In his landmark work, "The Destruction of the European Jews," Mr.
Hilberg said the Holocaust had been the result of a huge bureaucratic
machine with thousands of participants, not the fulfillment of a
preconceived plan or a single order by Hitler.

As uncountable separate instructions were passed on, formally and
informally, to a range of actors that included train schedulers and
gas chamber architects, responsibility became ever more diluted, he
argued, even as the machinery of death churned inexorably ahead.

"For these reasons, an administrator, clerk or uniformed guard never
referred to himself as a perpetrator," Mr. Hilberg said in an
interview with The Chicago Tribune in 1992.


August 7, 2007 Raul Hilberg, 81, Historian Who Wrote of the Holocaust
as a Bureaucracy, Dies By DOUGLAS MARTIN

Raul Hilberg, a Jewish émigré from Nazi-occupied Vienna who helped
begin the field of Holocaust studies with his long and minutely
detailed 1961 study of the massacre of European Jews, died Saturday in
Williston, Vt. He was 81.

The cause was lung cancer, said Jeffrey R. Wakefield, a spokesman for
the University of Vermont, where Mr. Hilberg had taught for 35 years.

In his landmark work, "The Destruction of the European Jews," Mr.
Hilberg said the Holocaust had been the result of a huge bureaucratic
machine with thousands of participants, not the fulfillment of a
preconceived plan or a single order by Hitler.

As uncountable separate instructions were passed on, formally and
informally, to a range of actors that included train schedulers and
gas chamber architects, responsibility became ever more diluted, he
argued, even as the machinery of death churned inexorably ahead.

"For these reasons, an administrator, clerk or uniformed guard never
referred to himself as a perpetrator," Mr. Hilberg said in an
interview with The Chicago Tribune in 1992. "He realized, however,
that the process of destruction was deliberate, and that once he had
stepped into this maelstrom, his deed would be indelible."

Though some critics said Mr. Hilberg had understated the impact of
historic German anti-Semitism, his broad conclusions were based on
painstaking research. He examined microfilm of thousands upon
thousands of prosaic documents like train schedules and memorandums
between minor officials.

"This head-against-the-wall technique is the only virtue I can parade
without blushing," he said last year when Germany gave him with its
Order of Merit, the highest tribute it can pay to someone who is not a
German citizen.

The historian Hugh Trevor-Roper wrote that Mr. Hilberg's book
"reveals, methodically, fully and clearly, the development of both the
technical and psychological process; the machinery and mentality
whereby one whole society sought to isolate and destroy another,
which, for centuries, had lived in its midst."

Mr. Trevor-Roper called the book's most surprising revelation, and its
least welcome one, its suggestion that at least some Jews cooperated
in their own annihilation. Examples included Jews who had helped
organize deportations or led victims to gas chambers. Mr. Hilberg
argued that Jews had a long history of passivity and that some had
mistakenly calculated that the Nazis would not destroy what they could
economically exploit.

Many historians, survivors and Jewish leaders disagreed, pointing to
examples of Jewish resistance. But Holocaust historians of all views
began using terminology Mr. Hilberg had devised, including that of
calling the Holocaust's principals perpetrators, victims and
bystanders.

Raul Hilberg was born on June 2, 1926, in Vienna. In his memoir, "The
Politics of Memory: Journey of a Holocaust Historian" (1996), he said
his father, Michael, had been a "middleman," someone who bought
household goods for people needing credit and paid him in
installments. In 1938, the occupying Nazis arrested him but released
him because he was a World War I veteran.

The Hilbergs emigrated to Brooklyn, where Michael worked in a factory
and Raul attended Lincoln High School. His studies at Brooklyn College
were interrupted when he was drafted into the Army. His unit was
housed in the Nazi Party's former offices in Munich, where Mr. Hilberg
was fascinated by crates containing Hitler's personal library.

He returned to Brooklyn College, where he quit chemistry for political
science and history. He went on to Columbia, where he insisted on
writing his doctoral dissertation on the Holocaust, which few
academics were studying. His adviser, Franz Neumann, warned him that
his choice of subject might be his academic funeral.

At least five publishers rejected his major book. It was published by
a small Chicago house after a wealthy patron agreed to buy 1,300
copies to go to libraries.

His caustic personal style, which contrasted with the monotone of his
histories, did not always help. When academics asked about his subject
area, Mr. Hilberg was prone to reply, "I study dead Jews."

He next taught at Hunter College and landed a federal job helping to
catalog documents being released from German archives. He copied
material by hand so he could use it for his own research.

Mr. Hilberg started teaching at Vermont in 1956 and retired in 1991.
In addition to writing and editing five books besides "The Destruction
of the European Jews" and his memoirs, Mr. Hilberg produced two more
editions of that book (1985 and 2003), adding considerable material.

Mr. Hilberg's first marriage, to Christine Hemenway, ended in divorce.
He is survived by two children from that marriage, David, of Brooklyn,
and Deborah, of Jerusalem, and his wife, the former Gwendolyn
Montgomery.

The multitudinous materials Mr. Hilberg examined convinced him that
those very documents were the strongest argument against those who
contended the Holocaust had never happened, he told The International
Herald Tribune in 1996.

"These individuals are not familiar with the archives, or they would
see that nobody could forge these millions of documents," he said.

Raul Hilberg, 81; scholar's views on the Holocaust attracted criticism
By Elaine Woo, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

August 7, 2007

Raul Hilberg, who established himself as the preeminent scholar of the
Holocaust with his monumental and still-controversial 1961 book "The
Destruction of the European Jews," the first comprehensive study of
the Nazis' genocidal campaign, died of lung cancer Saturday at a
hospice in Williston, Vt. He was 81.

A longtime professor at the University of Vermont, Hilberg was
considered the dean of Holocaust studies for his meticulous portrait
of the "machinery of destruction" that annihilated more than 5 million
European Jews during World War II.

"Raul Hilberg's work and great opus, 'The Destruction of the European
Jews,' set the standard and created the foundation for the development
of the whole field of Holocaust studies," said Paul Shapiro, director
of the Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies at the United States
Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C.

Hilberg's groundbreaking book, which drew on mountains of documents
from the Nuremberg trials, demonstrated the systematic nature of the
Nazi slaughter. He also wrote "Perpetrators, Victims, Bystanders"
(1992), which examined the vast bureaucracy of accountants, guards,
engineers, architects and other anonymous workers whose cooperation
enabled German dictator Adolf Hitler's killing machine to roll
relentlessly in service of gruesome ends. In defining what Shapiro
called "the three roles of human beings in the genocidal situation,"
the latter work created a framework for future scholars to follow.

Hilberg's primary focus on the perpetrators and some of his
conclusions -- in particular, his assertions about the lack of
substantial Jewish resistance -- drew sharp criticism from some Jewish
historians and the Jewish public, whose attacks continued unabated
throughout most of his five-decade career.

He came to his life's work through tragedy and luck. An Austrian Jew
born in Vienna in 1926, he narrowly escaped the Holocaust as a
teenager. He witnessed his father's arrest in 1938 when Germany
annexed Austria, but because his father had served in World War I,
Nazi policy allowed the entire family to avoid internment by giving up
their property and leaving the country.

They fled first to Cuba, then to New York City. After high school,
Hilberg was drafted into the U.S. Army and returned to Europe. His
division helped liberate the Dachau concentration camp.

He also assisted in the hunt for German documents that could be used
in the prosecution of war crimes. While stationed in Munich at the
former Nazi party headquarters, Hilberg discovered crates containing
Hitler's private library. He later worked for a project to organize
and microfilm captured German documents. That archive became the
foundation for Holocaust research, including his own landmark study.

After attending Brooklyn College, he entered Columbia University,
where he earned a master's degree in 1950 and a doctorate in 1955. One
of his Columbia professors, Franz Neumann, taught classes about
bureaucracy, particularly how the development of a nation like Germany
relied on the labor of a vast system of functionaries.

"That idea sparked a similar one in my mind," Hilberg told the Chicago
Tribune some years ago. "I grasped that the Holocaust could only have
been possible through the efforts of a similar bureaucracy, which must
have left its records too."

No serious scholars were studying the Holocaust then, so when he told
Neumann, who had become his doctoral advisor, that he wanted to pursue
it, Neumann told him "It's your funeral."

Hilberg decided to focus on the perpetrators of the Holocaust, which
he called "the work of a far-flung, sophisticated bureaucracy."
Without an understanding of who carried out the genocide, he later
explained, "one could not grasp this history in its full dimensions."

When he completed his dissertation and looked for a publisher, he was
greeted with rejection after rejection. Some publishers found the
700-page manuscript unwieldy. Others didn't like his reliance on
German sources or took issue with his views on Jewish accommodation.
He could not find a teaching job until 1956, when he was offered a
temporary position at the University of Vermont. After several years,
he earned a permanent slot, which would remain his academic home for
35 years until his retirement in 1991.

"The Destruction of the European Jews" was finally accepted by a small
Chicago publisher but only after a wealthy patron agreed to purchase
1,300 copies to donate to libraries. Hilberg's book told a story that
many did not want to hear. He carefully chronicled the monstrous
nature of the Nazi drive to exterminate the Jews but also argued that
Jews did little to help themselves. He contested the widely accepted
view that some 6 million Jews were killed, arguing the number was
closer to 5.1 million, and he concentrated his analysis on the actions
of the Nazis, giving short shrift, his critics said, to the victims.
Some of the most pointed criticism came from Yad Vashem, Israel's
Holocaust memorial institute.

Hilberg gave more attention to the victims in "Perpetrators, Victims,
Bystanders," but continued to maintain that Jewish resistance was
minimal. He was critical of those who preferred "victim-oriented"
history, whose views of the Nazi killings were limited by "the fence
around the ghetto, and the barbed wire around the camp."

"The Destruction of the European Jews" was revised and expanded into a
three-volume work in 1985 and remains what Shapiro called "the most
consulted, fundamental work" in the field. It was later published in
Germany, where Hilberg became a popular lecturer addressing a younger
generation of Germans struggling to absorb the enormity of their
forebears' ghastly scheme. Last year, Germany presented him with the
Knight Commander's Cross of the Order of Merit, the highest tribute
given to non-German citizens.

His rising stature in Germany caught the attention of some critics,
such as Harriet Lipman Sepinwall, a Holocaust educator who reviewed
Hilberg's memoir, "The Politics of Memory: The Journey of a Holocaust
Historian" (1996) in the New Jersey Jewish News.

Reacting to his portrayal of the lonely years of his career before the
Holocaust gained widespread scholarly interest, Sepinwall wrote, "It
is ironic that his connections with the Holocaust, which initially
drove him away from Austria and Germany, now seem to be bringing him
back there as the only places where he feels he is not only accepted,
but honored."

In later years, when Hilberg received awards, he said the recognition
pleased him. However, as he told a reporter last year, he could never
forget one thing: "And that is that the dead are still dead, and it is
about them that I think."

[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--

http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-hilberg7aug07,1,7436854.story?ctrack=3&cset=true

Reply via email to