Introduction
In the decades that followed World War Two and the unspeakable horrors of The Holocaust, much study has been conducted to both learn the details of all the interlocking forces that enabled these atrocities. Scholars and historians today have much data about how the Germans engaged in and perpetuated The Holocaust. There is a robust comprehension about the motivating factors of how the Holocaust was carried out. There isn’t a tremendous amount of insight regarding the feelings and thoughts of those who perpetuated such horrific evils. Chris Browning’s book, Ordinary Men Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland, sheds light onto one of the darker corners of The Holocaust: how the ordinary people, the middle-class Germans whose names have been forgotten by history, were able to gather up millions of Jews and systematically kill them—with bullets, stuffing them in cattle cars destined for gas chambers. Browning’s book helps makes sense of the senseless. Browning’s entire book helps to shed light on the psychological transformation that had to occur in many German men in order to turn them into ruthless killers. This book helps the reader understand how such ordinary men could be capable of such tremendous evil, while making nuanced suggestions about the human capacity for evil.
Most people have heard the expression, “you can get used to anything.” While this might not be an absolute in all cases and for all people, repetition and indoctrination definitely had an impact on Reserve Police Battalion 101 in getting them used to the killing process. Once the extermination camps were developed, the bulk of the murders were to occur there, as a means of streamlining the final solution. “When the time came to kill came again the policemen did not ‘go crazy.’ Instead, the became increasingly efficient and calloused executioners” (Browning, 1992, 77). Calloused and efficient is the best type of executioner to have. When Browning compares the first killing (the one at Jozefow) that these men had to carry out with the second killing (the one at Lomazy), there was remarkably less drama with the men of this regiment in carrying out these gruesome orders. The murders at Lomazy were more depersonalized, in order to exert a smaller psychological toll on the men. They also had not been given a choice to “step out” if they didn’t feel up to it. “Everyone...
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