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Gabe's View: Mass Slaughter Then And Now

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  • Gabe's View: Mass Slaughter Then And Now

    WNBC, NY

    Gabe's View: Mass Slaughter Then And Now

    POSTED: 10:24 am EDT September 20, 2007
    UPDATED: 5:32 pm EDT September 20, 2007


    The New York Times has just published some newly discovered
    photographs of SS men and women enjoying themselves back in 1944 after
    a hard day's work slaughtering Jews and other undesirables like Poles,
    Ukrainians and Gypsies at Auschwitz.

    The SS people are sunbathing in beach chairs, playing with a dog,
    enjoying a feast of blueberries and having a sing-along with an
    accordionist leading them. The pictures show the butchers of Auschwitz
    having fun like normal people, smiling, enjoying life as they take a
    break from their normal routine of administering death. Millions
    perished in the gas chambers of this most notorious of all Nazi
    extermination camps. When you walk through Auschwitz today or study
    the photographs of the Nazi exterminators, you are reminded of Hannah
    Arendt's words about the "banality of evil."


    After the atrocities of World War II were discovered, the slogan for
    Jews and others became, "Never again!" But genocide is far from
    extinct. Elements of the human race are still practicing it -- and
    people by the hundreds of thousands are still being wiped out.

    In Darfur, tens of thousands have died and hundreds of thousands have
    been driven from their homes in a struggle between African fighters
    and the Arab-controlled central government. The secretary-general of
    the United Nations, Ban Ki-Moon, who has just visited the region,
    warns that that this is "a society at war with itself ... tribe
    against tribe, warlord against warlord." He thinks the solution may be
    complex but that the world must find it, lest many more innocent
    people die.

    A U.N. worker said, "The people of Darfur are frustrated. They're
    demoralized by a crisis that seems to have no end. They are angry to
    see their children born and growing up in camps, rather than at home,
    in peaceful villages. Still, they keep on struggling to regain their
    dignity."

    In the last century, Armenians, Rwandans and many others have been the
    victims of genocide. Presumably, many of those committing the
    slaughter led "normal" lives when they weren't engaged in killing.

    Sadly, as the newly discovered photographs of SS officers enjoying
    themselves in 1944 make clear, genocide has existed in every
    generation. And the people committing genocide have been
    normal-looking folks, seeking pleasure in their off-hours.

    Matthew Levinger at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum has written:
    "The 20th century has been called 'the century of genocide' -- with an
    estimated 170 million people murdered by governments between 1900 and
    1999."

    Will the 21st century be any different?
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