`Auschwitz' Is Bernd Naumann's Revealing Documentary Record of Trial of 22 Nazis Saul Carson's review of the play "The Investigation" by Peter Weiss, in last week's Jewish News, should induce further reading on the subject of the Auschwitz trials. The play is based on actual facts gathered from evidence at the trial of the Hitlerite criminals. These facts are incorporated in an important new volume, "Ausch- witz," by Bernd Naumann, pub- lished by Frederick A. Praeger (111 4th, NY 3). It was translated from the German by Jean Stein- berg and it contains a most im- portant evaluative introduction by Hannah Arendt. Naumann had written the re- ports of proceedings at the Frank- furt trial of the monsters who conducted the extermination of mil- lions of Jews at the Auschwitz extermination camp in Poland for the Frankfurter Algemeine Zei- tung. This volume in the main contains these reports. They ex- pose the crimes and the criminals and they place in their proper light the defendants and their defenders. There were 22 Nazi criminals on trial. There was evidence of arrogance and defiance. There were verdicts against them. In one instance, that of Dr. Frani Bernhard Lucas, it was shown that on occasions he showed some compassion. But as in the other instances, in his, too, there was the claim of following or• tiers. They were found guilty but appeals are pending in their be- half, and Naumann's record Closes with these words: "As the longest German trial on record ends, only two verdicts have be• come legally operative—the ac- quittals of (Johann Arthur) Breitwiesser and (Johann) Scho- berth." Such is the condemnation of the author. Such is the expose of a long trial which indicates a result of pressure to forget, to abandon trials, to stop trying the guilty. In "A Note on the Trial," the author points out that justice did triumph over the injustice of Ausch- witz, that only because it was the "Auschwitz trial," the case against the chief accused, Robert Karl Lud- wig Mulka and the other 21 it "has ethical, moral, social and educa- tive implications. It has made an important contribution to the his- tory of our era. Auschwitz is no longer 'far away, somewhere in Poland.' It has come close to us. It has now been linked to the mass murder of individuals committed by other individuals. The trial has pitilessly held up this crime for all to see, and therein lies its justifi- cation." But the "sole task" of the jury "was to establish guilt within the framework of the penal code," Naumann asserts, and he explains: "The Frank- furt court . . was not an as- sembly of angels of vengeance F World Book Lore geance . . they were not meant to map out the road that a cleansed people should henceforth take. The chief judge, in his oral summation, made it clear that the judges and the jury had not conducted an `Auschwitz trial' and had not sat in judgment over Germany's past. The greater insights into the political, legal and psycho- logical conditions of the National Socialist era undoubtedly gained in the course of the trial could not influence the jury 'to depart from its legally mapped out course and venture forth into areas closed to code'." Constantly, throughout the pro- ceedings at Frankfurt, as recorded by Naumann, there were heard the assertions "we only did what we had to do" and "I only carried out the orders of the doctors." And there were the admissions akin to "they all knew what was going on." The evidence is devastating. The defense was, as indicated, arro- gant, determined to stick to the idea of lack of personal guilt be- cause it was "the order" from above. Could Nazis have resisted or- ders? Hannah Arendt, in her valuable introduction, makes an interesting point: "One thing is sure, and this one had not dared to believe any more — namely that everyone could decide for himself to be either good or evil in Ausch- witz.' (Isn't it grotesque that German courts of justice today should be unable to render jus- tice to the good as well as the bad?) And this decision de- pended in no way on being a Jew or a Pole or a German; it did not depend even upon being a member of the SS. For in the midst of this horror, there was Oberscharfuehrer Flacke, who had established an 'island of peace' and didn't want to believe that, as a prisoner said to him, `we'll all be murdered. No wit- nesses will be allowed to sur- vive.' I hope,' he answered, "there'll be enough among us to prevent that'." "There is the son of an SS man on duty who comes to the camp to visit his father. But a child is a child, and the rule of this par- ticular place is that all children must die. Thus he must wear a sign around his neck 'so they wouldn't grab him, and into the gas oven with him.' THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS the baby and dressed me so as to make me look older. (The mother held a third child by the hand.) When Dr. Lucas saw me he probably realized that the baby was not mine. He took it from me and threw it to my mother.' The court immediately knows the truth. "Did you per- haps have the courage to save the witness?' Lucas, after a pause, denies everything. And the woman apparently still ig- norant of the rules of Ansel'. witz—where all mothers with children were gassed upon ar- rival—leaves the courtroom, un- aware that she who had sought out the murderer of her family had faced the savior of her own life. This is what happens when men decide to stand the world on its head." "There is the prisoner who holds the selectees to be killed by the 'medical orderly' Klehr with phenol injections. The door opens and in comes the prison- er's father. When all is over: 'I cried and had to carry out my father myself.' The next day, Klehr asks him why he had cried, and Klehr, on being told, `would have let him live! Why hadn't the prisoner told him? Could it be that he was afraid of him, Klehr? What a mistake. Klehr was in such a good mood. Such are the indictments, the revelations, the exposes, the evi- dence of at least two acts of kind- ness—Flacke's and Lucas'. "Finally, there is the woman witness who had come to Frank- furt from Miami because she had read the papers and seen the name of Dr. Lucas: 'the man who murdered my mother and family interests me.' She tells how it happened. She had ar- rived from Hungary in May, 1944. held a baby in my arms. They said that mothers could stay with their children, and therefore my mother gave me And Miss Arendt makes the add- ed observation that "Bernd Nau- mann was wise to abstain almost completely from analysis and com- ment and to concentrate on the actual dialogue—the questions that were asked, the answers that were given, thus maintaining consistent- ly the great drama of court pro- ceedings. The documentary value of this book is of the very first order —for all those who would rather face the truth than live with illu- sions in self-deception. Whatever Friday, November 18, 1966-15 there is to know about the nether- most regions of Nazi Germany we know." Naumann's "Auschwitz" is one of the very important additions to the accumulating evidence of the Nazi crimes and to the mounting library dealing with the holocaust. WANTED Experienced, retired man for Shamas, Bal Kria, familiar with small synagogue, in Northwest section. Write, give details and experience. Box 785 The Jewish News 17100 W. 7 Mile Rd. Detroit, Mich. — 48235 Upholstery • Drapery Slipcover • Vinyl SAVE 75 Up o There was to have been the search for truth, but Naumann states that "neither the judges nor the jury found the truth—in any event, not the whole truth." Miss Arendt comments that "in- stead of the truth, the reader will find moments of truth, and these moments are actually the only means of articulating this chaos of viciousness and evil." Her com- ments on the Naumann point about truth-finding continue: "There is the boy who knows he will die, and so writes with his blood on the barrack walls: `Andreas Rapaport — lived 16 years. SOURCE: WORLD BOOK ENdYCLOMDIA 1 BLK. E. OF GREENFIELD Daily y 1 -5 102-5 Now that you can afford to think of great whisky first, price later, drink this in: Seagram's V.O. does what no other whisky can. It defines smooth once and for all. Light? Of course. Lucky you! Known by the company it keeps Seagram's Canadian There is only this reference to Flacke in Naumann's chronicle of events at the Frankfurt trial. After the witness had made the reference to Flacke commented upon by Miss Arendt, the judge asked: "Do you wish to say that everyone could decide for himself to be either good or evil in Auschwitz?", the witness replied: "That is exactly what I wish to say." What an in- dictment of Germans' brutalities! "There is the 9-year-old who knows he knows 'a lot,' but `won't learn any more.' "There is the defendant Boger, who finds a child eating an apple, grabs him by the legs, smashes his head against the wall, and calmly picks up the apple to eat it an hour later. LIQUIDATORS MART 15351 W. 7 MILE RD. You're a little bit richer when you switch to the Smooth Canadian. "The moments arise unex- pectedly like oases out of the desert. They are anecdotes, and they tell in utter brevity what it was all about. 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