldiers clustered like fans at a sporting event. At the moment these and similar murders took place, German witnesses, either in the course of duty or out of curiosity or by chance, made a photographic record. The alternation of their sentimental words with these horrific images documents a chilling incapacity for human feeling. These functionaries of death never seriously questioned the task they were assigned. "I only took part in the murder of three million people out of consideration for my family" wrote the director of Auschwitz 's political department. Indeed, in their personal letters and journals the camp guards are far more disturbed by delayed vacation leave or by shortages of small luxuries than by the executions they carried out daily, which they also noted, briefly and without comment. Top secret reports filed by SS officers recount the pressure exerted by the Reich to devise ever more effective methods of killing. As their work achieved a depraved efficiency, the camp guards enjoyed more time for social activities. Scrapbook snapshots show musical soirees and other informal gatherings where they drank and laughed together after a day 's work. "The Good Old Days" reveals startling evidence of the inhumanity of twentieth century history and is published as yet another irrefutable response to the revisionist historians who claim to doubt the historic truth of the Holocaust.--Adapted from dust jacket. |
Sisältö
Foreign Service | 8 |
Each time a victim was beaten to death they started to clap | 23 |
Pushed to their psychological limits | 59 |
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"The Good Old Days": The Holocaust as Seen by Its Perpetrators and Bystanders Ernst Klee,Willi Dressen,Volker Riess Rajoitettu esikatselu - 1991 |
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Viitteet tähän teokseen
Photographing the Holocaust: Interpretations of the Evidence Janina Struk Esikatselu ei käytettävissä - 2004 |