Efraim Zuroff is running out of time. Zuroff is a Nazi-hunter — in fact, since
Simon Wiesenthal’s death in 2005, he has become the world’s most
prominent hunter of Nazi war criminals. However, the number of
those who perpetrated the Holocaust has been reduced by the passage
of time. Those who remain alive are in their late 80s and 90s.
Despite this, Zuroff has vowed to give them no respite.
The American-born activist, a physically imposing
figure with a New York accent unaffected by many decades of life
in Israel, claims that there are hundreds, perhaps thousands,
of unprosecuted Nazi war criminals living out their years peacefully.
“The question for us,” he says, “is how to find the evidence.
Even now, we examine one or two new aspects every month.”
His final push to round up those guilty of
the Holocaust started seven years ago with the launch of Operation
Last Chance by the Simon Wiesenthal Centre, for whom he works.
The campaign has yielded results. “We had over 3,000 calls. Those
calls yielded the names of 540 suspects that we did not know
about. Any name that we are given has to pass three tests. First
of all there is credibility. It’s possible that someone has had
a row with their 85-year-old neighbour who has a German accent.
Then, he has to be alive and able to stand trial and not have
been before the courts already. There were over 100 cases we
uncovered, including six very serious ones.”
Sixty-one-year-old Zuroff is a quarter of
a century younger than the youngest suspects he is chasing. Could
it be that hunting and prosecuting elderly people is actually
counterproductive? Zuroff is adamant that the hunt will go on
to the bitter end. “I have never encountered a single case of
a Nazi war criminal who expressed any remorse — not one.”
He accepts that the public do not necessarily
share his views. “Look at John Demjanjuk [the Ukrainian currently
on trial in Germany for war crimes]. People see a frail old gentleman.
War criminals might be old now but in the prime of their lives
they put all of their energy into murdering innocent people.
I call it misplaced sympathy syndrome. These people had no mercy
for their victims.”
Zuroff is used to being asked to justify the
continued hunt for war criminals. He maintains that the passage
of time does not diminish guilt; that old age should not afford
protection for people who committed such horrendous crimes. “It’s
important to send out a message that if you commit crimes like
these there will always be someone trying to find you and bring
you to justice,” he says. Zuroff’’s career is detailed in a new
book, also entitled Operation Last Chance. There remain some
big targets, among them Milivoj Asner and Aribert Heim. Asner,
a Croatian, is in rude health despite his 95 years. Zuroff had
obtained agreement from Croatian president Stjepan Mesic to help
arrest Asner, but he concedes that he underestimated his foe.
“No one dreamed that a man of 91 was going to try to escape.
But he did. We didn’t think it through.” Asner now lives in Austria,
whose government refuses to extradite him.
Heim, a doctor who experimented on his patients
in a grotesque manner similar to Dr Josef Mengele, was reported
dead in Egypt in 1992. Zuroff is not prepared to accept this
until more evidence is provided. “There is no proof. There is
a death certificate but you can buy one of those for five shekels
in the Cairo shuk. There’s no body so you can’t verify anything.”
Zuroff claims some important victories. “One
is the case of Dinko Sakic [the former commandant of the Croatian
concentration camp Jasenovac] who was imprisoned by the Croatians.
I also exposed the rehabilitation of people in Lithuania who
had committed genocide, and I helped to educate the world that
the Holocaust was not just perpetrated by Germany and Austria
but by people from many other European countries. I also exposed
the issue of war criminals living in the UK.”
Zuroff’s book is dedicated to the memory of
legendary Nazi-hunter Simon Wiesenthal, whose reputation has
recently come under fierce attack in the book Hunting Evil, by
ex-Sunday Times journalist Guy Walters. Walters alleged that
Wiesenthal was a fantasist who caught few Nazis and was more
interested in self-glorification. So what is Zuroff’s opinion
of Wiesenthal?
“He was very smart and very sharp. He had
a healthy dose of cynicism and good sense of humour. He was also
the personification of an issue and that’s where it gets a little
problematic. In 2005 he was quoted as saying that he had caught
every Nazi who was worth catching. It was not true of course,
but the guy was 95 and he was thinking: ‘I’m the Nazi-hunter
and without me there’s no Nazi-hunting.’
“His greatest achievement was in keeping the
memory of the Holocaust alive when no one else was interested
in it. He had some important successes.”
But Zuroff is scathing of Walters. “There
may have been some inconsistencies in what Wiesenthal said but
much of what Walters wrote was ridiculous. Certainly what he
wrote about me was ridiculous. On top of that it’s a boring book.”
Zuroff is happy that Holocaust awareness and
education is at unprecedented levels. But he is concerned about
the effect of the Prague Declaration issued in 2008 and signed
by 40 leading European intellectuals including former Czech president
Vaclav Havel.
“It says that Europe will never truly be reunited
until it recognises the common legacy of Nazism and Communism.
It talks about designating August 23 as a joint commemoration
for the victims of Nazism and Communism. There is something insidious
about this. If Communism equals Nazism, it means Communism equals
genocide, which means Jews committed genocide because there were
many Jewish Communists. It also helps to deflect the guilt of
European countries in terms of their complicity in the Holocaust.
Suddenly they are the victims rather than the perpetrators. I’ve
been talking to people in the UK about fighting the declaration,
including potential ministers in the next government assuming
the Conservatives win.”
He concedes that his campaign against Nazi
war criminals has, at most, a few years to run. So what does
he hope to achieve? “I’d like a few prosecutions. If we get five
people into court that will be fantastic. The victims deserve
that an effort be made to find their killers.” thejc.com
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