Reviewing the
first, 1961 edition of Raul Hilberg’s The Destruction
of the European Jews (London: W H Allen) in 1962 Andreas
Dorpalen predicted that it would ‘long remain a basic source
of information on this tragic subject’.(1)
With hindsight, Dorpalen rather underestimated the impact that
Hilberg’s thesis would have on future scholarship. The
Destruction of the European Jews shaped academic perspectives
and popular understandings of what we now call the Holocaust,
even though Hilberg avoids the term. It established the contours
and the framework of academic discourse, posing questions about
the relationship between ideology and structure in the prosecution
of the ‘Final Solution’, which still preoccupy historians
now. Without Raul Hilberg we may not have witnessed, and certainly
not in the same way, debates about when that ‘Final Solution’
was designed, about what the essential conditions for genocide
were, about the extent of criminality and complicity within the
organised German community, about the responses of the bystanders,
or notoriously about the reaction of the Nazis’ Jewish victims.
To this day historians of the Holocaust invariably salute The
Destruction of the European Jews as a ‘masterly analysis’
and an ‘unsurpassed landmark’, agreeing that amongst
Holocaust historians ‘none [is] more influential than’
Hilberg in having set the agenda for Holocaust research.(2)
Most importantly Hilberg established, through the various editions
of his masterpiece, the narrative of the ‘destruction process’
at the heart of the Nazi genocide. Hilberg argues that the Nazi
campaign proceeded from legislative discrimination against Jews
in Germany after 1933, through aryanisation and liquidation of
Jewish businesses and assets from the mid nineteen-thirties and
then the physical and temporal ghettoisation of the Jewish populations
in Nazi-occupied Europe from 1939, to their murder and annihilation
after 1941. Historians may have ritually contested the relationship
between these stages of destruction, but the narrative itself
remained a matter of historical and historiographical orthodoxy.
There would be very little dissent from the idea that each stage
was in itself a radicalisation in policy. Equally historians would
largely agree that the stages were not clearly demarcated, but
bled into one another. Each radicalisation was made possible,
and perhaps even caused by, the extension of possibilities revealed
in the cruelties that had preceded it.
Hilberg’s essential thesis is that the ‘Final Solution’
was a bureaucratic process – and that it was the bureaucracy
of the Nazi state that drove forward, with ever more lethal radicalism,
the policies inflicted on Europe’s Jews. The Holocaust was
therefore, according to Hilberg, a systematically implemented
programme that proceeded ‘step-by-step … to the annihilation
of 5 million victims’.(p. 46) The ‘destruction process’
was perfected by a variety of agencies in the expanding boundaries
of the Reich between 1933 and 1939, a model which was then applied
and further perfected throughout occupied Europe after war began.
The essential unity of purpose, as well as the competition between
the agencies of the expanded German state, drove Nazi antisemitism
to fulfil its ultimately genocidal potential. As Hilberg’s
thesis is largely unchanged here in the third edition –
although it is even further expanded with new empirical and historiographical
detail – this review will attempt to consider how the path-finding
The Destruction of
the European Jews can be read in the light
of the insights of contemporary Holocaust historiography.
Despite being primarily concerned with the perpetration and perpetrators
of genocide, Hilberg’s original thesis was perhaps most
controversial when dealing with the Jewish victims. In the preface
to the first edition Hilberg had declared that his book was not
about the Jews, but this did not prevent him offering a controversial
interpretation of Jewish behaviour, an interpretation that remains
unchanged in the third edition. Hilberg’s double-pronged
analysis rests on the observation that in the main Jews displayed
an ingrained passivity in their response to Nazism and that the
Jewish leadership, in the shape of the Judenräte (Jewish
Councils), was an essential part of the German bureaucracy of
destruction contributing to the efficacy of the ‘Final Solution’.
It would be wrong to argue that Hilberg takes no account of the
fundamental ambiguity of Jewish leadership who ‘both saved
and destroyed its people’.(p. 216) The social and cultural
capacities of the Judenräte, who throughout Nazi-occupied
Europe provided what might be described as social and cultural
services for the concentrated victims, are acknowledged. But much
greater emphasis is given to the Jewish Councils perceived role
in the German bureaucracy and therefore the ‘destruction
process’ itself. Thus the problems with Hilberg’s
account of the Jewish Councils, which were identified at length
by Isaiah Trunk as long as thirty years ago, remain.(3)
In his effort to discern the ‘destruction process’
as a singular monolithic attack on the Jews, Hilberg continues
to generalise about the Judenräte, despite their being established
in different ways, at different times, for different purposes
and having locally determined relationships with their wider Jewish
populations. The social and cultural diversity of that populace
also remains unexplored by Hilberg, whose insistence that leadership
is simply located within the German-imposed administrative elites
fails to bring to life the ‘complexity, variety and ambiguity’
of the Jewish ghettos as communities.(4)
Hilberg ignores what has been described as the cultural miracle
of the ghettos in which richly diverse cultural, political and
religious activities were pursued.(5)
The argument that this is not a book about the Jews does not really
justify this disdain for consideration of the Holocaust as Jewish
rather than German history.
As I have said, Hilberg’s generalisations about Jewish
leadership stem from his desire to see the entirety and singularity
of the ‘Final Solution’: something which also points
us to a potential problem with his interpretation of the Holocaust
as German history. The Jewish Councils were co-opted as part of
a general bureaucracy of concentration and murder – used
to provide Jewish labour, to pacify the victim populations and
then to administrate their transfer to killing centres. The local
diversity of approaches to this central task are ultimately seen
as irrelevant in comparison with their net contribution to the
‘destruction process’ as a whole. Their other activities,
while acknowledged, are not seen as historically significant by
Hilberg because they have little impact on the destructive ends
of Nazi policy. Similarly, armed Jewish resistance (most famously
in the Warsaw ghetto) is dealt with perfunctorily, precisely because
it did nothing to alter the fate of Poland’s Jews. Again
this is an interpretation and a narrative that is justified by
the view that all Holocaust history must flow through the filter
of the ‘Final Solution’.
However it could be argued that in continuing to regard and represent
the ‘Final Solution’ as a single (if not necessarily
unified) process, Hilberg is out of step with the historiography
that has emerged since the beginning of the 1990s. Written by
a generation of German historians, this historiography, based
largely on archival sources uncovered in the former Soviet Union,
suggests the priority of local determinants in the emergence of
mass murder as systematic policy throughout Nazi-occupied Europe,
especially in the East. Such an emphasis on the local points to
the sheer complexity of the Holocaust and its irreducibility to
singular explanatory notions such as Hilberg’s bureaucratic
‘machinery of destruction’. The idea that there were
identifiable stages in a step-by-step process, which was essentially
similar throughout Nazi-occupied Europe, becomes less tenable.
Instead of being determined by a policy filtered through central
decision makers – either as the result of a maniacal ideological
fixity or the ceaseless dynamic of a self-propelling bureaucracy
– this new historiography points to the local utilitarianism
of the ‘Final Solution’ as a policy.
Dieter Pohl has for example demonstrated that the impetus for
the emergence of a mass murder policy in the General Government
came not from central decision-making but from the logistical
problems of occupation. Similarly Thomas Sandkühler’s
investigation of the genesis of genocide in Galicia has argued
that murder was a product of local policies of occupation and
subjugation: the result of road-building programmes and food shortages,
with Jews murdered as ‘useless eaters’, using the
logic of the euthanasia programme. Other regional patterns of
radicalisation have been discerned by Christian Gerlach in Byelorussia,
Christoph Dieckmann in Lithuania and Sybille Steinbacher in Upper
Silesia.(6)
The collective impact of this new historiography has been to
break down the idea of the singular narrative of the ‘Final
Solution’ first established by Hilberg. As such his arguments
that link all of the extermination facilities in occupied Poland
– when they appear to have been designed and operated as
part of at least three discrete murder operations – appear
outdated. This is not to say that Hilberg refuses to acknowledge
local variations in genocidal policy, either in terms of its prosecution,
or the way in which it was rationalised by the perpetrators. He
specifically designates the murder of Jews in the Reich-incorporated
Wharteland as a local and self-contained process instigated by
Artur Greiser and local officials.(7)
Equally Hilberg’s analysis of genocide in Serbia recognises,
in a way that the work of Christopher Browning and Walter Manoschek
complements and fleshes out, the participation of the army in
murdering Jews there; and the crucial role that the threat to
German security posed by partisan actions in the region played
in the emergence of a genocidal reprisal policy.(8)
But none of these individual narratives is allowed to stand alone
in Hilberg’s all-encompassing approach. All are apparently
linked by a monolithic sense of the ‘Final Solution’
implicitly controlled by Himmler’s ‘fanatic[al] functional
centralisation’ and reducible to the prescribed and even
deterministic ‘destruction process’.(p. 216) But this
centralisation runs alongside an account of bureaucracy that is
decentralised and encompasses the entire organised community:
a bureaucracy that is, according to Hilberg, driven as much from
the bottom up as it is from the top down.
It is therefore only at first glance that The Destruction
of the European Jews appears out of step with the more
recent historiography, which emphasises that the ‘Final
Solution’ was made up of fragments. For example, although
Hilberg sees the ‘Final Solution’ as a single process,
he refuses to give a singular narrative account of its development
as a policy. As he did in the second (1985) edition, Hilberg sidesteps
the ever-growing mountain of historiography concerned to locate
a decision amongst the Nazi leadership to proceed with a programme
of genocide, to launch the ‘Final Solution’ as we
now understand it. Indeed this question, which appears so fundamental
to some historians, warrants only a single comment buried in a
footnote for Hilberg: ‘chronology and circumstances point
to a Hitler decision before the summer ended’.(p. 419, n.31)
(9) The lack of priority that
Hilberg ascribes to the central decision-makers reflects his belief
that it is much more important to locate when the German bureaucracy
as a whole – the organised community – came to a collective
sense (rather than a decision) that a genocidal ‘Final Solution’
to their individual ‘Jewish Questions’ was necessary.
So, by the middle of 1941, the dividing line had been reached,
and beyond it lay a field of unprecedented actions unhindered
by the limits of the past. More and more of the participants were
on the verge of realizing the nature of what could happen now.
(p. 418)
Hilberg’s ‘destruction process’ then, is not
monolithic. He acknowledges that only those at the centre had
a full knowledge or realisation of the destruction process (as
he himself has discerned it), but this is not the same as arguing
that such a policy emerged from the centre. His descriptions of
Heydrich’s pivotal role in the attempted centralisation
of Jewish policy after the summer of 1941 may attempt to locate
the meaning of the ‘Final Solution’ for Nazi decision-makers,
and the innate competitiveness of the Nazi system, but they do
not imply that such events are all important. There do remain
some awkward generalisations within Hilberg’s narrative
– for example his refusal to discuss Aktion Reinhard and
the murder of the Jews in the General Government as a separate
bureaucratic and administrative mass murder, seeing it only as
an exercise in expropriation. Yet, as a whole, Hilberg’s
conception of the destruction process does allow for localised
innovation and radicalism as well as centralisation. Occupied
Poland, Hilberg argues, was ‘an area of experimentation
[where] the machinery of destruction … outdid the bureaucracy
in Berlin’.(p. 188)
Far from being contradicted, Hilberg’s work somewhat prefigures
that of a new generation of historians who emphasise that genocide
as a policy emerged for different reasons and at different times
in different locations, not driven by a centralised decision-making
process. But, where does this leave our understanding of the Holocaust
as a whole? Have we reached a position where to put these policies
together is nothing more than a narrative construction, the post-hoc
rationalisations of historians, removed from the Nazi reality?
Actually The Destruction of
the European Jews suggests not, and
performs a valuable service in providing a sense of the context
for the fragmented narrative emerging from new historiography
– usefully helping to prevent the breakdown of the concept
the Holocaust. Hilberg’s massive text, with its mastery
of the structures and relationships that organised genocide on
a continent-wide scale, remind us first of the geographical extent
of the ‘destruction process’. That sense of scale
also aids our understanding of the overall context within which
individuals and bureaucracies, spread throughout the continent
of Europe, took murderous decisions. Indeed it could be argued
that it acts as a framework within which the new and ever more
detailed Holocaust historiography may be understood, helping to
restore or remind us of the usefulness of a single (but not necessarily
unified) framework within which to understand the phenomenologically-identifiable
Nazi attack on the Jews of Europe.
Hilberg makes the comparatively simple point at the beginning
of his work that no single centre of Jewish policy existed in
the Third Reich. There was no single ministry or institution that
dealt with Jewish affairs (although Heydrich’s SD (Sicherheitsdienst)
may have regarded itself as the centre of genocidal policy after
1941, this was not actually the case). The implications of such
an observation are manifold, and should not simply be seen as
the result of the ‘polycratic’ and decentred organisation
of the Nazi state. As Hilberg also points out, almost every institution
or administrative grouping in the machinery of government inside
and outside the Reich did have officials and groups responsible
for the management of Jewish matters. In this sense ‘Jewish
policy’ actually lay outside the sphere of what we might
understand as politics. It was an essential element of the regime,
underpinning a great variety of assumptions and initiatives, impacting
on every administrative structure. Indeed, the ‘Jewish Question’
could be argued to have been the driving force of politics itself
in the Third Reich.
This observation of the centrality of what, for the sake of convenience,
can be called antisemitism, to the Nazi Weltanschauung is
not new: it was of course at the centre of intentionalist readings
of Holocaust history. But Hilberg does not allow the absurd simplicities
of the argument that antisemitism equals the genocide of the Jews
to stand. Nor does he give any credence to the contention that
the idea of antisemitism as traditionally understood is enough
to encapsulate Nazi attitudes towards the Jews. Hilberg’s
homage to the work of Götz Aly is an implicit acknowledgement
that antisemitism was for many cast in the context of a much wider
racial vision in the Third Reich. Original deportations from the
Reich, and inside occupied Poland, were one element of a vision
of a racially-restructured Europe, personified in Himmler’s
appointment as the Reich Commissioner for the Strengthening of
Ethnic Germandom.(10) Götz
Aly’s wider contribution to historiography is to demonstrate
that antisemitism could function as a part of diverse political
purposes in the Nazi era, as elsewhere he and Susanne Heim have
demonstrated how lower level economic planners, their so-called
Architects of Annihilation, envisaged the murder of Europe’s
Jews as a part of an economic modernisation of Eastern Europe.(11)
Hilberg provides us with a narrative framework within which we
can locate these diverse purposes of antisemitism, which were
put to diverse policy ends.
It was, argues Hilberg, the ‘shared comprehension’
of the rectitude of pursuing antisemitic policy that drove the
German bureaucracy forward towards the ‘Final Solution’.
In emphasising the ideational underpinnings of that bureaucracy,
Hilberg reminds us that the officials which made up the Nazi institutions
were not simply the banal practitioners of a faceless murder process,
but the enthusiastic implementers of a social and political vision:
if you like, their intention was not removed from their function.
It is common now to read that the heat of the intentionalist /
functionalist debate which defined approaches to the Holocaust
for so long has been cooled. But it is clear from re-reading Hilberg,
that his deft analysis of the relationship between ideology and
structure actually offered us a way out the fog much earlier.
Hilberg presents the bureaucracy of genocide on such a scale
that it becomes clear that it in fact encapsulated a cross-section
of German society under the Nazis. By doing so he provides a framework
which both helps us to understand, and contributes to, what has
been described as the ‘emerging consensus’ around
attempts to explain the behaviour of the perpetrators of the ‘Final
Solution’.(12) This
consensus unites the ideological pathfinders of the RSHA (Reichssicherheitshauptamt
– the SS Security Main Office) and the WVHA (Wirtschafts
und Verwaltungshauptamt – the SS Economic and Administrative
Main Office) with the ‘ordinary men’ of the Order
Police, the shared assumptions of racial policing on the home
front, and even the extension of complicity revealed in new analyses
of popular involvement in aryanisation and expropriation. All
are rendered explicable with reference to the triumph of a new
moral and ideological atmosphere throughout the institutions of
the Third Reich. In their own way institutions and individuals
became progressively radicalised, as the horizon of possibilities
was expanded by each new policy, action, theft or killing.(13)
Michael Thad Allen’s masterly investigation of the bureaucrats
concerned with the Business of Genocide in the WVHA is a useful
example. His detailed exposition of the individuals and individual
administrative groupings within this section demonstrates how
individuals contributed to and were shaped by, the ‘shared
comprehension’ of the different elements of the SS. Thad
Allen is keen to make clear that his study of the minutiae complements
Hilberg’s ‘macro’ sense of the bureaucracy.
(14)
The idea of ‘shared comprehension’ also allows us
to solve some of the self-imposed problems of Holocaust historiography
too – for example the tension regarding the role of Jewish
slave labour within a framework of genocide. If we raise antisemitism
from the level of simple politics, then we can perhaps explain
the apparent contradictions of policy by discerning their relationship
to the same, new and dominant value system. The different uses
and abuses of Jews throughout Europe, in line with local circumstances
and perceptions, become complementary rather than contradictory.(15)
Within the framework that Hilberg provides, debates about decision-making
and the precise moment that the Nazi leadership crossed the Rubicon
to imagining a policy of wholesale genocide can also continue
to be fruitful. While new perspectives on the contested months
from the summer of 1941 may challenge Hilberg’s throwaway
assertion regarding Hitler’s mindset, and will impact upon
our precise understanding of the Nazi psyche, they should not
be allowed to unseat Hilberg’s unique perspectives on the
continent-wide scale of the politics of annihilation. (16)
Raul Hilberg’s Destruction of the European Jews certainly
remains a vital source of information on this tragic subject.
While the simplicities of his condemnation of the Jewish Councils
are unfortunate, his insight does aid our understanding of the
Judenräte as an element of the German bureaucracy. Most of
all Hilberg continues to give us a sense of the overall framework
within which this bureaucracy functioned, and as such a sense
of the wider significance of what may well have been localised
genocides. If nothing else, Hilberg reminds us why that bureaucracy
produced the Holocaust, in a manner that avoids the simplicities
of explanations indicting either antisemitism or simply the depersonalised
structures of government and occupation:
the Germans killed 5 million Jews. The onslaught did not come
from the void; it was brought into being because it had meaning
for the perpetrators. It was not a narrow strategy for the attainment
of some ulterior goal, but an undertaking for its own sake, an
event experienced as Erlebnis, lived and lived through by its
participants.’ (p. 1059)
April 2004
Notes
1. Andreas Dorpalen review
of Raul Hilberg, Destruction of the European Jews,
Journal of Modern History, 34:2 (1962), 226-27.
2. Yehuda Bauer, Rethinking
the Holocaust (New Haven and London: Yale University Press,
2002), p. 96 [editor’s note: for a review of this book on
these pages, click here];
Michael Marrus, The Holocaust in History (Harmondsworth:
Penguin, 1987), p. 5; Mark Roseman, The Villa, the Lake,
the Meeting: Wannsee and the Final Solution (London: Allen
Lane/Penguin, 2002), p. 5; Christopher R. Browning, Ordinary
Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland,
pbk edn (London: Penguin, 2001), p. xix.
3. Isaiah Trunk, Judenrat:
Jewish councils in Eastern Europe under Nazi Occupation,
pbk edn (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1996), this is
a new version, the original being published in 1972 (London: Collier
Macmillan).
4. Gustavo Corni, Hitler’s
Ghettos: Voices from a Beleaguered Society, 1939-44, transl.
Nicola Rudge Iannelli (London: Arnold, 2002), p. 332.
5 . Tim Cole, ‘Ghettoization’,
in Dan Stone, ed., The Historiography of the Holocaust
(Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2004), pp. 65-87. This is an excellent
collection surveying the development of Holocaust historiography
and offers some interesting new perspectives.
6. All of these scholars have
published monographs on these subjects in Germany. For English
language summaries of this cutting-edge research see Ulrich Herbert,
ed., National Socialist Extermination Policies: Contemporary
German Perspectives and Controversies (Oxford: Berghahn
Books, 2000).
7. For a very useful summary
of the emergence of genocide in the Wharteland, see Ian Kershaw,
‘Improvised Genocide? The emergence of the ‘Final
Solution’ in the ‘Wharthegau’, Transactions
of the Royal Historical Society, 6th ser., 2 (1992), 51-78.
8. See Manoschek in Herbert,
National Socialist Extermination Policies, pp. 163-85;
and Christopher Browning, ‘Wehrmacht reprisal policy and
the murder of the Jews in Serbia’, in idem., Fateful
Months: Essays on the Emergence of the Final Solution (New
York: Holmes and Meier, 1985), pp. 39-56.
9. See Christopher R. Browning,
‘The decision-making process’, in Stone, ed. Historiography,
pp.173-96, for an analysis of Hilberg’s interventions in
the debate over decision-making; Browning also notes the phrase
that I have highlighted here.
10. Götz Aly, Final
Solution: Nazi Population Policy and the Murder of the European
Jews, transl. Belinda Cooper and Allison Brown (London:
Arnold, 1999).
11. Götz Aly and Susanne
Heim, Architects of Annihilation: Auschwitz and the Logic
of Destruction, transl. A. G. Blunden (London: Weidenfeld
and Nicolson, 2003) [editor’s note: for a review of this
book on these pages, click here].
12. George C. Browder, ‘Perpetrator
character and motivation: an emerging consensus’, Holocaust
and Genocide Studies, 17: 3 (2003), 480-97.
13. See Browning, Ordinary
Men; Robert Gellately, Backing Hitler: Consent and
Coercion in Nazi Germany (Oxford: Oxford University Press,
2001) [editor’s note: for a review of this book on these
pages, click here]; and Frank
Bajohr, ‘Aryanisation’ in Hamburg: The Economic
Exclusion of Jews and the Confiscation of their Property in Nazi
Germany (Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2002).
14. Michael Thad Allen, The
Business of Genocide: The SS, Slave Labor, and the Concentration
Camps (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press,
2002).
15. See for example Ulrich
Herbert, ‘Labour and extermination: economic interest and
the primacy of Weltanschauung in National Socialism’,
Past and Present, 138 (1993), 144-95; and Donald
Bloxham, ‘Extermination Through Work’: Jewish
Slave Labour under the Third Reich, Holocaust Educational
Trust Research Papers 1:1 (London: Holocaust Educational Trust,
1999).
16. See Browning, ‘The
decision-making process’ for a summary.
Professor Hilberg greatly appreciates the time and labour Dr
Lawson has devoted to his fine discussion of The Destruction
of the European Jews, and does not wish to comment further. |