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Labour of mourning: Commemoration of Holocaust should not be routine

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  • Labour of mourning: Commemoration of Holocaust should not be routine

    Statesman, India
    March 18 2005

    LABOUR OF MOURNING:Commemoration Of Holocaust Should Not Be Routine
    Affair

    By PRASENJIT CHOWDHURY

    In this season of Holocaust remembrance, we get a `celebration'' of
    the 60th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz. The lesson of
    history is that there should not be yet another instance of a crime
    against humanity though we have since seen Stalin's purges, the
    killing fields of Rwanda and ethnic cleansing of Bosnia, the
    liquidation of nations, not to speak of Guantánamo Bay, Abu Ghraib
    and numerous civil wars. History does repeat itself. But in
    remembering the Holocaust and the tales of survival, we want to
    uphold the triumph of human sprit.
    The whole exercise has been reduced to `the labour of mourning'.
    Ritualisation of mourning is all very solemn but the pitfalls are far
    too evident in recent instances of genocide. The empire of kitsch
    built around one of the direst hours of humanity has often reeked of
    making art out of bloodstains.

    Glut of films
    Not alone Auschwitz, but Holocaust literature has taken hold of our
    collective imagination; a whole glut of films, documentaries and
    dramas have come up. The Holocaust has become the subject of
    countless works of art as individuals and communities seek to
    memorialise victims and make sense of a senseless event. When Roman
    Polanski's The Pianist was having to tackle such an inherently
    sensational subject such as the extermination of Polish Jews, in its
    adaptation of classical keyboardist Wladyslaw Szpilman's
    autobiography by screenwriter Ronald Harwood The Dresser, there were
    people to judge the `personal' and professional credentials of the
    filmmaker. For making a film that deals with basic survival, the
    critics were quick to point out that Polanski is himself a famous
    survivor. His mother died in Auschwitz, his father was confined in a
    separate Nazi concentration camp, and Polanski grew up in the Krakow
    ghetto.
    The post-war German state's relations with the Third Reich, Hitler
    and Holocaust are carefully codified in law. The Federal Republic
    still defines itself by its difference from and rejection of what
    went before. This results in peculiarities like the exception from
    the constitutional guarantee of free speech, under which it is
    illegal to deny that Holocaust happened, or even that the number of
    victims was smaller than commonly believed. Commemoration of the mass
    destruction of Germany's Jews has become a routine affair.
    Only a few years back, the publication of Daniel Goldhagen's American
    bestseller Hitler's Willing Executioners stressed how much of a
    problem the Holocaust remained for the new Germany. The thesis of the
    book is that ordinary Germans took part in the killing of Jews not
    because they were obeying orders, were afraid of the consequences of
    resisting or were too hypnotised by Hitler's `demagoguery'. Goldhagen
    set out to demonstrate that Germany in 1933 was a `society pregnant
    with murder' because violent anti-Semitism was so deeply rooted in
    the consciousness of ordinary people that all Hitler needed to do for
    the annihilation to proceed was give the starting signal. The
    dynamics of oppressed-oppressor, victor-victim relationships have
    been the bane of historical contentions as the ritualisation has
    revolved around the good-Nazi-bad-Nazi theme.

    Moral `imperative'
    The Israeli journalist, Tom Segev, in his book The Seventh Million
    describes a visit to Auschwitz and other former death camps in Poland
    by a group of Israeli high school students, some from secular
    schools, some from the religious ones. All of them were prepared for
    the visit by the Israeli ministry of education, fed with a staple of
    books and films on the subject and including meetings with survivors.
    On their arrival in Poland, they were not sure whether they would
    emerge from the experience as `different people'? The students were
    `prepared' to believe that the trip would have a profound effect on
    their `identities' as Jews and as Israelis.
    In February 1994, Steven Spielberg's Schindler's List resurfaced with
    interviews with survivors, photographs of perpetrators, fresh
    evidence and memories with a certain regularity. Prior to that
    cinemas were showing Europa, Europa, the story of a Jewish boy who
    survived the war by passing for a German; Korczak, Andrzej Wajda's
    film about the Warsaw ghetto; Shoah, nine hours of interviews with
    Holocaust witnesses and Sophie's Choice, the story of a woman forced
    by the Nazis, to choose between her son and her daughter. The quality
    and abundance of such films, not to mention the documentaries, the
    journalism and the novels (even Martin Amis has written about the
    Holocaust) and the attention they get, prove that nobody really finds
    them either peculiar or obsessive. On the other hand, filmmakers and
    writers on the Holocaust feel that there is a moral `imperative' to
    return to that subject again and again.
    Today, films such as Schindler's List and Viktor Klemperer's diaries
    - stories of Jews cheating death and good Germans helping them - are
    replacing the guilt-obsession of Werner Fassbinder and Heinrich Böll
    in the 1960s and the 1970s. Klemperer settled in East Germany where
    his diaries were unpublished because of their unflattering comparison
    between national socialism and communism. Spielberg has made films
    about Japanese concentration camps (Empire of the Sun) and Nazi
    concentration camps but not about Soviet concentration camps, they
    fail to catch somehow the `collective' imagination.
    `It is foolish', writes Primo Levi, the Italian-Jewish writer, `to
    think that human justice can eradicate' the crimes of Auschwitz. `The
    destiny of the Jewish people, whom no earthly power has ever been
    able to eradicate' - so speaks a character in Jean-Françoise
    Steiner's novel about a revolt in Treblinka. Such sentiments lead to
    self-delusion. There are clashes of remembrance and opinion now that
    we have an enormous body of memoirs and studies describing the
    experience of the concentration camps. `After Auschwitz', wrote
    Theodore Adorno famously, `to write a poem is barbaric'. It means to
    `squeeze aesthetic pleasure out of artistic representation of the
    naked bodily pain of those who have been knocked down by rifle
    butts'.
    The shrewder among us may have guessed what we're getting at. Many of
    us know that Stalin killed by means of mass murder and concentration
    camps, at least twice as many people as Hitler - not because he was a
    `worse' or `more unique' dictator but because he was in power much
    longer. His crimes occurred within a decade of the Holocaust,
    sometimes in precisely the same Polish and Ukrainian villages.

    Monuments and museums
    Stalin not only managed the Katyn massacres (the order to kill 15,000
    Polish officers, the documents of which were locked until a few years
    back) but also the purges in Russia and the artificial famine in
    Ukraine, the murder of one in ten Balts, the execution of most
    intellectuals living in the Soviet Union, and the near liquidation of
    the Crimean Tartars. While the state of Israel has been able to build
    monuments and museums to Hitler's victims, the Poles and Balts and
    Ukrainians remained under Soviet rule for another 50 years, unable to
    speak out, unable to move to America or Britain, unable to write
    books and make films.
    Iris Chang, the Chinese-American writer of a bestseller titled The
    Forgotten Holocaust of World War II on the 1937 rape of Nanking
    pointed out how a culture also needed to be deemed as heirs of its
    very own Holocaust. The instance of Bangladesh in the throes of its
    making comes into mind. The Nanking massacre, during which tens of
    thousands of Chinese were slaughtered by Japanese troops, was a
    hideous event. The brutal lives and violent deaths of countless men
    and women from Africa and China who were traded as slaves must not be
    forgotten. The mass murder of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire cannot
    be denied. And what about the communal riots, the organised butchery
    of man against man?
    If collective guilt gives us a moral duty not to let the terrible
    tragedy of Holocaust pass by our memory, it is imperative as well to
    focus on other tragedies as compulsively. We mourn not because
    rituals demand it, not because we must but because we should.

    (The author is a freelance writer)
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