The Holocaust:
Many Villains, Few Heroes
by Alan M. Dershowitz
• May 2, 2016 at 3:30 pm
Seventy years ago, a group of prominent Nazis were
prosecuted for war crimes by the WWII allies in the Nuremberg trials. From
left to right: In the first row on the stand, Hermann Goering, Rudolf Hess,
Joachim von Ribbentrop, Wilhelm Keitel, Ernest Kaltenbrunner. In the second
row, Karl Doenitz, Erich Raeder, Baldur von Schirach and Fritz Sauckel.
As we commemorate the 70th anniversary of the Nuremberg
trials, at which selected Nazi leaders were placed in the dock, we must ask
some disturbing questions about those who were never tried for their
complicity in the world's worst genocide. It would have been impossible to
carry out the mass murder of so many people without the complicity of so many
governments, groups, and individuals. Perhaps there were too many guilty parties
to put them all on trial, but it is not too late to hold the guilty morally
accountable for what they did and failed to do.
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Tuesday, May 3, 2016
The Holocaust: Many Villains, Few Heroes
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