Nuremberg 2025
A good movie
for grownups about important historical events
Nuremberg is a 2025 historical drama written,
directed, and co-produced by James Vanderbilt. Nuremberg is a misnomer;
the film is not an exhaustive treatment of the thirteen trials of Nazi war
criminals that took place in Nuremberg, Germany, between 1945 and 1949. A more
accurate title for the film would be Five Men at Nuremberg, those five
men being SCOTUS Justice Robert H. Jackson (Michael Shannon), psychiatrist Dr.
Douglas Kelley (Rami Malek), Hermann Goering (Russell Crowe), Sergeant Howard
Triest (Leo Woodall), and Colonel Burton C. Andrus (John Slattery). Jackson
played a key role in initiating the Nuremberg trials. Goering was a top Nazi
defendant. Kelley was a thirty-two-year-old Army psychiatrist and lieutenant
colonel tasked with assessing the Nazi defendants' mental fitness to stand
trial. Triest was a US Army interpreter, and Andrus was the commandant of the
Nuremberg prison. Richard E. Grant stars as British prosecutor Sir David
Maxwell-Fyfe, and Colin Hanks plays a US Army psychologist, Dr. Gustave
Gilbert. Nuremberg is roughly two and a half hours long. Nuremberg opened
in the US on November 7, 2025.
Please go see this movie. Buy a ticket; see it in a theater. It's a good movie, and it's for grown-ups. If we want movies like this, we have to support them with our ticket purchases.
It's been a
while since I've seen a prestige Hollywood production that managed to do all of
the following. Nuremberg has a coherent plot. In spite of its runtime,
the film's pace is fast. I've seen it twice, and I was never bored. It features
recognizable and coherent human characters facing significant obstacles and, in
some cases, overcoming those obstacles; in other cases, characters are crushed
by those obstacles. Each character's fate makes sense in relation to the
storyline they are living out and their own internal makeup. This equation – a
recognizable human character v. a challenge we all might face and rising or
falling in the face of that challenge – has been the fulcrum of drama at least
since the ancient Greeks.
The actors
taking on these roles are charismatic, award-winning professionals who know how
to command the screen, arrest your attention and sympathy, and immerse you in
the story. In interviews they convey a sense of respect and commitment to the
grave subject matter. Russell Crowe as Goering is getting all the attention,
but I was in awe of Leo Woodall's low-key performance as Triest. Towards the
end of the movie, after I'd been thoroughly entertained by all that had
preceded this moment, in a quiet, subtle series of scenes, Woodall / Triest
surprised me by wringing spontaneous tears from my eyes. I don't want to spoil
this moment for you, but it's one of the most beautiful and profound moments
I've ever seen in any film, and if you take a quick bathroom break, or dip too
deeply into your popcorn, you will miss it, so pay attention.
I like watching
Rami Malek in anything and his intense, driven, intelligent performance is
exactly right for Kelley. I fell in love with John Slattery's unsmiling
depiction of Colonel Andrus, the commandant of the Nuremberg prison. When
Andrus throws Hess against a wall and informs him that he is never to give
another sieg heil during his remaining time on earth, I wanted to award
Slattery an honorary Oscar. Grant brings old school glamour; he takes Goering
down with a velvet glove. Secondary cast members, especially those playing
Streicher and Ley, are very good.
The film
revisits an historical era and the heaviest of topics, but the script is witty
and crisp. It moves like a well-oiled machine. It asks why people commit
atrocities and how we can understand and respond to those who commit
atrocities. Amidst the unavoidable horror, there are earned moments of
laugh-out-loud humor, for example, Nazi Julius Streicher's response to a
Rorschach test.
Nuremberg looks good. You've got a bombed out
post-war German city, throngs of extras in period clothing, (mostly Hungarian;
the movie was filmed in Hungary), and what appear to my civilian eyes as
authentic military uniforms. The Palace of Justice courtroom, site of the
Nuremberg trials, "was replicated to the inch using the actual building
plans" according
to Vanderbilt.
Nuremberg is free of artsy-fartsy cinematic
pretensions such as those that weighed down Luca Guadagnino's recent films, Queer
and After the Hunt. Moviegoers will not be scratching their heads
wondering what the heck is going on onscreen. Even so, there are a couple of
scenes that use artistry to make a point. One scene features only a length of
Manila rope – the kind
reportedly used to hang Nazis at Nuremberg. The rope stretches taut; under
strain, individual fibers branch out and catch light. The rope is further
stretched; we hear the fibers creak. The rope sways.
In another
scene, Triest and Kelley enter a bombed-out library at night. The only
illumination in the darkness are the beams from their flashlights. This scene
is a metaphor for the human need to comprehend the incomprehensible. Kelley is
excited. He has an idea. He will conduct research and discover what made the
Nazis do what they did. He will enable the world to prevent atrocity from ever
happening again. He will describe what makes Germans "different from us
Americans." Triest, the younger man, is taken aback by that last
pronouncement. We won't learn, till later in the movie, why Triest has been so
visibly affected. Towards the end of the film, we will also learn how Kelley's
words here come to have such grim resonance for Kelley himself.
Great Holocaust
films include Stanley Kramer's 1961 masterpiece, Judgment at Nuremberg, Steven
Spielberg's 1993 Schindler's List, Roman Polanski's 2002 The Pianist,
and Jonathan Glazer's 2023 Zone of Interest. Nuremberg is not in
that class, but it is a very good film, and well worth your time.
Now that I've
done my best to try to convince you to buy a ticket for Nuremberg, here
is some historical background of the actual event and also the making of the
film. After the Allied victory on VE Day, May 8, 1945, the Allies faced an
impossible question. As Americans and her Allies moved east, and as the Red
Army moved west, they discovered the unspeakable. On January 27, 1945, the Red
Army liberated Auschwitz. On April 29. 1945, American troops liberated Dachau.
Even before these dates, Americans had heard reports of atrocities, and
occupied people in Europe had witnessed them. Americans, too, were victims of
atrocities. In the December 17, 1944, Malmedy Massacre, Waffen-SS members used
machine guns to massacre surrendered American soldiers. In the August 26, 1944,
Rüsselsheim Massacre, German civilians used sticks, boards, bricks, rocks,
hammers, and shovels to beat American airmen to death. There were other such
incidents.
For years,
Americans had viewed film footage of millions of ecstatic Germans smiling,
cheering, and celebrating Adolf Hitler. At the Nuremberg trials, maps were
shown marking the location of concentration and death camps throughout
Nazi-occupied Europe. These sites pock the map the way that scars cover the
face of a small pox survivor. Most people have heard of Auschwitz. Auschwitz
was not alone. The National World War II Museum states,
"The Nazis created at least 44,000 camps, including ghettos and other
sites of incarceration, between 1933 and 1945. The camps served various
functions, from imprisoning 'enemies of the state' to serving as way stations
in larger deportation schemes to murdering people in gas chambers."
Everyone in Germany was within stench distance of a site of atrocity.
After their
defeat, Germans, including Goering, insisted, paraphrase, "I knew
nothing." Gestapo chief Ernst Kaltenbrunner was
"a prime figure in the 'Final Solution.'" At Nuremberg, Kaltenbrunner
insisted that it was his position that "Any personal or physical
persecution of Jews was completely unnecessary," and that he had not
signed documents that plainly bore his signature. He also insisted that he was
unaware of the Final Solution that he himself helped carry out.
Other Germans
complained that it was they who were the real victims. Benjamin Ferencz was the
chief prosecutor for the United States Army at the Einsatzgruppen trial.
Einsatzgruppen were Nazi death squads who committed mass murder, primarily
through shooting. Estimates of their kill count run between 1.5 and 2 million
human beings, most of them Jews. The Einsatzgruppen also killed an estimated
50,000 Poles, tens of thousands of Roma people, and Soviet officials.
Ferencz reports that the
mass killers he prosecuted insisted that they were the real victims. Some
claimed that they would be shot if they refused to commit mass murder. But
there are no records of any such refusals or military executions. Commander
Otto Ohlendorf provided his own humanitarian bona fides. He told his men to
stop tossing Jewish babies into the air and using them as target practice, or
bashing babies' heads against trees. He taught his men to have mothers hold
babies and shoot the baby, thus killing both mother and child at once, to save
on ammo. Others said that they were merciful because they delivered kill shots
to still-living victims in mass graves. Still others said that they were
victims because they had to "wade through Jewish blood up to their
knees" when performing their work. None, Ferencz said, took responsibility
for their actions or expressed regret.
Ferencz was
aware that Ohlendorf was the father of five children, and that he was about to
hang. Ferencz, on his own initiative, and out of human compassion, visited
Ohlendorf at the "death house." Ferencz spoke to Ohlendorf in the
mass murderer's native German. "Herr Ohlendorf," Ferencz asked.
"Can I do something for you?" Ohlendorf replied only, "The Jews
in America will suffer for what you have done." Ohlendorf showed "no
remorse whatsoever." Ferencz says that "only four"
Einsatzgruppen leaders were executed at Nuremberg. "There were three
thousand members of the Einsatzgruppen. What happened to them? Nothing.
Nothing. Was justice done? What is justice? Talk about justice is really
totally inadequate."
Figuring out
how to administer justice to an entire country as morally compromised as
post-war Germany was one problem. But there was another. America was a leader
in the post-war world and more Americans claimed German ancestry than claimed
ancestry from any other country. There were a lot of Mullers, Schneiders,
Meyers and Fischers on both sides of the Atlantic. Germany was not just related
to the rest of the West in terms of genes and culture. It was also economically
and militarily important, especially in the Cold War. It would be impossible to
punish every guilty party in post-war Germany. It would also be
self-sabotaging.
Finally,
post-war Germany needed traffic cops, teachers, doctors. Many were former Nazis
and war criminals, but Germany needed them to run the country. Historian Jochen
Hellbeck reminds us that "As late
as 1966," former Nazis constituted the majority in the West German
Ministry of Justice and Federal Criminal Police Office.
Immediately
after the war, though, many in Allied nations would have been happy to relegate
Germans and Germany to the trash heap. In a 1945 American Institute of Public
Opinion poll, nine options were offered in response to, "After the war is
over, how should we treat Nazi leaders?" The most popular reply, at 41%,
was "kill them." The next most popular, at 18%, was
"punish," followed by "imprison," at 13%.
"Torture" got a 7% approval rating. Only 10% voted for
"trials."
Stalin
suggested that 50,000 Nazi military leaders should be executed. Failing that,
he thought that Soviet-style show trials would have terrific propaganda value.
Roosevelt pondered dropping an atomic bomb on Germany. "Roosevelt informed
me if the European war was not over before we had our first bombs he wanted us
to be ready to drop them on Germany," wrote General Leslie Groves in his
memoir. Roosevelt "was quite disturbed over the Battle of the Bulge and he
asked me at that time whether I could bomb Germany as well as Japan,"
Groves said in an interview.
Churchill
wanted summary executions. "The British government opposed the
establishment of the Nuremberg war crimes tribunals ... because it wanted
selected Nazi leaders to be summarily executed and others to be imprisoned
without trial, according to a contemporary account that is declassified on
Friday. Winston Churchill made the proposal at the 'Big Three' conference at
Yalta in February 1945, according to the account," reports the Guardian.
German-American Hollywood star and anti-Nazi Marlene Dietrich said,
"Germany deserves everything that's coming to her."
In short, the
Nuremberg trials were not inevitable. People deeply invested in the rule of
law, the value of civilization's defeat of nihilistic evil, and the importance
of evidence pushed hard to make them happen. This was not easy because there
was no precedent and all involved would have to come to some agreement of how
to reconcile conflicting demands of different countries' legal systems. Today
we gripe at the incompleteness of the trials' reach. Maybe millions of
criminals escaped justice. In fact we should rejoice that the trials took place
at all. They produced thorough documentation proving the perpetrators' guilt.
Stalin's idea of summary executions might tempt us, but it would produce its
own problems. Some would argue that the executioners were no better than those
whose lives they ended. The executed could be celebrated as martyrs. Instead we
have video of Goering, Streicher, Hess, Kaltenbrunner, in the dock, squirming
like the lowlifes that they were, trying to escape the truth.
In 2011,
Minnesota science writer Jack El-Hai outlined a book proposal treating the work
of Dr. Douglas Kelley, a lesser-known character of the trials. Many
psychiatrists and psychologists, from several countries, studied Nazi
prisoners. One of them was psychiatrist Kelley. Kelley was born in Truckee,
California. Kelley, a
straight-A student and Eagle Scout, had received degrees at Columbia, UC
Berkeley, and UCSF. His grandfather, Charles McGlashan, was an historian,
journalist, lawyer, educator, entomologist, and active opponent of Chinese
immigration. McGlashan researched and published on the Donner Party, and he
helped establish a
monument to the doomed wayfarers. Kelley's mother was one of the first
women admitted to the California bar. His father was a dentist. Kelley came
from a family of intelligent high achievers who blazed their own paths. El-Hai
describes Kelley as a driven man, convinced of his own importance, determined
to make his mark on the world.
At Nuremberg,
Kelley used intelligence tests and Rorschach tests. Kelley wanted to find a
"Nazi virus" that could explain evil. If evil could be explained,
horrors like the Nazi Era could be prevented. Kelley
wrote, "The near destruction of modern culture will have gone for
naught if we do not draw the right conclusions about the forces that produced
such chaos. We must learn the why of the Nazi success so we can take steps to
prevent the recurrence of such evil." El-Hai says that a sort of bond
formed between Nuremberg prisoner Hermann Goering and Kelley. Both were
intelligent, manipulative, competitive, and trying to use the other to achieve
their own ends. Goering wanted the trial to be his testament. Someday, Goering
protested, people would come to appreciate Nazism for the heroic movement it
really was, and erect statues in his honor. "In 50 or 60 years there will
be statues of Hermann Goering all over Germany. Little statues, maybe, but one
in every German home."
El-Hai
describes Kelley's motivations. "Instead of repelling Kelley, Goering’s
brutality heightened the psychiatrist’s determination to reach some
understanding of the captive’s personality. Over time, Kelley built an
unusually close relationship with Goering. The two men spent hours discussing
German politics, war strategy and the likely outcome of the forthcoming
trial."
El-Hai's book
proposal found its way to James Vanderbilt, of the Vanderbilt family.
Vanderbilt was the writer and producer of the well-received 2007 true crime
drama, Zodiac. Vanderbilt has also written the scripts for films in the Independence
Day, Spider-Man, and Scream franchises.
Based on
El-Hai's proposal, Vanderbilt
knew "I wanted, needed to write this movie. I knew, with absolute
certainty in that moment, that I was the man for the job … I used my own money
to option the rights." Vanderbilt took the material very seriously.
"The sheer weight of the subject matter was pushing down on me as well.
The responsibility to the survivors, to their families. The historical
implications. The voice in my head saying, You cannot screw this up, you have
to get it right … My wife asked … if we could maybe have fewer books about
Nazis on our bedside table."
For this
viewer, Vanderbilt's thirteen years of research, funding, and writing paid off.
Professional critics are not as enthusiastic as I am. At Rotten Tomatoes,
Nuremberg gets a 71% score. That's okay, but it's not the rousing
endorsement received by, say, the putrid pro-leftist-terrorism flick, One
Battle after Another; that mess received a 94% score. According to
professional reviewers, what is Nuremberg doing wrong? Some critics view
the film as "preachy" and "didactic." Nuremberg is
indeed both. Given the subject matter and Vanderbilt's goal to create a film
that would reach mass audiences, I can't imagine how it could have avoided
these qualities.
One reviewer
bashes "clunky exposition." I definitely noticed the
"exposition" on a second viewing; it went right over my head during
the first viewing, because I was too busy having a good time at the movies, and
being surprised that I was having a good time at the movies. On second viewing,
yes, I noticed that characters did toss in one or two lines of explanation, for
example, "That's Hermann Goering! Second in command to Hitler!" Why
is that exposition there? Because today's audiences might not know who Goering
was.
Some like, or,
on the other hand, don't like Nuremberg because they see it as a
criticism of the current American president. When Vanderbilt is hit with this
question in interviews, he responds that he began working on this project in
2012, and that he had a script before Trump even began running for president
the first time. The questions this film asks are timeless, Vanderbilt reminds
interlocutors.
The critical
comments that violate decency are those that say, paraphrase, "Blah blah
blah Gaza!" In Sri-Lanka-native Radheyan Simonpillai's review in the Guardian,
Nuremberg is "old-fashioned entertainment" that is "seduced
by spectacle" and ultimately worthless because "Prosecuting war
crimes and establishing international law has done nothing to prevent the
atrocities in Gaza." Scott Roxborough, writing in Deutsche
Welle, chides, "The spectacle at the center of Nuremberg feels
all the more hollow given the state of international law. By the end, we're
meant to cheer the triumph of justice, yet the International Criminal Court in
The Hague, Nuremberg's successor, has done little to prevent modern-day
atrocities, such as those unfolding in Ukraine and Gaza."
I suspect that
Roxborough and Simonpillai don't bash Nuremberg because their tender
hearts weep for the victims in Gaza or Ukraine. I suspect that they bash it
because it is a conventional narrative film made to be entertaining to a mass
audience, and it features white men behaving heroically in defense of the values
of Western Civilization. No leftist film critic disparages Alexander Nevsky,
a classic of Soviet cinema from 1938, because of the Molotov - Ribbentrop
Pact or the massive death toll of World War II in the USSR. Rather they accept
the film's story on its own cinematic terms: back in the thirteenth century,
Russians once fought invading Germans and won. By bashing a conventional
Hollywood film, Simonpillai and Roxborough are not standing with the masses,
they are telegraphing their status above the masses.
All is not
lost. The masses, in spite of wilting reviews, have found Nuremberg and
they like it. When the film premiered at the Toronto International Film
Festival, it received a four-minute standing ovation, one of the longest
standing O's at that venue. At Rotten Tomatoes, where professional
reviewers give the film a so-so 70% rating, amateur reviewers award Nuremberg
a 96% score. The "most recent" fan reviews include the following:
"Excellent by every measure," "I walked in to the theater with
low expectations and walked out loving it. Russell Crowe gives an Oscar
nomination worthy performance." "A powerful, necessary, historical
drama. This movie should be #1." "You have to see this movie. Malek,
Crowe, and Woodall give stellar performances." "Top notch from start
to finish! Russell Crowe & Rami Malek were exceptional - truly mesmerizing
to watch! Michael Shannon - always fantastic! Leo Woodall - WOW - really came
to play - he was phenomenal! The movie has stayed with me for days. A must see
in the theatre!"
Nuremberg dramatizes real events, events that
matter greatly to many people. That being the case, viewers are tough on any
inaccuracy. There are plenty of articles on the web listing "what really
happened" and what didn't really happen the way the film depicted it. I
will mention, here, two aspects of the film that didn't work for this viewer:
an incomplete depiction of Hermann Goering, and an inaccurate accounting of
Nazism's victims. My objections do not interfere with my appreciation of all
the good that the film offers. These two errors, though, must be corrected,
especially at a time when Nazism has new adherents. These new self-styled Nazis
are ignorant about the full implications of the group they admire.
Storytelling
requires a compelling hero for whom audiences cheer, and an opponent worthy of
our heroes' best efforts. As long ago as David v. Goliath, and Beowulf v.
Grendel, we have wanted our story antagonists to be outsized. Nuremberg
falls into this storyteller's trap in making Goering more of a man than he,
or any Nazi, actually was.
Both Nuremberg
2025 and the 2000 Alec Baldwin miniseries of the same name include
celebrated performances by powerhouse actors in the Goering role. Brian Cox
played Goering in the 2000 Nuremberg miniseries. Both films declined to
depict some of the less impressive aspects of Goering.
Goering liked
to pretend to be super manly by keeping lions at his house. In fact these
"lions" were mere cubs taken from the local zoo. Once the cubs grew
past the point of safety for Goering, he sent them back, and got a new cub. In
1925, he was confined, in a straitjacket, to a Swedish insane asylum. After
repeated military failures for which Goering bore some responsibility, Hitler
"berated" Goering in a "cruel and hateful" manner. Goering
loved to dress up in operatic costumes he had made to order. Some say he would
change costumes several times a day. He liked to wear a Roman-style toga, and
also a kimono. Goering wore noticeable makeup in public, including lipstick. He
also painted his finger and toenails red. As Nuremberg does depict,
Goering was "fat stuff" to his American jailers. He was obese and an
opioid addict.
"No man
has beaten me," the movie's Goering insists. Georgy Konstantinovich Zhukov
might disagree. Zhukov was Deputy Supreme Commander of the Soviet Armed Forces.
At Stalingrad, his Red Army turned the tide of World War II. After the Red
Army's defeat of the Nazis at Stalingrad, Hitler demoted Goering, who bore some
responsibility for that defeat. I am, otherwise, no fan of the Red Army, but I
am a fan of the famous photo, "Raising
a Flag over the Reichstag," taken on May 2, 1945. Goering and his
friends denounced Russians as "subhuman" and yet these ragtag,
underfed, under-equipped Russians managed to beat the Nazis, including Goering.
Were Nazis the
Übermenschen or "supermen" of their own propaganda, and of too many
films? No. Nazis were cheap thugs, classic bullies, no better than the big guy
in high school who torments the little guy who can't fight back.
Nazi Germany
invaded and tortured defenseless peasants and shtetl Jews. Nazis bombed
Kazimiera Mika, a ten-year-old Polish girl digging potatoes in a field – see this photo.
Photographer Julien Bryan describes Nazi pilots purposely, consciously,
altering their flight path so that they could murder little girls harvesting
potatoes, children who posed no threat to them. Bryan reports, "The child
had never before seen death and couldn't understand why her sister would not
speak to her … [she] looked at us in bewilderment. I threw my arm about her and
held her tightly, trying to comfort her." In Auschwitz, German Nazis
tortured and murdered Czeslawa
Kwoka, a defenseless fourteen-year-old child. German Nazis sent a tiny
little Jewish boy, his hands up in surrender, to his death at Treblinka; see here.
Big, strong, German Nazis, at point blank range, shot to death mothers holding
their children; see here.
Nazis were not supermen. Goering was defeated. Let's never forget these key
facts.
There's another
aspect of the film that didn't work for me. In Nuremberg, Jews are
virtually the sole victims of the Nazis. At one point David Maxwell-Fyfe
quickly mentions Poles and others, but otherwise, Nazis killed Jews and nobody
else.
Jews must be
recognized as victims of Nazism in a way that other groups were not. Jews were
special targets of deadly propaganda. And Jews were mass murdered to an extent
unmatched by other victim groups. Approximately two-thirds of European Jews
were murdered by the Nazis. This genocide is so overwhelming that other Nazi
victims are often reduced, if mentioned at all, to the phrase "and
others." "And others" fails at doing necessary work.
Nazis mass
murdered another group before Jews, and Nazis continued to mass murder members
of this group even after their defeat. That group is handicapped people, many
of them so-called "Aryan" Germans.
Nazis killed
approximately twenty-seven million Soviet citizens. By one estimate, roughly
sixteen to seventeen million Soviet civilians were killed. Over three million
Soviet POWS were killed, often by simply starving them to death. Poles and
Soviet POWs were the first to be gassed with Zyklon B. Perhaps a third of the
population of Belarus was killed. Perhaps twenty percent of the Polish
population died. Many were enslaved, imprisoned, tortured, and subject to
experimentation. Three thousand Polish priests were killed; almost two thousand
died in concentration camps. When Nazis first entered Poland, Einsatzgruppen
fanned out and began massacring tens of thousands of Polish community leaders.
Other Polish community leaders were sent to Auschwitz. Tens of thousands died
there. Between a quarter and a half of Europe's population of Gypsies, aka Rom
and Sinti, were murdered. Hundreds of thousands of Serbs were killed.
Nazism is often
misunderstood as being pro-German or pro-Germany. In practice, it was not.
Dachau's first prisoners were Nazis' fellow Germans, their political opponents.
But Nazis were quite happy to betray and murder their own. During the Night of
the Long Knives, Nazis turned on fellow Nazis. "Raucous laughter burst out
at every report of a killing" in Goering's office as
he learned of the murder of men he used to call friends. One of the most dramatic betrayals of one
Nazi of another must, for now, remain only the subject of speculation. Czech
and Slovak partisans attempted to assassinate top Nazi Reinhard Heydrich, but
they only wounded him. Heydrich died a slow, painful death. He was denied
conventional care for his wounds. The doctor denying him adequate treatment had
been sent by Heydrich's colleague, Heinrich Himmler, perhaps jealous because
Germans referred to Heydrich as Himmler's "brain."
Between roughly
six and nine million Germans died during World War II. At Nuremberg, some
defendants turned on their previously worshiped fuhrer, Hitler, or they turned
on other defendants. Before his suicide, Hitler ordered Goering arrested. At
Nuremberg, Goering threatened Speer with assassination. An epidemic of
suicides, from those at the top, Hitler and Goebbels, to average Germans swept
the country. Historian Florian Huber estimates that "tens of
thousands" of Germans committed suicide. They often murdered their own
children, as did Joseph and Magda Goebbels. These suicides were encouraged and
modeled by Hitler. Suicide, Hitler said, means that "one is redeemed of
everything and finds tranquility and eternal peace."
At Nuremberg,
some Nazis, pleaded that they were "just following orders." But
others resisted those same orders. Both Goering and Heydrich had brothers who
helped Jews. Some, including Goering and Ohlendorf, insisted that everything
they did they did for Germany. Some today fall into that trap and romanticize
Nazis and Nazism as a heroic struggle of happily united Germans against enemies
of the state. But the Nazis lied. They were never united and they didn't do
what they did for Germany. They did what they did for themselves. Kelley and
Gustave Gilbert were both correct: Nazis were narcissists, opportunists, and
they lacked empathy. Those qualities lead to the destruction of Germany. German
"supermen" required American rescue, in the form of the Marshall
Plan, to be able to eat, bathe, work, and live again. America, a democracy
informed by the Judeo-Christian ethic – that is a system despised by Nazis –
raised Germany from the dead, and from its own infamy.
Nazism's
victims, as diverse as they were, all had one thing in common. One feature
unites the young German boys and old German men thrown into futile battle and
maimed or killed during Hitler's final days; one feature unites German
handicapped people and Jews mass murdered at Babyn Yar, Polish Catholic
priests, Soviet Communists, and Orthodox Serbs. One feature unites former
Hitler BFF Ernst Rohm and Anne Frank. Every one of these victims lost their
life to Nazi ideology that declared some lives unworthy of life.
Nazism's
ideological roots are in scientific racism, social Darwinism, Neo-Paganism, and
nationalism. This toxic brew justified every death mentioned above. A German
with a handicap was deemed life unworthy of life. Generalplan Ost demanded the
genocide of most Poles and Russians, and the enslavement of any surviving
remnant. Christianity in general and Catholicism in particular would not be
allowed to survive. Even the flower of Aryan German manhood had no value unless
it served the Nazi state; thus Hitler kept throwing men into battles he knew to
be lost. His "Nero Decree" demanded the destruction of Germany so
that invading Allies could not enjoy any spoils. The suffering of Germans under
this decree, that was never carried out, mattered not a whit in Nazi ideology.
I have seen, in
academia, scholars insist that Nazism was racism, with the understanding of
"racism" as whites against non-whites. Jews were
"non-white" in this formulation. In fact Nazis declared very white
and mostly Christian Poles, Russians, and other Slavs an inferior race and thus
fit for annihilation. In Judgment at Nuremberg, Burt Lancaster plays a
fictional Nazi judge, Ernst Janning. The Janning character is based on two real
life Nazi judges. One, Oswald Rothaug, was known as "The
Executioner." After this judge condemned a Polish slave laborer to death,
he declared, "Die ganze Minderwertigkeit des Angeklagten auf
charakterlichem Gebiet ist offensichtlich in seiner Zugehörigkeit zum
polnischen Untermenschentum begründet." Google translate renders this
as, "The defendant's entire inferiority in the area of character is
obviously rooted in his belonging to the Polish subhuman race."
Another
inspiration for the fictional Ernst Janning character was Franz Schlegelberger.
Schlegelberger authored the Polenstrafrechtsverordnung or Poland Penal
Law Provision. This law stripped Polish Catholics and Jews of the very right to
life under German occupation, for
example, "Poles were executed for tearing down German wall posters and
proclamations."
Goering himself
cited Nazi race theory to justify the Nazi invasion of Czechoslovakia. Goering
felt that Czechoslovakia should be "liquidated" "It is my
unshakable will that Czechoslovakia shall be wiped off the map," said
Hitler. Czechoslovaks were a "miserable, pygmy race," said Goering.
Reinhard Heydrich earned the sobriquet "Butcher of Prague."
In short, we
misunderstand Nazis and Nazism if we think of Nazis as supermen who gave their
all to Germany, and when we think that Jews were Nazism's only victims. Nazis
betrayed their own country and left it in ruins. And Nazism condemned largely
Christian Slavs who looked just like Germans to the status of racial inferiors
and "life unworthy of life." Nazism was and is a nihilistic,
anti-human ideology that destroys everything it touches, including its own
adherents. To convert those today who find Nazism appealing, we must enhance
their appreciation for life itself, for life as a sacred miracle.
In his
Nuremberg testimony, Nazi Doctor Karl Brandt summed up the Nazi worldview.
"The demands of society are put above every individual human being … the
human being, is completely used in the interest of that society … the
individual person had no meaning whatsoever."
Nuremberg brings the viewer back to an
unanswerable question. How does law best respond to post-war Germany? My own
feelings are intense and resistant to rationality and also my own Christian
faith; they can best be summed up in the phrase, "Kill them all; let God
sort them out." A very good friend, son of German parents who were alive
in Germany during and after the war, reminds me that if my desires were
fulfilled, he would not exist. My thirst for vengeance can only respond,
"Whatever."
To talk myself
down from this position, I remember that there is no earthly satisfaction to be
had. If I were able to achieve my desire to, say, stab a top Nazi to death, I
wouldn't feel satisfied. Tens of millions of human beings would not be brought
back to life. Their suffering could never be erased. We can't turn back the
clock and deprive the criminals from the sadistic pleasure they got from
hurting innocents who posed no threat to them.
There are
supermen in the Nuremberg story. One of them was Benjamin Ferencz. Ferencz was
born in Transylvania in 1920. His family left to escape persecution of Jews by
Romania. Ferencz grew up on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, an area thought
of as a "slum." Tenements were crowded and residents were poor and
working class. Ferencz attended the City College of New York. Jews had limited
access to more exclusive schools; "grubby and exalted" CUNY was known
as "The Harvard of the Proletariat." Ferencz did well enough that he
won a scholarship to Harvard Law. After graduation, Ferencz joined the army. He
scrubbed pots, floors, and toilets. And then, this boy who escaped antisemitism
in Europe, was asked to prepare a prosecution case against Nazi war criminals.
He was only in his twenties.
Ferencz might
have seemed easy to dismiss, as he was about five feet tall. He had to stand on
books to reach the lectern at Nuremberg. But this hero lived to be 103 years
old, dying in 2023. He devoted his life to justice.
Ferencz was a
superman. The guys who landed on Normandy beach were supermen. Men like my dad
who made their way through Pacific jungles, fearing Japanese soldiers with
every step, were supermen. We need more movies about heroes like this, movies
that snobby film critics will denigrate, but that audiences will appreciate.
Danusha V.
Goska is the author of God
through Binoculars: A Hitchhiker at a Monastery.

I have studied the Nuremberg Trials in some detail. They give unstinting credit to Poles as victims. Some Jews complain that the Nuremberg Trials neglected the Jews. I did a survey of the electronic version of the two summary Nuremberg volumes, and Jews are mentioned 746 times in Volume 1 and 1,064 times in Volume II.
ReplyDeleteThis is hardly neglect.
Numbers of mentions proves nothing.
ReplyDelete