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Holocaust And Memory In The Global Age (Politics History  Social Chan)

audiobook Holocaust And Memory In The Global Age (Politics History Social Chan) by Daniel Levy; Natan Sznaider in History

Description

Aided by letters saved by his mother in 1950 and 1951; a retired physician looks back more than fifty years to give an insightful and candid account of his experiences while serving as the1st Battalion Surgeon and later as the Regimental Surgeon of the 7th Infantry Regiment of the 3rd Infantry Division during the Korean War. The "Forgotten War" has been rendered memorable by the many stories of courage and endurance; suffering and sorrow; human failings with self inflicted wounds; inept leadership; and friendly fire errors. But the process of war culled the cowards and brought to the top those capable of brilliant and sacrificial leadership at squad; platoon; company; battalion and regimental levels. Attacking and retreating north; south; east and west; in freezing winter and summer mud ever being engaged in fighting for territory. Yet in spite of it all; there was GI humor; as well as enabling and ennobling faith revealed in the midst of the carnage. This is an old doctor-soldier's story that has been lauded; verified and amplified by other old soldiers to make enjoyable reading.


#2167954 in Books 2005-12-08Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 8.25 x .70 x 5.50l; .62 #File Name: 1592132766240 pages


Review
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Newfangled Forms of Holocaust Supremacism (Part 1); and New Forms of Retreat From German Responsibility (Part 2)By Jan PeczkisThis book can be divided into two main themes; and my review is thus divided accordingly:------------------PART i of ii. Consider the preeminence of the Judeocentrically-defined Holocaust over the genocides of all other peoples; especially its most modern forms—that of the Holocaust being arrogated the moral lighthouse of all humankind; and the Holocaust being arrogated the gatekeeper to all non-Jewish genocides.BEFORE THE ADVENT OF HOLOCAUST SUPREMACISMAfter WWII; when sanity prevailed; all the Nazi German crimes were kept in proper perspective and recognition; and there was no dividing of the dead. The authors thus discuss the Nuremburg trials; “The verdicts total 226 pages; of which only three deal with the annihilation of the Jews…” (p. 58).Now consider the 1950’s USA. The authors quip; “Americans cultivated an image of the Holocaust that highlighted the diversity of the victims.” (p. 90). So; at one time; all the victims of the Germans were equally recognized. Imagine that!What became known as the Holocaust or Shoah did not rule even in the new Jewish state. Levy and Sznaider write; “Through the end of the 1950s; the Holocaust was not acknowledged as a unique historical event in public consciousness or historical thought in Israel.” (p. 88).JEWISH INFLUENCE AND HOLOCAUST SUPREMACYAt the risk of belaboring the obvious; Levy and Sznaider are candid about the origins of the elevation of the Holocaust over all other genocides; “Holocaust remembrance is marked by various taboos in different countries. Nevertheless; it is no coincidence that the memory of the Holocaust is playing an increasingly central role in a transnational; global arena. As we have noted; Jews; or more specifically; their media representations; are the most important carriers—indeed; the very personification—of cosmopolitan memories.” (pp. 198-199).HOLOCAUST SUPREMACY BEGAN WITH AN ORWELLIAN PROCESS OF RESHAPING LANGUAGEThose who control the discourse control the narrative; and this begins with the control of the language. After all; the control of the language is key to the control of how people think—as shown long ago by George Orwell’s 1984. The authors; probably inadvertently; allude to this; “The clearest sign that the Holocaust is unique is that it has its own name. There is the Holocaust; then there are all the other massacres. People can argue all they want about how theoretically this is not true; but as long as they use the word—as long as no other massacre gets its own word—they are designating the Holocaust as unique. THE SOCIAL STRUCTURE THAT IS LANGUAGE CONSTRAINS THEM TO DO SO. If they use another term; they will just have to explain that they are actually referring to the Holocaust. The clearest sign that ‘the Holocaust’ is sacred is that using that term lightly can give offense…In other words; the Holocaust is surrounded by taboos; and taboos provide insight into the dominant culture of a society.” (p. 52; Emphasis added). No kidding.Language rules. No wonder that Jews fought so furiously against inclusion of the Nazi German murder of Poles or Gypsies under the term “Holocaust”! They successfully monopolized this term in a narrow Judeocentric sense; and that is why we now are stuck with the Orwellian-constructed phrase of “the Holocaust and other victims of the Nazis.” Furthermore; the non-Jewish victims of the Nazis; when mentioned at all; generally must use Holocaust-deferential terminology if they hope to be heard (e. g; the Gypsy Holocaust; the Polish Holocaust [sometimes facetiously called the Polocaust or the Polonocaust]; and; more recently; the “Kosovocaust” of 1998-1999. (p. 165)].Of course; having a special name for one’s genocide is not enough. After all; we have the Aghet (Armenians); Porajmos (Sinti and Roma); and Holodomor (Ukrainians). However; owing to the fact that non-Jews have lacked the influence to promote public awareness of their genocides; their impact has been almost as negligible as public awareness of these special names. (For evidence; see comments).THE MYSTIFICATION OF THE HOLOCAUSTThe Holocaust has now assumed the self-appointed role of global moral lighthouse. Levy and Sznaider quip; “The Holocaust has become a moral certainty that now stretches across national borders and unites Europe and other parts of the world.” (p. 18). Wow. Says who? Even more grandiose is the following; “Along the way; the Holocaust is reaffirmed as the touchstone for a disoriented; de-territorialized humanity searching for moral clarity amid constant uncertainty.” (p. 24). Oh; really?NEWFANGLED HOLOCAUST SUPREMACISM: NOW AN ORWELLIAN “STAND-IN” FOR ALL OTHER GENOCIDESThe Holocaust rules over all other genocides in subtle as well as obvious ways. Authors Levy and Sznaider state that; “At the U. S. Holocaust Museum in Washington; D. C. [USHMM]; the Holocaust experience of the Jewish victims serves as a symbol for victims in general.” (p. 13). Who decreed that this is so?The foregoing can be generalized. The authors comment; “The Holocaust is now a concept that been dislocated from space and time; resulting in its inscription into other acts of injustice and other traumatic memories across the globe.” (p. 5). Furthermore; according to Levy and Sznaider; we do indeed have a Cult of the Holocaust; “Human rights and their violation create a moral space in which there is no longer an uncertainty. The oppressed must be ‘innocent’ and the oppressors ‘evil’; A GLOBAL CIVIL RELIGION in which Jews and Nazis serve as the basic prototypes.” (p. 193; Emphasis added).We certainly live in a very interesting world. When did the human race ever vote its acceptance of this self-appointed privileged genocide-gatekeeper status for the Holocaust?THE SO-CALLED UNIVERSALITY OF THE HOLOCAUST IS A SMOKESCREENRhetorical disguises aside; nothing has changed. Despite all the talk of universalizing the Holocaust; the same Judeocentric mindset about its peerless nature remains in force. The author’s candidly state that; “Often the ‘uniqueness’ of the Holocaust means that it could and should not be compared to other events.” (p. 132). They give away the store by disclosing their own position; “It is correct to insist that the Holocaust is singular and that comparisons to other atrocities need to proceed from this premise.” (p. 161). In addition; “Israelis are often admonished not to universalize the Holocaust; and they have treated it as a traumatic event in Jewish history that cannot be used to draw universal lessons.” (p. 171).The various Holocaust-related controversies are sideshows. They do not change the foregoing narrative. The authors write; “In contrast to those who abhor the universalizing and commercializing of the Holocaust; we view this process as a vital contribution to the development of a cosmopolitan memory.” (p. 137).THE JEWISH--NOT POLISH--MONOPOLIZATION OF AUSCHWITZLevy and Sznaider repeat the canard that Poles tried to appropriate the memory of Auschwitz. (p. 167). It is the other way around. Fact is; Poles at no time avoided the fact that Jews; as Jews; had been victims of the Nazis. See comments. What Jews dislike is Poles bringing up the fact that Poles were also victims at Auschwitz. It does not fit the standard narrative.-------------------PART ii of ii. INTRODUCTION TO THE ONGOING DILUTION OF GERMAN GUILT FOR THE HOLOCAUSTThe displacement of guilt away from the Germans takes on many forms. For instance; the informed reviewer can think of the frequent media mendacity about “Polish death camps” and the increasingly German-less Holocaust in Eastern Europe (e. g; the much-ballyhooed Jedwabne “revelation” started by neo-Stalinist Jan T. Gross). However; guilt-displacement away from the Germans need not be so frank. Instead; and whether or not done intentionally to benefit the Germans politically and/or to make it easier to blame other nations (notably Poland) for the Holocaust; German-guilt-displacement is often subtle.THE DE-GERMANIZATION OF THE NAZIS IN ACTIONThe move to whitewash the Germans began with the construction of a contrived dichotomy between Nazis and Germans. Authors Levy and Sznaider allude to this; “In Germany; by contrast; numerous politicians and other public officials recognized that Germany (but; notably; not the Germans) had to take responsibility for the concentration camps. They managed quite well; however; to distance themselves from what had actually happened. Making the distinction between ‘regular Germans’ and ‘Nazis’ and using the designation ‘crimes in the name of Germany’ were useful in this respect.” (p. 60). They certainly were.The authors make this German-guilt-evasion even more explicit as they write; “Various distancing mechanisms were disseminated through the language of public discourses (Olick 1993). For one thing; Germans could push responsibility for the Holocaust onto a small group of Nazis who had committed ‘criminal acts in the name of Germany.’” (p. 72).DE-GERMANIZATION OF THE NAZIS…AND NOW THE DE-NAZIFICATION OF THE NAZISThere has been a further initiative to “spread the guilt around” for the Holocaust. The authors summarize it well; “In this view; the mass murder of European Jews by the Nazis is regarded not as a German-Jewish tragedy but as a tragedy of reason or of modernity itself. (Adorno and Horkheimer 1999 [1944]; Arendt 1992 [1963]; Bauman 1989)…Hence it is precisely the ABSTRACT nature of “good and evil” that symbolizes the Holocaust; which contributes to the extraterritorial quality of cosmopolitan memory.” (p. 4; Emphasis added). The more abstract the Holocaust is; the less the guilt of the Germans.Levy and Sznaider add that; “Memories of the Holocaust revolve around the dichotomy of ‘particularism’ and ‘universalism’. [Reviewer’s editorial comment: Note the Orwellian Holocaustspeak.] Was the Holocaust a Jewish catastrophe with German perpetrators; or was it a universal catastrophe; a breakdown of civilization or modernity?” (p. 7). The fact that such a question is even asked is; by itself; a soft-peddling of German guilt. It is like the leftist who exculpates the criminal by trying to convince us that the problem lies not with the criminal; but with society in general.

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