Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
August 1957 | Volume 8, Issue 5
Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
August 1957 | Volume 8, Issue 5
The story is not yet complete. Mr. Reitlinger indicates where the historian’s responsibility lies, and Dr. Kersten presents a slice of the miserable material with which the historian is obliged to work. It remains to take a look at the way in which history wrongly written and basely interpreted can twist the life of a whole nation out of shape.
We stick with the boys in the jackboots—the blackshirts. The exhibit now is a work called Gestapo: Instrument of Tyranny , by Edward Crankshaw, which rounds out the picture presented by the two previous books and which is yet another chapter in the strange tale of bits and pieces which the historian has to bear in mind. Mr. Crankshaw is concerned, basically, with the hideous things that can happen to a people who have perverted history, who know everything about the past except what it really means, who can study history devoutly without ever once realizing that it is really the story of actual, flesh-and-blood human beings.
This book is in a way a blend of the other two. It picks up one of the subsections of the SS—the world-dreaded Gestapo—for intimate examination, and it also concerns itself directly with Himmler himself; and its impact is perhaps the greatest of the three because it makes explicit some of the things that come out of the other two books only as overtones.
There is no real disagreement here. Mr. Crankshaw comes to very much Mr. Reitlinger’s conclusion, and he states it explicitly:
“… the Gestapo did not function as a dark and sinister tyranny, compact and aloof, ruling first Germany, then most of Europe, alone, in secrecy, and unobserved; but, once absolute power had been achieved, merged itself inextricably with the general mood of Germany as a whole, so that in occupied Europe, especially in the East, it is hard to separate the cruelties of the Gestapo and the S.D. from the cruelties of the Wehrmacht. …”
All of which is true enough. Mr. Crankshaw traces the rise of the Gestapo and shows what Himmler had to do with it (and it should be noted that Himmler is not quite the grandfatherly humbler which Dr. Kersten sometimes makes him appear; he was a canny operator who knew at all times precisely what he was up to) and he presents a record which, because it is so compact and so readable, is perhaps the most damning indictment yet put on paper. But he sounds in addition an eloquent note of warning: “… we are clearly going about things the wrong way if we allow ourselves to start with the assumption that only Germans could behave in the manner recorded in these pages.”
Gestapo: Instrument of Tyranny, by Edward Crankshaw. The Viking Press. 275 pp. $3.75.
The Germans had studied history; no people ever studied it more intensively. Yet what they finally got out