 |
 |
| AP |
| Hitler gestures during a speech in May 1937 |
|
 |

Adolf Hitler
The avatar of fascism posed the century's greatest threat to democracy and redefined the meaning of evil forever
By ELIE WIESEL
His Legacy: Why Hitler Is Not Person of the Century
Intro: Our Century ... and the Next One
21st Century: The Shape of the Future
Monday, April 13, 1998
Not being a professional historian, I take on this essay with fear and trembling. That's because, although defeated, although dead, this man is frightening.
What was the secret of his power over his listeners? His demagogic appeal to immoderation, to excess and to simplifying hate? They spoke of his intuitive powers and his "luck" (he escaped several attempts on his life).
Adolf Hitler or the incarnation of absolute evil; this is how future generations will remember the all-powerful Fuehrer of the criminal Third Reich. Compared with him, his peers Mussolini and Franco were novices. Under his hypnotic gaze, humanity crossed a threshold from which one could see the abyss.
At the same time that he terrorized his adversaries, he knew how to please, impress and charm the very interlocutors from whom he wanted support. Diplomats and journalists insist as much on his charm as they do on his temper tantrums. The savior admired by his own as he dragged them into his madness, the Satan and exterminating angel feared and hated by all others, Hitler led his people to a shameful defeat without precedent. That his political and strategic ambitions have created a dividing line in the history of this turbulent and tormented century is undeniable: there is a before and an after. By the breadth of his crimes, which have attained a quasi-ontological dimension, he surpasses all his predecessors: as a result of Hitler, man is defined by what makes him inhuman. With Hitler at the head of a gigantic laboratory, life itself seems to have changed.
1 | 2 | 3 | 4
Next > >




|