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The World Stood By As The Holocaust Began. Have We Made The Same Mis

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  • The World Stood By As The Holocaust Began. Have We Made The Same Mis

    THE WORLD STOOD BY AS THE HOLOCAUST BEGAN. HAVE WE MADE THE SAME MISTAKE WITH BURMA?

    PETER POPHAM

    http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/commentators/the-world-stood-by-as-the-holocaust-began-have-we-made-the-same-mistake-with-burma-8927974.html
    Thursday 7 November 2013

    World View: Diplomats have unique freedom of action - and sometimes
    this is crucial

    Robert Townsend Smallbones was an exemplary British diplomat who
    earlier this year was posthumously awarded the British Holocaust Medal,
    in recognition of the number of German Jews he saved from the death
    camps by giving them British visas. But could he have done more?

    The question is prompted by an exhibition opening on Monday at
    Berlin's Centrum Judaicum on the 75th anniversary of Kristallnacht,
    which gathers the impressions and dispatches of a host of foreign
    envoys present in Germany in November 1938 as the "catastrophe before
    the catastrophe" exploded around them.

    Mr Smallbones liked the Germans. They are "habitually kind to animals,
    to children, to the aged and infirm", he told the Foreign Office.

    "They seemed to me to have no cruelty in their make-up." So, when
    well-orchestrated Nazi mobs began burning synagogues, smashing shops
    and homes and throwing Jews into concentration camps, it was an ugly
    shock. In Frankfurt, he wrote, Jews were forced to kneel and place
    their heads on the ground. When some of them vomited, "the guards
    removed the vomit by taking the culprit by the scruff of the neck and
    wiping it away with his face and hair". These Jews were later taken
    to Buchenwald and some beaten to death.

    Many other envoys conveyed their disgust to their bosses back home. It
    was "mediaeval barbarism", "a disgusting spectacle", they wrote. "The
    scope of brutality," wrote a French diplomat, was only "exceeded by
    the [Turkish] massacres of the Armenians".

    Nor could the diplomats be in any doubt about the desperation of Jews
    to leave Germany: 1,000 of them took refuge in the Polish embassy in
    Leipzig. The US consul-general in Stuttgart reported: "Jews from all
    sections of Germany thronged into the office until it was overflowing
    with humanity, begging for an immediate visa." But despite the
    eloquent horror of the envoys, nothing happened. Washington was the
    only country to recall its ambassador. No country broke off diplomatic
    relations. No sanctions were imposed. Nor did other countries act on
    the clear information that Germany's Jews were in mortal danger. The
    wealthy nations were no more generously disposed to the wretched of
    the earth in 1938 than they are today.

    The result was that the Nazis got away with Kristallnacht. The outside
    world failed the test. As the historian Raphael Gross writes, the Nazis
    "felt like pioneers who had just successfully entered new territory".

    November 1938 appears one of those occasions when diplomatic activity
    could have made a real difference: a united reaction from the outside
    world would undoubtedly have been condemned as "interference" but it
    could just have halted "the catastrophe after the catastrophe".

    As the BBC comedy Ambassadors shows, diplomats have unique freedom
    of action, hobnobbing with the ruling caste but also able to build
    bridges to the oppressed. And sometimes this is crucial. In Burma,
    during the decades of military rule, the willingness of British envoys
    to go out on a public limb in support of the democratic opposition
    was vital in showing the Burmese that the tyrannical status quo was
    considered intolerable outside the country.

    The converse is also true. The Pope, as Stalin pointed out, has no
    divisions, but the status of Pope Pius XII during World War Two was
    enormous. So when he refused to publicly denounce the persecution
    of Roman Jews by the occupying Nazis it was easy for the Germans to
    conclude that mass deportation would meet no serious impediment from
    the Church.

    Sometimes strategic hopes have to be sacrificed to the emotions of
    the moment, when they are as strong as those produced by Kristallnacht.

    Burmese Buddhists attacked and killed Rohingya Muslims in race riots in
    June 2012, just as Aung San Suu Kyi was beginning her charm offensive
    in the West. Everywhere she went, the priority of governments was
    to make her welcome, so it passed with little comment that she had
    failed to condemn the anti-Rohingya pogrom.

    The violence has continued sporadically ever since, while Ms Suu
    Kyi has yet to denounce it convincingly. It should have been made
    clear right at the start that this was something the West would not
    tolerate. Now it may be too late.




    From: A. Papazian
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