Hitlers First Victims by Timothy Ryback
Posted: Sat Mar 28, 2015 11:03 am
This slim volume is so important, not the least because it forces us to contemplate the unthinkable. How many of us have wondered how it was possible for a culturally advanced and democratic nation to transform itself in but a couple of short decades, into the genocidal totaltarian nightmare that was Nazi Germany. Well the answers are all here and they make uncomfortable reading for any thinking individual.
Concentrating on the period of the early 1930's and centered on one mans fight to expose the developing horror within the Bavarian district of Munich, we learn of the first extra-judicial killings in the newly constructed Dachau 'protective custody' camp and how they were concealed by an emergent Nazi beurocracy under the blanket of 'rubber-stamped' explanations of suicide and failed escape attempts. Shocking as this is [and the tales of torture and abuse are shocking - deeply so] almost more frightening is the broader tale of how, between the early 1920's and the mid-thirties, the National Socialist party, with broad popular support, rose from tub-thumping rants in the Munich Beer-Kellers to a multi-headed hydra that infiltrated every aspect of German life, political, administrative and social.
What makes this such an un-nerving read is when you start making the parralells with our own situation [at least in Europe] and begin to realise just how far down the same road we may have unwittingly travelled. We have elections coming up where the proprtionate power of relatively minor political groups is elevated by the ability to maintain or depose the larger parties by granting or withholding support. We have detention camps run by non-state bodies where already rumors of maltraetment and abnormally high suicide rates are being reported [Channell Four News ran one such undercover expose in the last few weeks where privatly employed officers wher heard refering to 'inmates' in less than human terms]. We have mooted sugestions of privitising our State law enforcement bodies - effectivly the establishment of non-state contelled police and para-military style groupings. We have rising tides of nationalism, anti-semitism and far-right thinking amongst the populace. The more, alas you read, the more alas you think, "My God - This could happen again".
Concentrating on the period of the early 1930's and centered on one mans fight to expose the developing horror within the Bavarian district of Munich, we learn of the first extra-judicial killings in the newly constructed Dachau 'protective custody' camp and how they were concealed by an emergent Nazi beurocracy under the blanket of 'rubber-stamped' explanations of suicide and failed escape attempts. Shocking as this is [and the tales of torture and abuse are shocking - deeply so] almost more frightening is the broader tale of how, between the early 1920's and the mid-thirties, the National Socialist party, with broad popular support, rose from tub-thumping rants in the Munich Beer-Kellers to a multi-headed hydra that infiltrated every aspect of German life, political, administrative and social.
What makes this such an un-nerving read is when you start making the parralells with our own situation [at least in Europe] and begin to realise just how far down the same road we may have unwittingly travelled. We have elections coming up where the proprtionate power of relatively minor political groups is elevated by the ability to maintain or depose the larger parties by granting or withholding support. We have detention camps run by non-state bodies where already rumors of maltraetment and abnormally high suicide rates are being reported [Channell Four News ran one such undercover expose in the last few weeks where privatly employed officers wher heard refering to 'inmates' in less than human terms]. We have mooted sugestions of privitising our State law enforcement bodies - effectivly the establishment of non-state contelled police and para-military style groupings. We have rising tides of nationalism, anti-semitism and far-right thinking amongst the populace. The more, alas you read, the more alas you think, "My God - This could happen again".