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  General Topic
Crimes of War: What the Public Should Know
Leave None to Tell the Story. Genocide in Rwanda
The Trial of Henry Kissinger
Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil
The Anatomy Of The Nuremberg Trials: A Personal Memoir
Stay the Hand of Vengeance, The Politics of War Crimes Tribunals
Unspeakable Truths, Confronting State Terror and Atrocity
Crimes Against Humanity: The Struggle for Global Justice
Torture - Does it Make us Safer? Is it Ever OK?
Into the Quick of Life
A Time for Machetes
Shake Hands with the Devil: The Failure of Humanity in Rwanda
Conspiracy to Murder - The Rwandan Genocide
Judging War Crimes and Torture
 
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Accueil / Biblio  >  General Topic  >  Eichmann in Jerusalem: A ...

Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil

Hannah Arendt

 

While living in Argentina in 1960, Nazi leader Adolf Eichmann was kidnapped and smuggled to Israel where he was put on trial for crimes against humanity. The New Yorker magazine sent Hannah Arendt to cover the trial. While covering the technical aspects of the trial, Arendt also explored the wider themes inherent in the trial, such as the nature of justice, the behavior of the Jewish leadership during the Nazi Régime, and, most controversially, the nature of Evil itself.

Far from being evil incarnate, as the prosecution painted Eichmann, Arendt maintains that he was an average man, a petty bureaucrat interested only in furthering his career, and the evil he did came from the seductive power of the totalitarian state and an unthinking adherence to the Nazi cause. Indeed, Eichmann's only defense during the trial was "I was just following orders."

Arendt's analysis of the seductive nature of evil is a disturbing one. We would like to think that anyone who would perpetrate such horror on the world is different from us, and that such atrocities are rarities in our world. But the history of groups such as the Jews, Kurds, Bosnians, and Native Americans, to name but a few, seems to suggest that such evil is all too commonplace. In revealing Eichmann as the pedestrian little man that he was, Arendt shows us that the veneer of civilization is a thin one indeed. (from Amazon.com) 

    
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