Reflections on the Holocaust
By
Daniel C. Peterson and William J. Hamblin
“A
single death is a tragedy,” said Josef Stalin. “A million deaths
is a statistic.” But a visit to the Holocaust Museum in Washington,
DC, gives the lie to the Soviet dictator. A million deaths
is a million tragedies.
And
the losses continue. Given the intellectual leadership of the
Jews in Europe and, now, in the United States, we must ask ourselves what great art we are missing,
that Hitler’s millions of victims might have created. Who
can know what literature they or the children they were denied
might have written? Would we have had a cure for cancer? And
Jews were by no means the only victims of Hitler’s grisly “Final
Solution” and of the war into which he plunged much of Europe
and the world beyond. The ramifications of the Holocaust are
literally incalculable.
The
Holocaust raises the problem of evil – what theologians and
philosophers call the question of “theodicy” – in its most acute
imaginable form: Appalling evils suggest that, if God is all-powerful,
he is not good, and that if he is good, he is not all-powerful.
Many solutions have been offered to this problem, but in the
face of the actual details of the Holocaust – and the Soviet
“gulag” and the Armenian genocide and the Cambodian killing
fields and the Ukrainian “famine” and the purges of Mao and
the massacres in Rwanda and the “ethnic cleansing” in the former
Yugoslavia and the mass graves of Saddam’s Iraq – they can seem
merely shallow and glib. One thinks of Voltaire’s Candide,
and of Dr. Pangloss, assuring us despite horrifying injustices
and seemingly pointless suffering that this really is “the best
of all possible worlds.”
“Never
shall I forget that night,” writes the Nobel laureate Elie Wiesel,
a survivor of the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz, “the first night in camp, which has turned my life into one
long night, seven times cursed and seven times sealed. Never
shall I forget that smoke. Never shall I forget the little
faces of the children, whose bodies I saw turned into wreaths
of smoke beneath a silent blue sky.
“Never
shall I forget those flames which consumed my faith forever.
“Never
shall I forget that nocturnal silence which deprived me, for
all eternity, of the desire to live.
Never
shall I forget those moments which murdered my God and my soul
and turned my dreams to dust. Never shall I forget these things,
even if I am condemned to live as long as God Himself. Never.”
But
is evil really the end of the story? Did Hitler win? Some
Jews have seen in the “Final Solution,” which ended violently
in 1945, and the rise of the Jewish state of Israel in 1948,
a symbol of the triumph of good (and of God) over evil and death
much like the death and resurrection of Jesus himself for Christians.
They may not be entirely wrong.
The
scores of biographies of Hitler that have appeared since his
Wagnerian death amidst the flaming ruins of Berlin clearly demonstrate
that we crave an explanation for such stunning evil -- and that
we are not yet satisfied that we have one. But doesn’t stunning
goodness also demand explanation? Albert Schweitzer, the Buddhist
emperor Ashoka of India, and Mother Teresa of Calcutta (who
sought only to do “something beautiful for God”) are clues,
no less than Stalin and Pol Pot, to the nature of humanity and
the universe.
St.
Maximilian Kolbe voluntarily went to his death at Auschwitz
in place of a fellow prisoner. Oskar Schindler, not a good
man by traditional standards, rose to indisputable moral heroism
under the Nazis and rescued hundreds of Jews. During the four
years of the German occupation of France, the little southern Protestant village of Le Chambon,
with an impoverished population of three thousand, saved about
five thousand refugees (mostly children).
“There
is none that doeth good,” says the Psalmist, “no, not one.”
“All we like sheep have gone astray,” agrees Isaiah. Yet, as
another Psalm declares, God has made humankind “a little lower
than the angels” – or, as the Hebrew says, “a little lower than
the gods.” A balanced perspective on humanity and the universe
will keep both facts in view.