Guilty conscience, antisemitism and the personal development of some SS leaders
TítuloGuilty conscience, antisemitism and the personal development of some SS leaders
Call number940.5318/0149
Número del objeto05247CI
Lugar de publicaciónOxford, England
EditorialPergamon Press
Año de publicación
1989
PaginaciónVol.2 pp2083-2092
MaterialArticle
ISBN80367542
NotesPapers from "Remembering for the Future:papers and addenda" pp2083-2092
Descripción
How explain the preparedness of Nazis to participate in the crimes of the Holocaust, and the process by which they arrived at that preparedness? We can trace a direct progression from a motivation to become a Nazi to the perpetration of Nazi crimes and finally to the denial of guilt after the war. We can also discern the process by which they became Nazis: from a rigid militaristic upbringing, through World War I front-line experience, to interwar social and political turmoil and joblessness resulting in widespread despair. If Nazis had one virtue it was loyalty, albeit misplaced.