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Review: Eichmann Before Jerusalem

In the run-up to Holocaust Memorial Day, we hail a reassessment of a principal perpetrator

January 22, 2015 13:19
An intelligent, 'trained ideological warrior'. Adolf Eichmann with his son, aHorst, in Prague circa 1942

By

David Cesarani,

David Cesarani

3 min read

Review: Eichmann Before Jerusalem by Bettina Stangneth
The Bodley Head, £25

When Adolf Eichmann stepped into the bullet-proof glass booth specially designed for his trial in Jerusalem on 11 April 1961, there was a universal sense of anti-climax. Was this soberly dressed, bespectacled and balding middle-aged man the same figure whose name terrified Jews in the Third Reich? Could this verbose bureaucrat be the same person who mercilessly drove hundreds of thousands of Jews to the death camps?

Hannah Arendt suggested that Eichmann was indeed an unthinking drone who robotically served a murderous totalitarian regime. In fact, she saw little of Eichmann giving testimony and her conclusions rested on partial evidence of his activities. Thanks to Bettina Stangneth's meticulously researched study, the image of Eichmann as the personification of banal evil-doing will no longer stand up.

Stangneth begins with a careful review of Eichmann's career in the SS and the Gestapo, where he ran the office for Jewish affairs. Contrary to suggestions that he was a pen-pusher who shunned the limelight, she reveals his flair for rhetoric and his talent for self-promotion. His trip to Palestine in 1937 to investigate the potential for German-Jewish emigration was a failure, but he turned it into the basis of his reputation as the expert on Zionism.