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Showing posts with label genocide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label genocide. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Nazi Germany and the Jews: Volume 1 (Book Review)



Book Reviewed: Nazi Germany & The Jews Vol. 1  (ISBN: 0060928786)

Author: Saul Friedlander

Publication Year: 1998

Review Rating: 5 out of 5 stars

PROS: Extraordinary historical detail & scholarship, comprehensive

CONS: May be too detailed for casual readers

Most of us know the basic facts of the Holocaust. That is one of the most comprehensive genocides that the world has ever known.

Most of us know that the Nazi system killed millions of people who did not look like or support the Aryan “mold” of the Third Reich.

Few of us know how comprehensive and detailed the Holocaust really was and how it continued for as long as it did.

Nazi Germany and the Jews Volume 1, by Saul Friedlander, was written as a defense to a historian’s argument that the view of Nazi Germany is biased toward a simplistic “good vs evil” argument. Friedlander argued that the Holocaust was not a historic aberration. The Holocaust was a systematic and comprehensive destruction of non-Aryan (specifically Jews) that preyed upon a country in desperate economic woes and a world filled with lackluster concern for the plight of the victims. Throughout this comprehensive 512 page work, Friedlander documents how the Third Reich was able to complete such horrible deeds with extraordinary detail and insight. He argues that the people inside and outside of Germany knew what was going on, but chose not to act, either by default or on purpose.

I came to read Nazi Germany and the Jews Volume 1 on a Twitter suggestion from Scot Nagasaka, senior partner of Change Lab, a social justice organization. I am glad that he gave me that suggestion because completely changed how I look at the history during this period. The book opened my eyes to the total destruction that was planned out by the Nazi persecutions.  After coming out of horrible losses in World War I, Hitler offered the German people a myth. He wasn’t the first person to offer this myth, but he was one of the strongest supporters of that myth.  The myth: The Germans were a great people who had lost to the influence of Jews and their supporters. By eliminating the Jews, the Germans could once again reclaim their power and usher in a new era of German power.  That myth, simple as it sounds, would lead to the deaths and torture of millions of people from places as diverse as Russia and Greece.

This part I knew, but I never completely understood how Hitler and his party managed to achieve this on such a large scale unchecked. Friedlander’s book gave me part of the answer. In the book, Friedlander argues that several factors) led to the rise and unchecked growth of Nazi-ruled Germany including:

  1. Total  Nazi control of every part of societ
  2. Passive acceptance of anti-Semitism in the culture at that time & unwillingness of other nations to deal with the “Jewish problem"
  3. Lack of coordinated support from the inside & outside community

This is just the tip of the iceberg and Friedlander provides as much as a layperson can comprehend in the 500+ that compromise the book. For those who are interested in learning about this period of history, this is definitely a book to consider. It is not designed to be light read by any means: however it doesn’t veer off into the level of a graduate college thesis (though it comes close at times) either. It’s the kind of book you read when you are ready to fully invest yourself in a comprehensive look at the factors that led to this terrifying piece of human history.

In any case, the implications that come from this book have staggering consequences.

Two Khan Academy videos that bring this into perspective:

  1. Hitler and the Nazis Come to Power: http://youtu.be/EtZnPoYbRyA
  2. Night of the Long Knives: http://youtu.be/ZrbbKMnPDUk
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Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Europeans Inflicted a Genocide on Amerindians


by: Glenn Robinson

Below are a few excerpts from Guenter Lewy's academic article titled "Were American Indians the Victims of Genocide?"  I learned some interesting facts, but...

After reading about half of the article I found myself wishing he would stop defending the criminal and stop blaming the victim. Regardless if the label of the atrocity is genocide -- Europeans knew what was happening. They knew their diseases were killing Native Americans. Instead of backing off and returning to Europe -- they continued their land grab -- stealing and killing along the way.

There were whole tribes (whole Nations) that were annihilated. The term genocide is correct.
"... according to Ward Churchill, a professor of ethnic studies at the University of Colorado, the reduction of the North American Indian population from an estimated 12 million in 1500 to barely 237,000 in 1900 represents a "vast genocide . . . , the most sustained on record." By the end of the 19th century, writes David E. Stannard, a historian at the University of Hawaii, native Americans had undergone the "worst human holocaust the world had ever witnessed, roaring across two continents non-stop for four centuries and consuming the lives of countless tens of millions of people." In the judgment of Lenore A. Stiffarm and Phil Lane, Jr.,"there can be no more monumental example of sustained genocide—certainly none involving a 'race' of people as broad and complex as this—anywhere in the annals of human history."

The disparity in estimates is enormous. In 1928, the ethnologist James Mooney proposed a total count of 1,152,950 Indians in all tribal areas north of Mexico at the time of the European arrival. By 1987, in American Indian Holocaust and Survival, Russell Thornton was giving a figure of well over 5 million, nearly five times as high as Mooney’s, while Lenore Stiffarm and Phil Lane, Jr. suggested a total of 12 million. That figure rested in turn on the work of the anthropologist Henry Dobyns, who in 1983 had estimated the aboriginal population of North America as a whole at 18 million and of the present territory of the United States at about 10 million.

The most lethal of the pathogens introduced by the Europeans was smallpox, which sometimes incapacitated so many adults at once that deaths from hunger and starvation ran as high as deaths from disease; in several cases, entire tribes were rendered extinct. Other killers included measles, influenza, whooping cough, diphtheria, typhus, bubonic plague, cholera, and scarlet fever. Although syphilis was apparently native to parts of the Western hemisphere, it, too, was probably introduced into North America by Europeans.

About all this there is no essential disagreement. The most hideous enemy of native Americans was not the white man and his weaponry, concludes Alfred Crosby,"but the invisible killers which those men brought in their blood and breath." It is thought that between 75 to 90 percent of all Indian deaths resulted from these killers.
-Guenter Lewy
source

For an American Indian's perspective check this source


===

Glenn is a European-American married to a Mexican-American. They have two children. Glenn is interested in progressive immigration reform, and desegregation within schools and communities. He is a life long learner with interests in sociology, anthropology, psychology, history and politics.
Connect to Glenn at CommunityVillage.us


Saturday, October 2, 2010

From Pride to Hate - The Slippery Slope


by: Glenn Robinson
Updated 8-9-2012

With the never ending news of violence and shootings - one might ask themselves - as Marvin Gaye said, what's going on?

I created this chart to help identify threats in which we should probably call the authorities, verses subjective threats, verses our every day disrespectful annoyances. 

Below, in order from less threatening to most threatening, you will find:

Words for pride, fear, hate and violence, in order of intensity.
Degrees of Us vs Them / Gloria Yamato's Degrees of Racism- click chart to enlarge -

By severity



Pride

misogyny / misandry

Violence


More nuanced definitions can be found at Definitions and Semantics at the TheStudyOfRacialism.org

It's said that there is a fine line between love and hate.

Love of self (pride) can morph into arrogance. Arrogant people think they are superior - and in turn they probably dislike, or at least disrespect those who are unlike themselves.

Dislike or disrespect toward others can easily lead to hate - and then to a hate crime.

Many Americans are blatantly xenophobic and/or homophobic; homophobia is evident in our nation's attempts to prevent the LGBT community from marrying. And xenophobia is evident from our nation's eagerness to spend tax dollars building fences and maintaining outdated immigration quotas that do not meet our county's needs.




===

Glenn is a European-American married to a Mexican-American. They have two children. Glenn is interested in progressive immigration reform, and desegregation within schools and communities. He is interested in sociology, anthropology, psychology and history.
Connect to Glenn at CommunityVillage.us