The ongoing hunt for Nazi war criminals made news last week when evidence
emerged that Aribert Heim, the wartime “Dr. Death” in Mauthausen
who conducted experiments on prisoners, was given haven in Egypt
and presumably died there. Efraim Zuroff has been searching for
information about Heim throughout his two decades as director of
the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s Israel office.
More than 60 years after the end of World War II, Zuroff’s job is to
find accused Nazi war criminals, document the cases against them, make
sure they are brought to justice and keep the issue in the public’s
consciousness. A native New Yorker and one-time researcher for the
Justice Department’s Office of Special Investigations, his work, which
uncovered the post-war escape of hundreds of war criminals to several
countries, has influenced the passage of legislation in Canada, Australia
and Great Britain. CNN will profile Zuroff this spring, and a new autobiography
is to be issued by Palgrave/Macmillan in the fall.
Q:Hitler, before the Final Solution, asked rhetorically, who still speaks about
the Genocide of the Armenians. Why, six decades after the end of
World War II, are people still talking about the Holocaust, and
why are old Nazis still front-page news?
A: People are still speaking about the Holocaust because of the
phenomenal success of the scholars and educators (Jews and non-Jews)
who during the past half-century have made a determined effort
to educate the world about the significance of the Holocaust.
Old Nazis are not always front-page news, but those who do get
a lot of attention are usually the ones who committed the most
shocking and heinous crimes. Thus everyone has been reading about
“Dr. Death,” but few people know about Sandor Kepiro, Milivoj Asner
and others who were involved in the murders of more people than
Aribert Heim but did so in less dramatic fashion.
Heim seems to present a Hollywood-made bad guy,
a Nazi who turns up in the anti-Israel Arab world. Are all your
cases so straightforward evil?
Most are not. Most are far less shocking and far less dramatic,
and consequently unfortunately do not receive much public attention.
Are foreign governments, post-Communism, more
willing to cooperate in finding and prosecuting accused war criminals?
We have been having severe problems in post-communist Eastern Europe,
where there is a distinct lack of political will to prosecute their
own nationals. Given the high-level of local complicity in mass
murder in those countries, this is particularly problematic.
What happens to the historical memory of the Holocaust
when the last war criminal -- not to mention the last survivor
-- dies? Will the Holocaust deniers have the field to themselves?
Not at all. The proofs to combat denial have been collected for
the past 60 years or so and we have all the tools to fight them
effectively. In that respect, denial has basically failed since
it has hereto never penetrated mainstream Western society.
Simon Wiesenthal was sometimes called the Jewish
James Bond, although he maintained that most of his work consisted
of archival research. Is being a Nazi hunter glamorous?
Glamorous is hardly a description of the work, which these days
is basically one-third detective, one-third historian and one-third
political lobbyist. In that respect, you have to remember that
someone like me who was born after World War II never had an opportunity
to catch the most prominent Nazi war criminals.
thejewishweek.com
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