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NYRB
December 5,
2013
Issue
The Defense
of a Jewish Collaborator
Mark Lilla
The Last of
the Unjust
a film
directed by Claude Lanzmann
Shown at the
New York Film Festival in September; general release in February 2014
Terezin: Il
ghetto-modello di Eichmann [Theresienstadt: Eichmann’s Model Ghetto]
by Benjamin
Murmelstein
Brescia: La
Scuola, 246 pp., €15.50
“Der Letzte
der Ungerechten”: Der “Judenälteste” Benjamin Murmelstein in Filmen
1942–1975
[“The Last of the Unjust”: The “Jewish Head Elder” Benjamin Murmelstein
in
Films 1942–1975]
edited by
Ronny Loewy and Katharina Rauschenberger
Frankfurt:
Campus, 201 pp., €24.90
lilla_1-120513.jpg
Cohen Media Group
Claude
Lanzmann and Benjamin Murmelstein, Rome, 1975; from Lanzmann’s film The
Last of
the Unjust
1.
A
half-century has passed since Hannah Arendt’s Eichmann in Jerusalem was
first
published. Yet somehow we can’t escape it. Even today historians of the
Final
Solution do battle with her misguided thesis that Adolf Eichmann, the
cold-blooded engineer of the Nazi killing machine, was himself but a
cog in it,
a self-deceived simpleton who made evil seem banal.1 And her cavalier
criticism
of Jewish leaders who found themselves forced to cooperate with the
Nazis in
the expropriation, expulsion, internment, and even extermination of
their own
people still provokes outrage and rebuttals. As sometimes happens in
the world
of ideas, it is those who think least of Eichmann in Jerusalem who keep
it
alive by dragging its author out for what is by now ritual trial and
conviction. This is how the book survives.
The specter
of Hannah Arendt haunts every film Claude Lanzmann has made, beginning
with his
nine-and-a-half-hour epic Shoah, released in 1985. Arendt believed that
the
Nazi experience could be understood, and had to be, since only through
understanding can “we come to terms with, reconcile ourselves to
reality, that
is, try to be at home in the world.” This would mean reconciling
ourselves, in
some sense, even to the Holocaust. “To the extent that the rise of
totalitarian
governments is the central event in our world,” she once wrote, “to
understand
totalitarianism is not to condone anything, but to reconcile ourselves
to a
world in which these things are possible at all.”
Lanzmann
refuses to understand the Holocaust, let alone make peace with the
world that
made it possible. A short essay only three paragraphs long is his most
powerful
retort to Arendt:
All one has to do, perhaps, is pose the
question simply, and ask, “Why were the Jews killed?” This shows its
obscenity.
There is an absolute obscenity in the project of understanding. Not
understanding was my iron law during all the years of preparing and
directing
Shoah: I held onto this refusal as the only ethical and workable
attitude
possible…. “Hier ist kein Warum”: this, Primo Levi tells us, was the
law at
Auschwitz that an SS guard taught him on arriving at the camp: “Here
there is
no why.”
What
disturbs Lanzmann about standard historical treatments of the Final
Solution is
that, in trying to comprehend its chronological development, they
unwittingly
make it look inevitable, given the “factors” involved. Documentaries
that begin
with Nazis burning books and end two hours later with emaciated
prisoners
staring out from behind barbed wire leave the impression that
everything moved
like clockwork. But, he has written, “the six million murdered Jews did
not die
right on time, and that is why any work that wants to render justice to
the
Holocaust today must make breaking chronology its first principle.”
Lanzmann’s
achronological approach in Shoah may be the secret of its power. We
hear
victims, killers, and bystanders speaking as if in a vacuum, and
experience
their shocking words without preparation or anticipation of what is to
come.
They are simply present. For “the worst crime, moral and artistic, that
can be
committed when making a work dedicated to the Holocaust is to consider
it as
past.”
It is more
than a little surprising, then, to watch Lanzmann’s stunning new movie,
The
Last of the Unjust, and realize that it breaks all these rules. Its
genesis was
complex. Lanzmann worked for over a decade on Shoah and during that
period
collected hundreds of hours of recorded material that could not
possibly be fit
into the film or that struck a discordant note. Several strong
interviews from
that material were left out and over the past fifteen years he has been
releasing
them as independent films. The Last of the Unjust, the most recent, is
based on
a series of interviews he did in 1975 with Benjamin Murmelstein, the
controversial head of the Judenrat (council of Jewish elders) who dealt
with
Nazi officials in the Theresienstadt concentration camp, and the only
such
figure to have survived the war.
It is also a
brief for his defense. Like the ludicrous Jewish elder of the Łódź
ghetto Chaim
Rumkowski, Murmelstein was widely despised by survivors of
Theresienstadt, who
considered him a traitor, his guilt sealed by the fact of his survival.
Gershom
Scholem spoke for many when he wrote in a letter to Hannah Arendt that,
“as all
the prisoners of the Lager I’ve spoken with confirm, the Viennese Rabbi
Murmelstein of Theresienstadt deserves to be hanged by the Jews.”2 But
who
really knew anything about him? Was he even alive? Lanzmann finally
hunted
Murmelstein down in Rome, where he had been living in obscurity since
the war,
and arranged for an interview that ended up lasting a week. And during
that
time Lanzmann was converted. A text that scrolls down the screen as the
movie
opens informs us that “during the week I spent with him, I grew to love
him. He
does not lie.”
If Shoah can
be viewed as a cinematic response to Arendt’s “banality of evil”
thesis,
Lanzmann’s new film is a retort to her unflattering portrait of the
Jewish
leaders. It is a straightforward, chronological documentary that moves
from
Murmelstein’s work with Austrian Jews after the Anschluss to the
history of Theresienstadt,
then moves to the two years Murmelstein spent in the camp, the last as
head
elder (Judenältester). Now, it seems, Lanzmann wants very much for us
to
understand the Holocaust, through Murmelstein’s story. This is a
striking
turnabout for the filmmaker and makes for a very strong documentary, if
not an
entirely satisfying one.
2.
Benjamin
Murmelstein was born into an Orthodox Jewish family in the Galician
city of
Lemberg (Lviv) in 1905 and moved to Vienna as a young man to pursue his
religious studies, eventually becoming rabbi of a small synagogue
there. In
1935, as Hitler’s rise stoked Austrian anti-Semitism, Murmelstein gave
a speech
in Vienna honoring what he called the “unknown Jewish soldiers” of
World War
I—that is, the soldiers whose names had been removed from German war
memorials
on Goebbels’s orders. This brought him to the attention of the
Israelitische
Kultusgemeinde (IKG), the Viennese Jewish community organization, which
asked
him to write reports for them after the Anschluss. It was in this
capacity that
he first encountered Eichmann, who had been put in charge of organizing
the
emigration and expropriation of the Jews, and received Murmelstein’s
reports.
Between 1938
and 1943 Murmelstein became increasingly responsible for arranging
logistics
with Eichmann as Nazi policy evolved from forced emigration to forced
ghettoization and internment. He cajoled and argued with officials to
help Jews
obtain exit visas and in 1939 even traveled to London to beg for
assistance. By
1941, when the Nazis began sealing the borders, he and the IKG had
helped over
125,000 Jews flee Austria. In 1943, though, Murmelstein was himself
deported to
the Theresienstadt ghetto along with many remaining “prominent Jews” in
Vienna.
Theresienstadt
was unique in the Nazi camp system and wore nearly as many masks as its
creator
Eichmann. Set up in 1941 within an eighteenth-century fortress in
Czechoslovakia, it was publicized in Germany and abroad as a “model
ghetto” for
elderly and prominent Jews and the first step toward establishing a
separate
Jewish homeland in Europe. In fact it almost immediately became a
transit camp
for Auschwitz-Birkenau, whose purpose was then known to few. Even more
perversely, the ghetto was sold to fearful Jews as a spa town whose
rooms with
mountain views could be booked if they handed their wealth over to
Eichmann,
which many of them did. They were then sent off in second-class train
compartments well stocked with food and medicine, only to disembark at
the
other end and be attacked by guards and dogs.
When
Murmelstein arrived in Theresienstadt he was appointed almost
immediately to
the Judenrat. Its leader at the time was Jakob Edelstein of Prague, who
after a
year was deported to Auschwitz and murdered, after first being forced
to watch
his wife and son being shot. When his successor, Paul Eppstein of
Berlin, was
summarily executed in the fortress the following year, the office of
elder fell
to Murmelstein, who held it until the camp was liberated in May 1945.
In the camp,
Murmelstein was feared and distrusted, given his constant contact with
the
Nazis and efficiency in carrying out their orders. Murmelstein was,
apparently,
an extraordinarily strict man who applied the Nazis’ regulations with
what
seemed appalling inflexibility and heartlessness. He established a
seventy-hour
work week to help the camp commander reach his production quotas,
despite the
fact that the population was slowly starving. (It did not help that he
was a
naturally fat man who also controlled the food supplies.) And when the
largest
deportations to Auschwitz began in late 1944, he refused to receive
requests
for exemptions unless the petitioner was willing to take his friend’s
place on
the train.
Even more
controversially, Murmelstein helped the Nazis “beautify” the ghetto and
turn it
into a movie set for propaganda films made in 1942 and 1944. (This
strange
episode and Murmelstein’s role in it are examined thoroughly in Ronny
Loewy and
Katarina Rauschenberger’s book, which also helpfully chronicles his
life.)
Buildings were painted, flowers were planted, and the sick and crippled
were
deported so as not to ruin the montage. Lanzmann splices in clips from
these
films that show inmates working happily, enjoying soccer games, playing
chess,
and listening to lectures, with klezmer music on the soundtrack. In one
heartbreaking scene we see jovial children playing games and munching
happily
on snacks they no doubt would never see again. It is hard to know what
effect
if any these films had on public opinion, but the renovation of the
ghetto did
much to fool officials from the International Red Cross when they
inspected it
in 1944 and reported nothing out of the ordinary.
Murmelstein’s
fall was quick and hard. After the camp was liberated by the Russians
he was
arrested by the Czech government and spent eighteen months in prison
while a
case was built against him as a collaborator. In the end, prosecutors
abandoned
it and Murmelstein was allowed to emigrate to Italy, where he spent the
rest of
his life in relative anonymity with his wife and son in Rome, working
as a
salesman and occasionally for the Vatican (in what capacity is unclear).
But well
before his arrival, rumors about him reached the Roman Jewish community
organization, which refused to register him. When Murmelstein died in
1989 his
son was not allowed to inter him next to his wife; he was buried
instead at the
very edge of the Jewish cemetery. His son maintains that Jewish
community
leaders also forbade him to say Kaddish, the Jewish prayer for the
dead, in
Rome’s main synagogue. This despite the fact—or because of it—that he
was the
only Judenältester to survive the war.
December 5,
2013
Issue
The Defense
of a Jewish Collaborator
Mark Lilla
lilla_2-120513.jpg
bpk/Art Resource
A concert in
the ‘community house’ at the Theresienstadt concentration camp, August
1944;
still from the Nazi propaganda film The Führer Gives a City to the Jews
3.
The Last of
the Unjust begins badly. Rather than plunge us right into the
Murmelstein
story, Lanzmann weirdly keeps the camera focused on himself for the
first
half-hour. We see him staring silently and significantly at stations
where the
transport trains passed, pausing at spots where executions were carried
out,
and reading from texts on the history of Theresienstadt and from camp
memoirs.
Similar blunt intrusions punctuate the film. At different points we are
shown
drawings by ghetto artists, a cantor singing in a rebuilt synagogue,
the
gravestones in Prague’s Jewish cemetery, and, apropos of nothing, a
long shot
from a car as it approaches the walls of Jerusalem. Lanzmann generally
avoided
such techniques in Shoah and has criticized other filmmakers for
applying
schmaltz to the Holocaust, but here he nearly slips into it himself.
Then
Murmelstein begins to talk and the tenor of the film changes.
The first
image of him will jar anyone who thinks he knows Murmelstein’s story.
Sitting
on a terrace overlooking Rome on a splendid day he looks less like a
monster
than an aging cherubic uncle from the old country, sporting tweeds and
tinted
glasses and speaking rapid-fire German with an Eastern European accent
and
slight lisp. Lanzmann seems uncomfortable around him, while Murmelstein
is
serene and charming, dropping well-worn anecdotes and bons mots, and
smiling
ironically from time to time. He is well prepared for the director’s
questions,
which at first are mundane. But as the interview gathers steam and the
questions
become more precise and challenging, Murmelstein responds with equal
and
astonishing precision, causing Lanzmann to remark on his prodigious
memory.
From that point on their relation is fixed. Murmelstein talks at length
while
Lanzmann interrupts occasionally to ask for clarification or shift the
conversation in a slightly different direction. This, unlike Shoah, is
a
one-man show.
What few
viewers will know is that many of Murmelstein’s detail-filled
monologues are
drawn, sometimes verbatim, from a book he published in 1961 about his
camp
experiences, Terezin: Il ghetto-modello di Eichmann (Theresienstadt:
Eichmann’s
Model Ghetto), which has just been reissued to coincide with the film’s
premiere. Murmelstein must have had high hopes for the book but it
received
little attention at the time and did nothing to rescue his reputation.
When he
learned of Eichmann’s kidnapping and planned trial he even sent a copy
to
prosecutors in Jerusalem, along with a letter giving his contact
information
and stating his willingness to testify. He never received a response.3
Terezin is
largely a straightforward history of the camp and Murmelstein’s
imprisonment.
He tends to get lost in the details, but every so often there are
extraordinarily vivid and moving passages that express a sensitivity
and moral
outrage that Murmelstein rarely displays in the film. Here are his
impressions
on the day he arrived in the ghetto:
In one corner tired workers, in another
mothers with babies in their arms. Next to a broken table, work is
being
prepared for tomorrow; technicians discuss the quantity of water
available and
the diameter of the tubes. In the corridor the sick lie in agony
without hope,
in the kitchen girls and grown women give themselves up for a
cigarette, and, under
the arcade, young people read poetry.
Soon after
arrival Murmelstein was put in charge of managing health services, such
as they
were, and describes the hopelessness of his task:
In this atmosphere even the bacteria are
not allowed to develop freely. Epidemics run a strange course because
the
ghetto’s residents, surrounded by all the infections possible and
imaginable,
finally acquire a certain immunity. Everyone becomes his own cultivator
and
inhibitor of bacteria.
In another
passage he gives an acute analysis of Eichmann’s strategy and how it
kept the
Jews at each others’ throats rather than the guards’:
This is how Eichmann’s experiment developed
and was prepared according to a detailed recipe: throw together Jews
from
different places and with different languages, add a dash of those who
were
never really Jewish, and bring the whole thing to a boil over a slow
flame;
strain, making some pass through every once in a while. The rest end up
in the
oven.
Terezin also
describes what Primo Levi called the “gray zone” of concentration camp
life
that Lanzmann avoids. Up to 50,000 prisoners from very different
backgrounds
were forced to struggle for survival in a fort that had been built for
seven
thousand troops, provoking appalling behavior in some and bringing out
strange
rivalries and even snobbery in others. In a paragraph worthy of Levi,
Murmelstein describes a sick inmate who refused care from an Eastern
European
doctor who visited her. “Excuse me,” she said, “but I’m a German woman
who cannot
be examined by a Jewish doctor.” He overhears an argument:
“Theresienstadt was
given by the Führer to us, the Germans; a Polish ghetto suffices for
the Jews.”
He tells the stories of “prominent” inmates who were under the illusion
that
their social position would protect them from Nazi racial laws. There
is the
judge who investigated the Reichstag fire in 1933, as the Nazis
demanded, but
was sent to the camps when his impure blood was discovered. And there
is the
Jewish ex-wife of a German noble who divorced her to save his family’s
honor—then, to ease his conscience, arranged her transfer to the model
ghetto
Theresienstadt with “a privileged status.”
There are no
such humanizing touches in Lanzmann’s film. Murmelstein is there to
defend
himself and defend himself he does. He wants to convince his
interviewer and
the viewer that all his actions, including the most troubling, were
intended to
beat the Nazis at their own game. If Eichmann’s strategy was to create
in
Theresienstadt a model ghetto that would distract world attention from
the mass
murders committed elsewhere, Murmelstein’s was to maintain that
illusion so the
camp and its inmates could not be destroyed without setting off an
alarm.
If one
accepts the soundness of this strategy, his actions appear in a
different
light. Rules had to be strictly, even brutally enforced to ensure that
the
Nazis did not transform the ghetto into an extermination camp. To keep
the
place from succumbing to a typhus epidemic he secretly had all the
inmates
forcibly vaccinated, denying food to those who refused, so the place
appeared
healthy. The seventy-hour work week was essential because, at the time
he
instituted it, the Nazis were worried more about shortages than about
world
opinion, and Murmelstein wanted the ghetto to appear economically
indispensible. “Survival through work,” he says, was his version of the
Nazi
camp motto “Freedom through work.”
He offers
the same defense of his efforts to beautify the ghetto for the
propaganda
films. Besides keeping it in the public eye, the beautification program
also
allowed him to actually improve conditions in the camp: clean the
streets,
build more accommodations, especially for the elderly, and put windows
into
windowless buildings. Every one of these actions bought the camp a
little more
time.
They may
have done so. What’s fascinating, though, is to witness a man incapable
of
recognizing the real cost of his strategy, especially in the wider
Lager
system. Keeping his camp running efficiently and in the public eye
saved it as
an institution, but also meant that victims could be processed more
efficiently
on their way to Auschwitz-Birkenau and other places east. Murmelstein,
like
everyone in the camp, did not learn about Auschwitz until 1944, but no
one was
ignorant of the fact that transport nach Osten meant unspeakable
suffering and
nearly certain death. At times, he speaks as if preserving the ghetto
was an
end in itself, never considering, as Hannah Arendt had suggested, that
less
efficiency might have meant fewer deaths overall. In the judgment of
Holocaust
historian Saul Friedländer, “objectively the Judenrat was probably an
instrument in the destruction of European Jewry.” “But,” he added,
“subjectively the actors were not aware of this function.” Arendt never
considered
that a healthy capacity for self-delusion may have been necessary for
survival
in the camps, and that Jewish elders especially would have needed it to
continue helping others and not just themselves.
Still, there
are moments, when Murmelstein rattles off statistics or recounts the
precise
dates of meetings or corrects some detail in Lanzmann’s questions, that
he
sounds eerily like the blinkered figure Eichmann pretended to be in
Jerusalem,
oblivious to the larger drama he was a part of. In the last half-hour
of the
film Lanzmann finally loses patience with him. After asking Murmelstein
what
happened to children born in the camp, and being told matter-of-factly
that all
those born before October 1944 were killed, Lanzmann criticizes his
coolness:
Listening to you speak about
Theresienstadt, one does not have the impression that Theresienstadt
was a
place of disaster, that the people were suffering, that thousands
perished and
that other thousands were deported to Auschwitz…. I have the feeling
that you
did not have any human feelings.
Murmelstein
snaps back:
Imagine a surgeon who cannot stand blood,
who is so good-hearted that he starts crying during an operation. Can
you
imagine that? He would kill the patient. He is hard-hearted, yes, in
order to
save the patient.
In the
transcripts of his original footage Lanzmann is even rougher on
Murmelstein,
asking him at one point, “You have a fascist temperament, right?”4 But
as the
interview wears on, it’s clear that Lanzmann is coming to believe and
even
admire him. It’s not hard to. What gives Murmelstein’s testimony the
ring of
truth is not his mastery of detail or even self-justifications. It is
his
ability to evoke, often with striking metaphors, what it was like to be
in his
position, without the “luxury,” as he puts, of being a gentleman. All
the
Judenälteste were “between hammer and anvil,” unable to satisfy either
Nazis or
Jews and earning the contempt of both. He compares himself to Sancho
Panza, the
practical man who got things done while the Don Quixotes of the camps
perished
ineffectively.
He also
likens himself to Scheherezade, keeping Theresienstadt alive by telling
stories
to both Nazis and Jews. When asked about the charge that he was just a
marionette, he rejects it—then, on reflection, accepts it:
The Jewish elder was stuck in the position
of being a marionette, a ridiculous marionette. But this marionette had
to act
in such a way that he could influence matters from his laughable
position.
Nobody could understand that, nobody was supposed to understand that
otherwise
it would have cost him his head…. Usually marionettes are pulled by
wires, but
in this case the marionette had to pull his own wires. This was the
hard part
of being a Jewish elder.
Murmelstein
states plainly that he was no hero, just a “tightrope walker.” (He also
refuses
to call the prisoners “heroes,” preferring the term “martyrs.”) When
asked
whether he enjoyed having power, he freely admits it. “I am only
human…. Who is
displeased with power? By which I mean the possibility of accomplishing
something, that is a real satisfaction.” He also admits to a certain
Abenteuerlust, a “thirst for adventure” that kept him at his post in
both
Vienna and in Theresienstadt. Murmelstein could have tried to escape
during his
London trip in 1939, and later that year was even offered a pass to
Palestine
for himself and his family, which he gave instead to a former student.
That, in
retrospect, was a mistake, and at one point he speaks wistfully of the
career
he might have made for himself as a rabbi or professor in America.
Instead he
became, as he calls himself, “the last of the unjust.”5
4.
By the
film’s end Lanzmann appears completely won over. He accepts
Murmelstein’s
friendship and praises his fortitude in the interviews. “Mais vous êtes
un
tigre!” He then asks what Murmelstein thinks about Israelis’ hostility
to him,
mentioning Scholem’s letter to Hannah Arendt. Murmelstein praises
Scholem
somewhat ironically as a great scholar at the level of Sigmund Freud,
then wonders
why he didn’t use the Murmelstein case as an occasion to do some
historical
research. Besides, cracking a smile, isn’t it strange that Scholem
opposed the
execution of Eichmann but wants Murmelstein the Jew dead? “The Herr is
a bit
capricious with hanging, don’t you think?”
This
conversation, the movie’s final scene, was filmed before the Arch of
Titus, not
far from the Roman Forum, at Murmelstein’s request. It is a highly
symbolic
place. The arch was built by the Emperor Domitian in the first century
to
commemorate the victories of his brother Titus, who reconquered
Jerusalem in 70
CE. A sculptured panel shows this conquest and Roman soldiers carrying
off an
enormous menorah. One of Titus’s aides was the Jewish historian Flavius
Josephus, who as a young man fought against the Romans and, when
trapped by
them, took part in a collective suicide pact that he alone survived. He
later
defected to the Roman side and tried unsuccessfully to negotiate a
Jewish
surrender to save Jerusalem and its temple from destruction, and for
this was,
and by some still is, considered a traitor and pariah. Murmelstein was
always
fascinated by Josephus and in 1938, that fateful year, published an
anthology
of his writings, with an introduction that concludes, “His divided and
ambiguous
nature turned him into a symbol of the Jewish tragedy.” A sentence that
reads
like an epitaph for Murmelstein himself.
As the film
fades into the credits we see Lanzmann walking up a cobblestone street
toward
the arch, his arm draped over Murmelstein’s shoulder, a gesture that
seems to
say, once again, “he does not lie.” Perhaps not. But The Last of the
Unjust
cannot be the whole truth about this brave, slippery, wise, half-blind
man.
Had Lanzmann
stuck to the more jumbled, associative style of Shoah he might have
been able
to capture cinematically the moral shadows that still shroud this
historic
figure, making a powerful film more powerful still. Instead he sticks
to the
conventional style of the documentary apologia, which delivers a clear
lesson
but does not, in the end, disturb. One cannot help feeling that an
opportunity
was missed. By blocking all the psychological exits Shoah forced us
into a
genuine experience few viewers will forget. The Last of the Unjust lets
us
escape before we reach the center of the gray zone, where we might have
encountered not only Benjamin Murmelstein but ourselves.
—This is the
second of two articles.
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