Peter Jukes writes:
In The
House of the Dead, the late historian Tony Judt explains how the
Holocaust is the formative and foundational event of modern Europe.
The
unimaginable horrors of the Nazi death pits, death camps and death marches
haunted the continent for the next 60 years in unpredictable
and unmistakable ways.
Twelve years on, even Judt would
probably be surprised by Benjamin Netanyahu hijacking the six million
victims of the Holocaust for short-term political expediency.
In a speech on Tuesday, the Israeli
Prime Minister argued that Hitler had no plans for the Final
Solution until he was persuaded by an Arab cleric called Haj Amin
al-Hussein, who – concerned about the growing number of Jewish settlers in
what was then the British protectorate of Palestine – suggested the Nazi
leader should “burn them”.
This is such an egregious act of historical revisionism
that, were he to repeat this claim as he visits Germany, Netanyahu could be
liable to arrest and prosecution.
Under the German code of
incitement anyone who "denies or downplays" the
role of Nazism in the holocaust can face a prison term of up to five years.
For the avoidance of all doubt,
there is no evidence that the Grand Mufti had any impact in Hitler’s long held
hatred of Jews, or his plans to eradicate them and other native
populations.
For the best account of Hitler’s racist imperial vision, Tim
Snyder’s recently published book, Black Earth: The Holocaust as History and
Warning, shows the ideological foundations to Nazism were neo-Darwinian
theories of racial competition.
The ultimate goal of all of
Hitler’s policies was the extermination of all the
"subhumans" to the east to create "Lebensraum", or
living space for pure German Aryans in a new Reich.
The Jews, because of their
cross-border ubiquity, were the first targets of Nazi ferocity (after
homosexuals and the physically handicapped), as they embodied in their ideology
all the diseases of modernity, from modern art and psychiatry, to
Bolshevism and Capitalism.
But they weren’t alone. The Nazi’s killed an even
higher proportion of Central Europe’s Roma population, and had the invasion of
Russia succeeded, they had plans to starve most the Slavs under
occupation to death.
Of course, Netanyhu’s revisionism has nothing to do with
actual history, and everything to do with the political demands of the
present.
By overplaying the role of an Arab cleric, he is trying to use
the Jewish dead to undermine Palestinians, who have recently become locked
in a deadly back and forth with Israelis on the streets of Jerusalem.
Some
are already calling the violent cycle of retributions that are taking place on
the streets the "third intifada".
This misuse of history is a desperate gamble to turn the
various separate conflicts over land rights, property ownership, access to
water and the al Aqsa Mosque, into a binary
conflict of good against ultimate Swastika-bearing evil.
By making Muslims the
original proponents of genocide against the Jews, both revenge and pre-emptive
retaliation are justifiable.
By claiming that Palestinians were responsible for
the Final Solution, Netanyahu can gather all his enemies under single banner of
evil, and kill or expel them with moral authority.
The reality of Israel and the occupied territories is
somewhat different. Most Jews do not live in Israel. Many Israeli citizens
aren’t Jewish. And many Palestinans aren’t Muslim.
But demagoguery always
requires summoning up a last apocalyptic battle.
Traducing history is the least
of Netanyahu’s concerns.
Strangely, the importance of
history, and learning the lessons of the past, is best exemplified by what was
once the worst example: Germany.
In response to Netanyahu’s bizarre claim, the German
chancellor Angela Merkel was forced to wrest back “full responsibility” for the Holocaust:
“This is
taught in German schools for good reason, it must never be forgotten,” Merkel’s
spokesman Steffan Seibert said on Wednesday, “And I see no reason to change our
view of history in any way.”
He added: “We know that responsibility for
this crime against humanity is German and very much our own.”
Once famed for Prussian
militarism, brutal secret police and a surly sense of national victimhood,
Germany has now become a beacon of liberalism.
As Merkel spokesman has
pointed out, a lot of this has to do with education. That the realities of
history, however unpleasant, should be taught in all schools was a principle
established in the 50s by the then German Chancellor, Konrad Adenauer.
The rise
of Nazism has been a compulsory subject ever since because, as Judt puts it “the
health of German Democracy required that Nazism be remembered rather than
forgotten.”
Any visitor to Germany can
witness this openness about the past. While Brits are now embarrassed to bring
up the subject of Hitler, Berlin cab drivers with raise the subject
without apology.
To Germans, the past is a nightmare which needs constant
analysis and recollection to stop it recurring.
Netanyahu’s intervention shows,
at least at the top of its political class, Israel is doing a very bad job at
learning the lessons of the past.
As the saying goes, it will therefore be
condemned to repeat them, while Palestinians are accused of crimes they’ve
never committed.
As far as cases of mistaken identity go, it could well be one
of the worst.
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