update Oct 14, 2014  of the controversy from Jewish Review of Books
"Richard Wolin’s review of Bettina Stangneth’s newly translated book about Adolf Eichmann caused a stir, mainly about Hannah Arendt and the banality (or not) of evil. Yale Professor Seyla Benhabib responded in a New York Times piece, others blogged, and Wolin responded in an essay on our website. Now Professor Benhabib has rejoined the debate and Professor Wolin has replied a final time. Here's a guide to the exchange from the original review to its last installment."
NY Times [See also Jewish Review of Books] Ever since his capture in the early 1960s, Otto Adolf Eichmann, who was in charge of Jewish affairs during the Third Reich, has been the subject of unsettled and passionate controversy — centered, above all, on Hannah Arendt’s portrait of him at his 1961 trial. Her “Eichmann in Jerusalem” in many ways mirrored Eichmann’s own self-presentation. She insisted that, contrary to expectations, the man in the dock was not some kind of demonic Nazi sadist but a thoughtless, relatively anonymous, nonideological bureaucrat dutifully executing orders for the emigration, deportation and murder of European Jewry. Arendt’s insights — that genocide and bureaucratic banality are not necessarily opposed, that fanatical anti-Semitism (or for that matter, any ideological predisposition) is not a sufficient precondition for mass murder — remain pertinent.
"Richard Wolin’s review of Bettina Stangneth’s newly translated book about Adolf Eichmann caused a stir, mainly about Hannah Arendt and the banality (or not) of evil. Yale Professor Seyla Benhabib responded in a New York Times piece, others blogged, and Wolin responded in an essay on our website. Now Professor Benhabib has rejoined the debate and Professor Wolin has replied a final time. Here's a guide to the exchange from the original review to its last installment."
- The Banality of Evil: The Demise of a Legend by Richard Wolin
Bettina Stangneth’s newly translated book Eichmann Before Jerusalem finally and completely undermines Hannah Arendt’s famous “banality of evil” thesis. - Who's on Trial, Eichmann or Arendt? by Seyla Benhabib
On September 21, 2014, on The New York Time’s website, Seyla Benhabib argued that a “rejection of the ‘banality of evil’ argument . . . does not hold up” and took issue with Wolin’s review. - Thoughtlessness Revisited: A Response to Seyla Benhabib by Richard Wolin. Richard Wolin responds to Benhabib’s “ringing reaffirmation of Hannah Arendt’s notion of the banality of evil.”
 - Richard Wolin on Arendt’s “Banality of Evil” Thesis by Seyla Benhabib
Seyla Benhabib rejoins the debate, contesting Wolin’s critique of Arendt’s banality thesis on historical and philosophical grounds. - Arendt, Banality, and Benhabib: A Final Rejoinder by Richard Wolin
In the final installment of the exchange, Wolin defends and amplifies his critique. 
NY Times [See also Jewish Review of Books] Ever since his capture in the early 1960s, Otto Adolf Eichmann, who was in charge of Jewish affairs during the Third Reich, has been the subject of unsettled and passionate controversy — centered, above all, on Hannah Arendt’s portrait of him at his 1961 trial. Her “Eichmann in Jerusalem” in many ways mirrored Eichmann’s own self-presentation. She insisted that, contrary to expectations, the man in the dock was not some kind of demonic Nazi sadist but a thoughtless, relatively anonymous, nonideological bureaucrat dutifully executing orders for the emigration, deportation and murder of European Jewry. Arendt’s insights — that genocide and bureaucratic banality are not necessarily opposed, that fanatical anti-Semitism (or for that matter, any ideological predisposition) is not a sufficient precondition for mass murder — remain pertinent.
Yet
 as Bettina Stangneth demonstrates in “Eichmann Before Jerusalem,” her 
critical — albeit respectful — dialogue with Arendt, these insights most
 certainly do not apply to Eichmann himself. Throughout his post-1945 
exile he remained a passionate, ideologically convinced National 
Socialist. He proudly signed photos with the title “Adolf Eichmann — 
SS-Obersturmbannführer (retired)” and, quite unlike a plodding 
functionary, boasted of his “creative” work. At one point he described 
the mass deportation of more than 400,000 Hungarian Jews as his 
innovative masterpiece: “It was actually an achievement that was never 
matched before or since.”
The
 enduring image of Eichmann as faceless and order-obeying, Stangneth 
argues, is the result of his uncanny ability to tailor his narrative to 
the desires and fantasies of his listeners. Arendt was not the only one 
to be taken in, and Stangneth, an independent philosopher living in 
Hamburg, is able to present a more rounded picture on the basis of 
previously unmined archival sources, particularly Eichmann’s own 
compulsive notes and jottings made in exile, in conjunction with the 
elusive series of taped conversations known as the Sassen interviews. 
These were exchanges organized in Argentina by the Dutch Nazi journalist
 Wilhelm Sassen and attended by a small group of old Nazis and their 
sympathizers. [...]
It
 is in these interviews and Eichmann’s own notes that he gave 
uninhibited vent to his version of the Holocaust and his involvement. 
Since he had a penchant for tailoring his endless chatting and 
voluminous writings to what he believed his audience desired, it may not
 be immediately evident why his statements in Buenos Aires should be 
considered more authentic than the “little man” portrait he painted in 
Jerusalem. The answer lies in the stance he took against what 
his Nazi and radical-right audience wanted to hear. For they were intent
 on either denying the Holocaust altogether, or outlandishly regarding 
it as either a Zionist plot to obtain a Jewish state or a conspiracy of 
the Gestapo (not the SS) working against Hitler and without his 
knowledge. Eichmann dashed these expectations. Not only did he affirm 
that the horrific events had indeed taken place; he attested to his 
decisive role in them. Hardly anonymous, he insisted on his reputation 
as the great mover behind Jewish policy, which became part of the fear, 
the mystique of power, surrounding him. As Stangneth observes: “He 
dispatched, decreed, allowed, took steps, issued orders and gave 
audiences.”
Like
 many Nazi mass murderers, he possessed a puritanical petit-bourgeois 
sense of family and social propriety, indignantly denying that he 
indulged in extramarital relations or that he profited personally from 
his duties, and yet he lived quite comfortably with the mass killing of 
Jews. This was so, Stangneth argues, because Eichmann was far from a 
thoughtless functionary simply performing his duty. He proceeded quite 
intentionally from a set of tenaciously held Nazi beliefs (hardly 
consonant with Arendt’s puzzling contention that he “never realized what
 he was doing”). His was a consciously wrought racial “ethics,” one that
 pitted as an ultimate value the survival of one’s own blood against 
that of one’s enemies. He defined “sacred law” as what “benefits my 
people.” Morality was thus not universal or, as Eichmann put it, 
“international.” How could it be, given that the Jewish enemy was an 
international one, propounding precisely those universal values? [...]

That must be a tragic discovery for those who relied on him as an eid ne'eman against the Zionists such as kastner.
ReplyDeleteKastner condemned himself with his treachery. For example with his defense at Nuremberg of Nazi Officer Kurt Becher whom Kastner testified in defense of AFTER the war and saved from the gallows.
ReplyDeletefine, if you use that sevara, it is ok. I am simply saying don't rely on what Amalek said in order to save his neck or justify his crimes. BTW - his defence lawyer - Servatius, also tried to use such sophistry. he said that such a crime as the Holocaust could only be allowed, or ordained by G-d. Since this was not something that humans could do on their own, then Mr Eichman could not have real culpability for his crime. I once related this story to another R' Gestetner in Yerushalayim , who said this view is not too different from Jewish thought!
ReplyDeleteDidn't he testify that Becher helped him save Jews?
ReplyDelete