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Monday, December 21, 2009

The real meaning of arbet macht frei

Barry Rubin uses the recovery of the missing sign from Auschwitz's entrance, on which the words arbet macht frei (work makes one free) are emblazoned, to reflect on what that slogan meant during World War II and what it means today.
And so, work makes free. It was not just a sarcastic act of derision but an actual control measure. If the Jews believed they were in Auschwitz to work hard in exchange for their lives, they would be more docile and far easier to manage. The sentiment was meant to be taken seriously, and almost always, at least until late in the war, it was.

To understand all of this is of vital importance for historical reasons. The Jews who became victims were not just cowards or fools or sheep but people who often believed they were using their wits to survive once again a terrible but ultimately passing pogrom. No matter how much they were starved or mistreated, they could take the hunger and put up with the beatings with the confidence that one day this, too, would end. Of course, they often had no choice and they wanted to believe this, yet it was quite rational for them to do so, certainly before the middle of 1942.

At this point, I hesitate to continue. The analogy of the Holocaust has been too often used, and misused. Moreover, many will think that I gratuitously or lightly exaggerate what I’m about to say. But consider this explanation seriously and you will better understand our own era.

The key here is the Western obsession with pragmatism, the dismissal of ideology, and the wishful thinking that believes conflict can be negotiated away or at least whittled down to the tolerable level by patience and concession. These were also the fundamental ideas that motivated both most European Jews and the expectations of most Western leaders and observers regarding the treatment of the Jews during the war (and in many cases, German intentions before the war as well). This mode of thinking is still very much with us.

Thus, it is disbelieved that radical Islamists, and in many cases militant Arab nationalists or various others, really mean what they say. Instead, it is expected that they will act according to narrow and individual personal interests. They would rather be rich than right, or revolutionary. Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, architect of Iran’s Islamist revolution, derided this concept as thinking the revolution was made for the sake of lowering the price of watermelons.
Read the whole thing. It applies equally to Iran's quest for nuclear weapons and to Fatah's and Hamas' quest to destroy the State of Israel.

1 Comments:

At 7:35 PM, Blogger NormanF said...

Its based on the belief the adversary is not evil, that he has legitimate grievances, that its possible to reach a compromise with him, etc. Its delusional in that it discounts the notion the adversary is evil, that he wants to destroy you, that he's sincere in rejecting any settlement with you, etc. In the West, we don't want to admit not all cultures equal and share our desire to live and let live. And in the end we pay a higher price for maintaining our delusions until reality forces us to fight back or die.

Such a another moment in Western history is upon us again.

 

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