Analysis Of Defining Enemies, Making Victims By Omer Bartov

Superior Essays
Minorities are often blamed for the vast array of problems any society faces. In today’s America we can see it in the cries of “they are taking our jobs” or “they are overwhelming our social services.” When citizens of a country feel insecure, they search for a reason, and finding no easy answer, they look to a scapegoat. Such was the case for the Germans following World War I. In “Defining Enemies, Making Victims,” Omer Bartov argues that in Nazi Germany and the subsequent Holocaust, the world has found the ultimate enemy in Nazis and the ultimate victim in Jews. Germany was broken after World War I on almost every level—financially, physically and psychologically. And, while German Jews had built a strong sense of solidarity while fighting …show more content…
Also, modernity’s emphasis on science resulted in “the skewed logic of racial hygiene, [which said] the Jews were both the lowest and most insidious race” (Bartov 780). People began to not only hate the Jews, but also, they began to fear them for their racial impurity. Ultimately, picturing the Jew as the enemy of the German nation “enabled the regime to maneuver between contradictory ideological assertions and policies” (Bartov …show more content…
German civilians feel as though they are unfairly attached to the events of the Holocaust, especially those “who were either not in positions of power in the Third Reich or who belong to succeeding generations” (Bartov 793). Because of this, the Nazi has become “the new enemy of postwar Germany,” meaning much like the Jew during World War II, the Nazi “lurks in everyone and, in this sense, can never be ferreted out” (Bartov 793). At the same time, the Germans believe the Nazi and all Nazism stood for is vastly different from the beliefs of contemporary Germany and individual Germans that some choose to entirely ignore the historical significance of that portion of their nation’s history, regarding it as myth more than

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    “For us there are only two possibilities: either we remain German or we come under the thumb of the Jews. This latter must not occur; even if we are small, we are a force. A well-organized group can conquer a strong enemy… We will be victorious over the Jews,” were Adolf Hitler’s words in his speech in Munich. To a certain extent, audience in today’s society would characterize his words to be on the more extreme end of identification, where it allowed his listeners to “dissociated from the others” (Jews) and grant them the permission of “symbolically kill those with whom they do not identify with.”…

    • 198 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    A.Plan of Investigation (Word Count: 125) To what extent were German citizens responsible for what happened during the Holocaust? Although German citizens were somewhat aware of what Hitler was doing, they were not ultimately responsible for his actions. This paper will discuss how responsible German citizens were for the events of the Holocaust caused by Hitler. Primary and secondary sources will be used to view different ideas people had during the Holocaust, and ideas historians have now of the Holocaust.…

    • 1932 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The Holocaust, which was the systematic persecution and murder of over six million Jews during World War II, is often cited as one of the worst atrocities committed in the history of human civilization. People speak of it in hushed, mournful voices as they wonder at how the German Nazis could be so malevolent as to annihilate a whole generation of Jews. Hundreds of eminent scholars have eloquently explained the horrific nature of the Holocaust and its effects on the modern world (Gerstenfeld). Yet, it can be said that emphasis should be placed on understanding why Adolf Hitler decided to exterminate so many Jews. Only by looking through the perspective of the Nazis can one begin to understand that the Nazi Party and its leader, Hitler, brutally…

    • 826 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    The Holocaust has had an everlasting effect on the Jews during the Holocaust, and years after, many Jews to this day continue and strive to push the idea that the genocide of a race should never happen ever again after experiencing the slaughter of many of their own kind. The life after liberation for the Jews varies throughout the Jews. “Liberation” refers to the Jews being rescued by Allied forces such as the United States and the Soviet Union. Although, after liberation, Jews were impacted significantly. The Jews were saved, but at a cost of mental and psychological scarring, with this, most Jews would never forgive the Germans.…

    • 1681 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Although many Jews were doctors, lawyers, businessmen, bankers, and teachers who contributed a great deal to german society, Hitler blamed them for the country’s economic problems. The truth was that Germany was going through a difficult time because it had been badly defeated in World War I, which ended in 1918.”(Heroes of the Holocaust p. 1) The Nazis had wanted the Jews to feel as though they were being ruled by a higher power and couldn’t do anything about it. They had everything taken away from them including their homes, jobs, and even their rights. Even though they had got there rights taken away that wasn’t enough for Hitler.…

    • 2114 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    So many aspects of the Holocaust are incomprehensible, but perhaps the most difficult to understand is how humans can so callously torture and kill so many innocent victims. While in the ghetto, he sees the Nazis for the first time. Elie recounts, “our first impressions of the Germans were most reassuring... Their attitude toward their hosts was distant, but polite” (Wiesel 23). Wiesel highlights this tragedy by first portraying them as ordinary humans.…

    • 823 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Ian Kershaw’s article “Hitler and the Germans” analyzes the approach used to assert Hitler’s position in German politics. The main theme of this article is the creation of the “Hitler myth” and its spread throughout German society. This critique will discuss Kershaw’s argument and how effective it was. Kershaw argues that Hitler’s personality was not the key to his success and neither was his own personal Weltanschauung. He believes that it would be more accurate to study the popular image of Hitler, what the average German would have experienced.…

    • 1700 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    These societies were similarly conditioned to hate a group of people thought to be inferior, and this prejudice was visible not only on a personal level, but in the laws of their governments and actions of their societies. For the Jewish people in Germany, they first lost their rights to citizenship and were the victims of cruel propaganda before they were sent to concentration camps as part of Hitler’s “Final Solution”. In the concentration camps, they were subject to various atrocities including starvation, brutal beatings, and death by gas chamber at the hands of Nazi officials. "Comrades, you are now in the concentration camp Auschwitz. Ahead of you lies a long road paved with suffering” (Wiesel 41).…

    • 1273 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    One might say I’ve experienced my share of fright, heartache, and disappointment in life. Born in 1940 in Berlin, Germany to a very strict Jewish family, it seemed as though my life was destined to be like any other European Jew at that time: deathly persecution by the ever-present population of anti-semites in Europe. Shortly after the Adolf Hitler rose to power in 1933, my parents, older sister, and I fled to live with my great aunt in Barcelona, Spain. Looking back on that event, I consider myself greatly blessed to have fled from the evil and persecution of the Nazis, for many Jews didn’t have that privilege. Even at a young age while living in Spain, I often felt feelings of guilt, for many of my fellow Jews were being killed by the thousands each day.…

    • 1885 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The history of the Holocaust is one that continues to captivate the minds of historians, sociology, political scientist, and popular culture. One of the many lasting legacies that continues to haunt the memories of individuals concerning the Holocaust is the idea that six million people could be exterminated by a “western” modern, capitalist society while the rest of the world stood and watched. Nazi Germany created the environment where Jews and other undesirables such as gays, gypsies, and communist began facing persecution decades before this state-sponsored mass murder campaign, which systematically started in 1941. The Nazis extermination policy that began with pogroms and clear directed violence was recognized and known by other Western counties. One of the most devastating accounts of human rights…

    • 488 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    The Jews’ desire to live deteriorates through their loss of identity, inhumane treatment, and their loss of dignity. As strong as the Jews are, no one can tolerate the utterly painful dehumanization that was bestowed upon them by the Nazis. Individual identity is paramount to a person’s…

    • 1375 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Great Essays

    The biggest atrocity to consider about the Holocaust is that in 1933 the European Jewish population stood at over nine million. By 1945, the German’s “Final Solution” killed nearly two out of every three European Jews. It is impossible to value a lost human life. The dreams, ambitions and accomplishments that these individuals could have made will never be discovered due to the sick and demented beliefs of a culture. Each one of the roughly six million Jews who lost his or her life had goals and ambitions that he or she were never be able to pursue because someone took that opportunity away from them.…

    • 2043 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Over 9 million people were killed within a span of four years in the 1940’s. One and a half million of these were children and over five thousand Jewish communities were destroyed by the Nazi party. This group was lead by Adolf Hitler, a german politician who became a military leader and dictator of Nazi Germany. Since a young age Hitler had a deep hatred for Jews, and referred to them as a people and compared the activities they took part in “like a maggot in a rotten body.” (Rice, p.19) Although all these victims had to suffer there are many today that still believe that the Holocaust never existed.…

    • 1196 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Superior Essays

    The processes in which the Germans were involved in to overcome the tragedies of World War II were vast and long. There were many complications present when the war ended; Germans found themselves questioned politically and mentally by their own compatriots, as well as outsiders. This essay will argue that the film The Murders Are Among Us depicts the complications involved in the German process of “overcoming the past,” post-World War II, through its characters. In particular, this essay will cover the development and practice of this process by discussing the three main characters of this film, Dr. Mertens, Cpt. Bruckner, and Susanne.…

    • 1117 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Superior Essays

    However, things were not as they seemed. With the end of World War I, all of the blame was placed on Germany for ramifications and Germany had to pay off war debt as a repercussion. Germany needed a scapegoat. Their choice was the Jews. Propaganda used by the Nazis provided a hidden Anti-Semitic message and provided a falsehood of the treatment of the Jewish people.…

    • 1034 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays