THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, October 29, 1982 51 • Dangerous Threat in Misuse of Holocaust Terminology By REV. FRANKLIN LITTELL National Institute on the Holocaust PHILADELPHIA — As more and more cities and states wake up to the impor- tance of Holocaust educa- tion, some of the same ques- tions bob to the surface and focus attention again and again. Two of the points which frequently arise, and on which clarity is needed, threaten to flatten out the very concept of "Holocaust." Except for the popular journalists — as slovenly in their use of the term "Holocaust" as they are in their use of "leftwing," "rightwing," "genocide," "invasion," "democratic," "conservative," "liberal," etc. — writers limit the term to the Nazi policy of murdering targeted peoples during the World War II. The Nazi killing program did not begin the Holocaust. Before 1941-1945 there was already a program of killing directed against "life un- worthy of life" (lebensun- wertiges Leben). The vic- tims, who numbered at least 80,000, were persons per- manently damaged and in- capable of surviving with- out constant care: epilep- tics, birth-damaged, Mon- goloids, limbless, etc. It was PARTY PICTURES I'll take the pictures, You have the fun, Enjoy your own party From when it's begun by diane Comfortably Priced 356-6691 HAPPY during the Nazi euthanasia program that a number of medical officers received the training which they put into practice in the death camps. The claim is often entered that Roman Catholic and Protestant pulpits, the signal given on the same Sunday morning by Cardinal von Galen and Bishop Theophil Wurm, stopped the euthanasia program by sermons of public de- nunciation. The question then arises what might have happened had the Christian leaders of the German Reich shown a like public concern for the fate of the Jews. In retrospect, the ques- tion puts again the larger question: What were the churchmen doing during the Third Reich? And the answer must be, in spite of present efforts to gloss over the issue, with few excep- tions, the churchmen were either supporting Hitler and his crusade or keeping a low profile. The euthanasia program was part of the larger pro- -gram of Nazi eugenics, and it included breeding as well as killing. Basing their ap- proach upon the remarka- ble results obtained in breeding horses and dogs, the Nazis set up a breeding program ("Lebensborn") where selected young "A- ryan" females were impre- gnated by selected male stalwarts who passed both physical and ideological tests. (Medical technology was not then sufficiently advanced to establish "sperm banks," arrange in vitro fertilization, etc.) The Nazi eugenics pro- gram, with its euthanasia 60th BIRTHDAY LOU BAKST A Great Brother-In-Law and Terrific Uncle Sister-In-Law Elaine and Family, Debbie & Randy, Randee & Rocky, Brian, Aaron & Rachel Dial 357-DOWN for sleeping comfort PILLOW TALK Now Discounts All DOWN QUILTS DOWN, FEATHER or FIBER PILLOWS QUILT COVERS FIBER QUILTS MATTRESS PADS at their New Location: 28803 Evergreen at 12 Mile Rd. Country Village Center As always: Pillows Renovated WHILE YOU WAIT! Feather, Down or Wool Quilts cleaned and/or renovated Open Mon.-Sat. 10:00 A.M.-4:P.M. dimension, anteceded the Holocaust and is not part of it, even though it provided theory, personnel and pro- cedures for the later killing program. This is generally rec- ognized, but the parameters of the event are still not thoroughly fixed. For example, the Marxists of eastern Europe commonly throw into the theme "Holocaust" 22 million Russians and six million Poles. And they delete any reference to Jews, as such. This goes too far for most west Europeans and Americans. But what of the 11 million that Simon Wiesenthal talks about? What of targeted groups like the gypsies, the homosexuals? Aren't they part of the "Holocaust?" Unhappily, it must be said without hesitation that Wiesenthal's use of the fig- ure 11 million victims of the Holocaust is based upon a profound misunderstanding and lends confusion rather than clarity to the moral imperatives which arise from the event. Like a number of well- meaning Jews who also use the figure of 11 million rather than six million are, however, disastrous. The costs are very many, but the most serious are these: first, the gentiles of Chris- tendom are freed from any intensive self-criticism or self-examination; second, the lessons of the event are flattened out into banalities about cruelty and violence and dictatorship. The facts should be plain. There is a pro- found difference be- tween concentration camps, large outdoor jails where people may die from poor food, lack, of medical care, brutal- ity, and death camps, where people die because that is what they are there for. Although individual death is a universal fact, and to the victim distinc- tions may seem unimpor- tant, in the religious and historical importance of the Holocaust such distinctions are vital. Did Jews die because they were simply part of the human victims of the Third Reich, as the Marxists have re-written the story of Babi Yar, or did they die because they were Jews? Or, more accurately, as Emil Fac- kenheim has put it: did they die because their grandpar- ents had stayed Jews, and not assimiliated? In sum, the Holocaust was the Nazi assault upon the Jewish people. It was not an assault upon people in general. It was not an as- sault upon those who had a choice, and could settle down into assigned jobs (gypsies) or conventional sex patterns (monogamy or celibacy) in Germany. The lessons of the Holocaust, as well as the true lines of the story. itself, are confused REV. LITTELL and obscured by extending the Holocaust to include gentiles, gypsies, homosex- uals. That the brutality un- leashed upon them was wrong is another matter. That the individual's death may have differed little from another indi- vidual's death is here irrelevant. The Holocaust was a mas- sive event in the history of the Jewish people and in the history of Christianity. Its uniqueness must be made clear if its universal import is not to be blurred. * * * Holocaust Meetings Held in Philadelphia The Eighth Annual Con- ference on Teaching the Holocaust will be held this week in Philadelphia. Sev- eral hundred people, most of them teachers in schools or congregations, will attend from all over the U.S. Among the speakers and leaders will be Jack Eisner, author of "The Survivor"; Norman Podhoretz, editor of Commentary; Yehuda Bauer, author and professor at Hebrew University; and Hubert Locke, author and professor at the University of Washington (Seattle). A generation had to pass before many people were able to face the sheer mass of the event, "the Holocaust." One of the most remarkable achievements was Max Weinrich's "Hit- ler's Professors," published in 1946. Weinrich's book provided chapters on the way persons trained in law, theology, medicine, educa- tion, etc. prostituted their sciences to support the Third Reich and its aggres- sions. Another was Raul Hil- berg's "The Destruction of European Jewry," published in 1961 and in revisions. It is still a classic in the field. In lit- erature, "The Diary of Anne Frank" dominated the field of popular con- sumption for many years. Today there are more than a dozen Anne Frank centers in Western Europe, about the same number in Israel, and plans for-4he first Anne Frank Center in the United States have been announced in Philadel- phia. In 1969-1970, on the invi- tation of a black scholar then at Wayne State Uni- versity — Dr. Hubert G. Locke — a committee worked out the plans for the first Holocaust conference in North America. Held in 1970, the Annual Scholars Conference on the Church Struggle and the Holocaust has continued to be the major center for professors and graduate students from many academic disciplines and countries to report on their research and findings. Since 1975, the annual Conferences on Teaching the Holocaust in Philadel- phia have also become major events. The National Institute on the Holocaust was also founded. It supplies study materials, bibliographies, syllabi, conference reports and other aids to inquirers all over America and Europe. - MUSIC, MUSIC Pay For One, Get One FREE For Your Next Party "STAN THE MUSIC MAN" 559-7742 S. REVA WE AR BLE PERSONALIZED • INNOVATIVE HAND PAINTED SWEATS call now to order for Hanukah! Shari R. Adelman 851-2636 Gary R Miller & Associates Photography with a Personal Touch 398-6894 Specializing in Candids and Video Were Jewish Women Victims of Massacre LONDON — A group of Beirut Jews visiting Israel believe that nine Jewish women who had married Arabs were among the vic- tims of the massacre in the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps last month, the Lon- don Jewish Chronicle re- ported. The Beirut group, in Galilee to visit Jewish rela- tives, said nothing has been heard from the nine women since the massacre. Solidarity Result of Church Fire JERUSALEM (JNI) — Many Jewish residents of Jerusalem interrupted their Simhat Torah celebra- tions earlier this month to stand in solidarity with the capital's Baptist* congrega- tion, whose church was gut- ted by fire Oct. 8. The Jerusalem munici- pality has announced the formation of a special fund of contributions from the public towards rebuilding of the church. • • • • • • • • Horizontal 1" Blinds Horizontal 1 & 2" Wood Blinds Vertical Blinds Verosol Blinds Window Shades Woven Woods Insulated Fabric Shade Carpet Anso IV Free Measure & Installation BIRMINGHAM 540-2244