Banality of Evil, Hana Arent
Banality of Evil, Hana Arent
Leibovici, Martine
Saturday 3 November 2007
In the spring of 1961, The New Yorker sent Hannah Arendt to Jerusalem to report on the trial of Adolf Eichmann. The desk of IV-B-4 in the R.S.H.A, to which Eichmann had been appointed in March 1941, had the task of regulating Jewish affairs and evacuations. Until July 1944 it played a central role in organizing the deportation of European Jews to the killing centers. Eichmann was convicted on fifteen charges, among which were crimes against the Jewish people, crimes against humanity and crimes of war. After the trial which lasted from April to December 1961, Eichmann was sentenced to death. Israels Supreme Court confirmed the judgment, and Eichmann was hanged on May 31,1962. Arendts report on the trial appeared in The New Yorker as a series of articles in 1963. From these articles she later published a book entitled Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil.
The abyss between the banality of the evils doer and the horror of the genocide
Arendts term, the expression banality of evil, does not refer to a theory or a doctrine, but fits a phenomenon which stared one in the face at the trial (Arendt, 1992: 287), the experience of an abyss : a lack of common measure between the gigantic scale on which the crimes (the evil) were committed and the insignificance (the banality) of the persons who were among those most responsible. Confronted with Eichmann in the flesh, Arendt felt it impossible to ascribe the phenomenon she observed to any particularity of wickedness, pathology, or ideological conviction of the doer. (Arendt, 1971: 417). As a concept created through contact with a specific situation the banality of evil neither referred to Shoah nor Nazisms evil as a whole. The banality did not concern all of the agents carrying out orders [ 1], but specifically the evil that was committed by Eichmann. His case was all the more exemplary because he had not been simply a subordinate. Rather, his part was decisive in implementing the crimes. Arendt neither doubted Eichmanns guilt, nor did she doubt that he deserved the death sentence. In The Origins of Totalitarianism and when dealing with the concentration camps, Arendt qualified the evil that was committed as radical evil, borrowing an expression from Immanuel Kant. Confronted with Eichmann during the trial however, she changed her mind [2]. In this case, one of the aims of employing the word banality was to break with traditional and deceitful representations of evil as exceptional, profound and demonic. Banality refers to Eichmann as a character: his way of speaking, his use of clichs and stock phrases applicable to any situation and supported by the Amtsprache (officialese), which he still admitted in 1961 was the only language he knew. Secondly, his motives were also banal: ordinary, trite and intrinsically non-criminal. That is, he was ready to do anything to advance in the Nazi bureaucratic grades. One of the most astonishing things about him was that anti-Semitism was not his foremost motive. Like Harry Mulish, Arendt systematically chose to believe Eichmann when he claimed not to harbor ill feelings against his victims. (Arendt, 1992:30) [ 3] Nonetheless, a triteness of motive did not inhibit his fearsome efficiency, insomuch as the murder of the Jews called for planning and the carrying out of the whole administration, state and party. In other words, it demanded officials experienced in tasks at which Eichmann himself excelled. The other side of banality refers to the activities that produced such evil. These activities were not murderous in themselves. They were comprised of office work such as organizing transport, deciding how many Jews should be deported and to where and negotiating arrangements with the countless partners involved in the final solution. Eichmann knew perfectly well the train destinations and understood that the Jews were to be killed, and how they were to be killed. Yet, the enigma Arendt wants to emphasize was that he [Eichmann] merely (&) never realized what he was doing. (Arendt, 1992 : 287. Arendts italics). Namely, he did not connect his activities to their eventual consequences. Arendt qualifies such a lack of imagination, pity and the inability to adopt somebody elses viewpoint as a curious, quite authentic inability to think (Arendt, 1971: 41), as if he perceived reality through a screen. Moreover, when Eichmann considered his activities, he saw them as irreproachable; all the more so since he had
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while carrying out his orders, he obeyed the law. Still, to obey the law in a totalitarian regime has a different meaning than in a non-totalitarian framework. If it is true that evils modes of performing are of the same kind as bureaucratic and technological devices, those devices do not become criminal unless they are articulated as a perversion of the laws meaning. In the Nazi case, the law is the law of nature, a law of movement immanent to society and expected to produce a new and purified mankind through the elimination of impure parts. The Fuhrers will was the only interpreter of that law, and it was supposed to be the principle directly inspiring the agents activities. The law was unwritten, and all persons were expected to identify their own will within the principle of this law, to understand it in veiled terms and through acting to become the laws perfect incarnation. An incarnation of the law even if the laws content was a total reversion of usual moral codes: the law of Hitlers land demanded that the voice of conscience tell everybody Thou shall kill although the organizers of the massacre knew full well that murder was against the normal desires and inclinations of most people. (Arendt, 1979: 150) According to Arendt, one has to remember the above facts to understand Eichmanns particularly zealous attitude, grounded upon an oath directly binding the SS to Hitler. In short, thinking was superfluous. And the lesson to learn in Jerusalem was that such thoughtlessness can wreak more havoc than all the evil instincts taken together. (Arendt, 1992: 288)
Bibliography
Arendt, Hannah, Between Friends. The Correspondence of Hannah Arendt and Mary McCarthy, 1949-1975, Harcourt Brace &Company, 1995 ___Eichmann in Jerusalem. A report on the banality of evil (1963), Penguin Books, 1992 ___Introduction to Bernd Neumann, Auschwitz, New York 1966 ___The Jew as pariah, ed. by Ron Feldman, New York, Grove Press, 1978 ___The Origins of Totalitarianism. Totalitarianism, Harcourt Brace Jovanovitch, 1979 ___Personal Responsibility Under Dictatorship , The Listener, August 6, 1964: 185-87 ___Thinking and Moral Considerations, Social Research, 38, 1971: 417-46 Barnow, Dagmar, The secularity of evil: Hannah Arendt and the Eichmann controversy, Modern Judaism 3 (1983): 75-94 Baumann, Zygmunt, Modernity and the Holocaust, Ithaca, Cornell University Press, 1989 Bergen, Bernard J., The Banality of Evil: Hannah Arendt and The Final Solution, Lanham, Boulder, New York: Rowman & Littlefield, 1998 Bernstein, Richard, Did Hannah Arendt change her mind? From radical evil to the banality of evil, in Hannah Arendt. Twenty years later, Jerome Kohn and Larry May ed., Cambridge, MA/MIT University Press, 1996, 127-146 Rony Brauman, Eyal Sivan, Eloge de la dsobissance. A propos d Un spcialiste Adolf Eichmann, Paris,Editions Le Pommier, 1999 Chalier, Catherine, Radicalit et banalit du mal, Politique et pense. Colloque Hannah Arendt, ed. M. Abensour et alii, Paris, Payot, 1996: 265-285 Ciaramelli, Fabio, Du mal radical la banalit du mal. Remarques sur Kant et Arendt, Revue philosophique de Louvain, 93, 1995
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Goldhagen, Daniel Jonah, Hitlers Willing Executioners. Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust, New York, Vintage Books, 1997 Kateb, George, Hannah Arendt: Politics, Conscience, Evil, Totowa, N.J.: Rawman and Allanheld, 1984 Kohn, Jerome, Evil and Plurality: Hannah Arendts Way to The Life of the Mind, in Hannah Arendt. Twenty years later, op.cit., 1996 : 147-178 Krummacher, F.A, ed., Die Kontroverse. Hannah Arendt, Eichmann und die Juden, Frankfurt, Nymphenburger Verlagshandlung, 1963 Lozowick, Yaacov, Malicious clerks in Hannah Arendt in Jerusalem, Stephen Aschheim ed., University of California Press, 2001: 214-223 ___Hitler's Bureaucrats:The Nazi Security Police and the Banality of Evil, London-New York, Continuum, 2002 Muhlmann, Graldine, Le comportement des agents de la solution finale . Hannah Arendt face ses contradicteurs , in Hannah Arendt. Penseur de la Shoah, 1943-1963, La Revue du Centre de Documentation Juive Contemporaine, n164, septembre 1998 : 25-52 Mulisch, Harry, De zaak 40/61. Een reportage, Amsterdam, De Bezige Bij, 1966 ; Strafsache 40/61. Eine Reportage ber den Eichmann-Proze, Berlin, Aufbau 1995 Ophir, Adi, Between Eichmann and Kant. Thinking on evil after Arendt, History and memory, vol. 8, n2, 1996 Revault dAllones, Myriam, Ce que lhomme fait lhomme. Essai sur le mal politique, Paris, Seuil 1995 Ring, Jennifer, The Political Consequences of Thinking: Gender and Judaism in the Work of Hannah Arendt, Albany: SUNY Press, 1997 Smith, Gary, ed., Hannah Arendt revisited: "Eichmann in Jerusalem" und die Folgen, Frankfurt a/Main, Suhrkamp, 2000 Villa, Dana, Politics, Philosophy, Terror. Essays on the thought of Hannah Arendt, Princeton University Press, 1999, Young-Bruehl, Elizabeth, Hannah Arendt: For the love of the world, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1982
[1] Individuals acting with an unbelievable sadistic brutality also took part in the slaughters, especially in concentration camps. See Arendts comments about the Frankfurt trial. (Arendt, 1966) [2] See Gerschom Scholem-Hannah Arendt, An exchange of letters in Arendt, 1978: 250-251. For an analysis of this modification, see Bernstein (1996), Ophir (1996). See also Revault dAllones, (1995: 21-72), Ciaramelli, (1995), Chalier (1996). [3] For a recent calling into question of Arendts approach, specially about Eichmanns and his staffs anti-Semitism, see Lozowick (2001, 2002).
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[4] About the Eichmanns controversy in general, see Krumacher (1963), Young-Bruehl (1982), Barnow (1983), Ring (1997). [5] On Eichmanns conscience, see Kohn (1996).
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