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Book Review: New way to look at genocide an ungainly work

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  • Book Review: New way to look at genocide an ungainly work

    Winnipeg Free Press , Canada
    Nov 21 2009


    New way to look at genocide an ungainly work

    Book Reviewed by: Lionel Steiman


    Worse Than War
    Genocide, Eliminationism, and the Ongoing Assault on Humanity
    PublicAffairs, 658 pages, $38
    By Daniel Jonah Goldhagen


    This ungainly work has many faults, the first being its length.

    It is wordy and repetitive, its tone is often arrogant and omniscient,
    and its author, American academic Daniel Jonah Goldhagen, is insulting
    and dismissive of views with which he disagrees.

    Because it presents evidence selectively, and forces it to fit
    Goldhagen's preconceptions, the book is not a trustworthy reference.
    But it is also a vigorously argued effort to address a major cause of
    human suffering.

    Worse than War claims to offer a new way of understanding the
    phenomenon of genocide, and a corresponding method of preventing or
    restraining genocidal actions once they begin.

    In it Goldhagen uses the interpretive frame of his controversial 1996
    book on the Holocaust, Hitler's Willing Executioners, for an analysis
    of genocide in general. Goldhagen's first book was rejected by
    scholars for faulty research and interpretation, and the present work
    will not likely fare any better.

    That is partly because Goldhagen excludes structural and material
    factors from consideration, focusing instead solely on the role of
    individuals.

    All genocidal assaults, he believes, are caused by individuals, who
    are always motivated by ideas. Individual leaders conjure some
    transformation of society which they insist requires the elimination
    of an identified enemy, usually a mistrusted and hated minority.

    Goldhagen calculates that in the 20th century between 125 and 175
    million people were victims of mass murder, three times the number of
    military and civilian deaths in all the wars of that century.

    But it is often impossible to distinguish between deaths resulting
    from war and those caused by genocide. Goldhagen insists a distinction
    can be made, but he fails to make a clear one. This is a serious flaw
    in a book whose title is Worse than War.

    Goldhagen's central concept is "eliminationism," which he prefers to
    the more narrowly defined genocide. Eliminationist leaders and
    politics are key to understanding the origins as well as the course of
    genocide, from that of the Armenians, Jews and Cambodians, to the
    so-called "ethnic cleansing" by Serbs and Croat in the Balkans, as
    well as the recent assaults in Rwanda and Darfur.

    There must exist a totality of beliefs, desires, ideologies, acts and
    policies to make mass annihilation an actual option. Goldhagen coined
    the term "eliminationism" for this totality because the term genocide
    made it impossible to diagnose potentially genocidal situations.

    Although he insists that his concept enables us to diagnose and deal
    with situations before they escalate into full-blown genocides, his
    eliminationism is too broad and amorphous a concept to serve as the
    basis of concerted action by any international body.

    In 1948 the United Nations defined genocide, but in a way that almost
    guaranteed that intervention to stop it would never be undertaken.
    Goldhagen therefore proposes a new approach, one combining prevention,
    intervention and justice.

    The media would drop the illusion that genocide results from a
    conflict between two equal sides and would avoid such euphemisms as
    "ethnic cleansing." Where political leaders commit mass murder, they
    and their deeds would be labelled accordingly, even where they were
    heads of state.

    Bounties would be placed on the heads of any political or military
    leaders pursuing eliminationist ends. The UN would no longer pamper
    tyrants and other practitioners of eliminationism; it would admit only
    democracies, would impose effective sanctions including armed
    intervention, and would establish an effective International Court.

    In Goldhagen's view the only major remaining source of eliminationist
    assaults lies in "political Islam," his term for Islamism or Islamic
    fundamentalism.

    Its targets are Americans and other infidels, particularly Israel and
    the Jews. Goldhagen refers to Israel as a target of possible genocide
    but fails to mention the Palestinians.

    In the Middle East one side's legitimate defenders are the other
    side's genocidal terrorists. How can "eliminationism" be addressed
    where each side see its salvation in the disappearance of the other?



    University of Manitoba historian Lionel Steiman is the author of Paths
    to Genocide: Antisemitism in Western History (St. Martin's Press,
    1998).

    Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition November 21, 2009 H7

    http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/entertainment /books/new-way-to-look-at-genocide-an-ungainly-wor k-70689527.html

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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