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Why Hitler is still Villain No. 1

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  • Why Hitler is still Villain No. 1

    WUnited Press International / Washington Times
    May 9 2005

    Why Hitler is still Villain No. 1


    By Martin Sieff
    UPI Senior News Analyst


    Washington, DC, May. 9 (UPI) -- President George W. Bush, Russian
    President Vladimir Putin and around 50 other heads of state and
    national leaders gathered in Moscow to celebrate Victory in Europe,
    or VE-Day, Monday all agree that Adolf Hitler, the leader of the Nazi
    Third Reich, was a definitive example of human evil: They are right.

    The late Hans Schenk, professor of European thought at the University
    of Oxford 35 years ago, had a very distinctive way of introducing the
    study of Hitler in his tutorials on modern history. "Very well,
    ladies and gentlemen, let us look at the monster," he would say.

    More than 60 years after his death, it is this larger than life,
    almost supernatural, intensity of malignant hatred that remains the
    most distinctive and disquieting aspect of the life of Adolf Hitler.
    At least two other tyrants of the century arguably were responsible
    for the deaths of more people -- Soviet dictator Josef Stalin and
    Chinese leader Mao Zedong. But those often-quoted statistics are
    misleading.

    Even if one takes the highest imaginable totals for the number of
    Soviet citizens who died during Stalin's dictatorship, a vast number
    of them died because of Hitler's Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union,
    which killed 27 million Soviet citizens alone. Or they perished
    because of the stupidity of Stalin's policies, such as the starving
    to death of up to 10 million Ukrainian peasants in the great
    collectivization of the late 1920s and early 1930s.

    In Mao's case, he does not appear to have wanted the 25 to 30 million
    people who starved to death during his 1958-61 Great Leap Forward to
    have died. He really thought that his bizarre policies would
    immediately enable China to outstrip the Soviet Union and even the
    United States in industrial power.

    But there is no doubt that Hitler wanted the 6 million Jews, well
    over a million Poles, 27 million Soviet citizens and possibly 2
    million Yugoslav citizens that he slaughtered to die. In his last
    hours of life, he lamented that he had been too merciful to the
    German people whom he ruled and that he had not made a more thorough
    job of slaughtering more of them.

    Hitler enjoyed full power for only 12 years. Stalin ruled with full
    power for a quarter of a century, more than twice as long. And Mao
    misruled China for more than 27 years. But Hitler killed far more
    people per year than either of his rivals for "worst villain" did.
    And he was far more thorough in slaughtering his chosen targets.

    Also, Hitler's definitions of races and classes of people to be
    denied the right to life were far more sweeping than either of his
    rivals. Far more than even Stalin or Mao, Hitler scorned the very
    concepts of love and mercy. His contempt for Christianity was almost
    as great as his hatred of the Jews.

    These chilling aspects of Hitler's thought are widely overlooked or
    ignored even now. But some of the most eminent leaders and scholars
    of his own time recognized them very well.

    The great German historian Friedrich Meinecke in his classic 1946
    work "The German Catastrophe" described Hitler and Nazism as the
    eruption of the daemonic into world history on a hitherto
    unprecedented scale.

    Britain's wartime Prime Minister Winston Churchill called Hitler the
    repository of the most malignant and corrosive hatreds ever to be
    contained in a human breast.

    And Schenk, a devout Czech democrat and Roman Catholic Christian who
    had escaped Hitler's reach, used to say of Lord Alan Bullock's
    classic biography of Hitler that it was "excellent, but flawed. It
    failed to grasp the demonic dimensions of the man."

    Hitler certainly did not invent the modern concept of racial genocide.
    He did not pioneer its use by the bureaucracy of a powerful modern
    state. That dark distinction belonged to the Young Turk regime that
    ran the Ottoman Empire through World War I. The Young Turks even
    called their attempt to annihilate the Armenian people, their "Final
    Solution of the Armenian Problem."

    But Hitler eagerly adopted and improved such pioneering work by
    others. Even Stalin and Mao never applied on the same scale the
    principles of sadism and torture which the Nazis, inspired by Hitler,
    applied to their victims.

    Churchill was well aware of the distinction. In confidential
    conversations with some of his top advisers while serving as wartime
    prime minister, he drew a distinction between the principles of
    communism which, he felt, was doomed to collapse because it ran so
    strongly in the face of human nature, and those of Nazism.

    Nazism, Churchill believed, was a far more sinister and threatening
    ideology because it did not deny basic human needs and emotions, but
    catered to and magnified the darkest impulses among them. That was
    why, in one of his classic speeches, he warned that, if Britain and
    its allies lost the great conflict, the entire world could be plunged
    "into a new dark age, made more sinister and, perhaps, more
    protracted by ... a perverted science."

    The dark architect of this astonishingly effective and thorough
    assault on two and half thousand years of moral monotheistic
    civilization in the Western world remains a strangely elusive figure,
    despite the thousands of biographies and studies that have been done
    of him. The more scholars attempt sophisticated or rational
    explanations for his policies and strategies, the more they seem to
    stumble before the obvious scale of the suffering he inflicted and
    the hatreds he unleashed.

    The intellectual Hannah Arendt coined the phrase "banality of evil"
    to describe the real nature of Nazi crimes. It was a term Hitler and
    Churchill, for very different reasons, would both have rejected with
    amused contempt. For Hitler did not want his evil to be banal.

    A lifelong, passionate admirer of the grand operas of Richard Wagner,
    whence he claimed much of his inspiration, he did his utmost to cast
    his most outrageous deeds in a heroic, superhuman and garish light.
    And he bequeathed this propensity for extraordinary artistic excess
    to his entire movement.

    Nazi storm troopers goose-stepped wearing thigh-high leather boots.
    Nazi Junkers Ju-87 Stuka dive-bombers were equipped with sirens to
    terrify their victims before blasting them with high explosive bombs.
    After the war was won, a monumental architecture was planned for
    Berlin to obliterate all the centuries of human-scale experience that
    had gone before. The ancient cathedrals and other Christian holy
    places of Europe were to be dwarfed and humiliated into irrelevance.

    Meinecke was right. Hitler's meteoric rise to the status of conqueror
    of entire continents is a cautionary tale for the ages on how easily
    scores of millions of human beings can have their emotions
    manipulated and distorted to carry out the most horrendous of crimes.

    All too many other outrages recorded in the same century shows that
    this mass propensity toward the taking of life and the inflicting of
    torments on millions of fellow human beings is not some unique moral
    failing of the German people. It is common to all humanity.

    This is why Hitler, far more even than Stalin, or Mao, or any of the
    other monstrous figures of the 20th century, serves to
    single-handedly embody and exemplify the crimes of them all. He
    showed what all of humanity could be capable of if the hard-won moral
    wisdom of the great religious traditions, or the careful balances of
    stable political systems, were lost.

    He showed what happened when all the restraints on the darkest human
    emotions were swept away and the beasts within were unleashed. No
    pretense at banality can undo the memory of that loss of innocence.
    To deny him his contemptible stature would be a further dishonor to
    the tens of millions he killed without regret or remorse. Bush, Putin
    and the other world leaders were right to make this 60th anniversary
    of VE-Day such a special occasion. Hitler remains Villain No. 1: No
    one else comes close.
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