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The Silence of Pius XII: Second Thoughts
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13292 |
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Section : |
MODERN THOUGHT
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10 / 1987 |
4,297 Words |
| Author
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Robert Herrera Robert Herrera is professor of philosophy at Seton Hall
University and author of Camps of Fire: Studies in Christian
Mysticism. |
The Holocaust is an enigma and unique novum in history. Its possibility, as Emil Fackenheim has suggested, is accepted solely because of its actuality. It is a moral and intellectual outrage generated by a world dominated by the logic of destruction. It submits the human to mutilations scarcely imaginable in better times, providing a glimpse into the demonic. As Francois Mauriac has noted, "Since the Holocaust in Europe . . . nothing in the world would be the same as before, for the world had been shaken to its very foundation."
This may seem an exaggeration. History presents us with a depressing multiplicity of examples of human cruelty on a vast scale. The present century has witnessed the slaughter of Armenians, the massacre of Ukrainians, and uncounted millions purged in the People's Republic of China. The Holocaust is not unique if only the numbers of slain are considered, no matter how impressive the toll. What does make the Holocaust unique is that the Jews were slaughtered simply for being, not for doing. Race became both an ontological category and an ideological justification determining who was to live and who was to die. As Norman Cohen indicated, though only about a third of the civilians killed by the Nazis were Jews, the Jews held a unique position among the victims:
Other people were marked out for decimation, subjugation, and enslavement . . . the Jews were marked out for extermination. They were not simply killed or worked to death; they were humiliated, hunted, and tortured with an intensity of hatred which was reserved for them alone.
The Holocaust is a Jewish phenomenon. It is, like the crucifixion to the
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