How Holocausts Happen
How Holocausts Happen: The United States in Central America
Douglas V. Porpora
Copyright Date: 1990
Published by: Temple University Press
Pages: 232
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt14btc42
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Book Info
How Holocausts Happen
Book Description:

"History repeats itself, but it never repeats itself exactly," observes Douglas Porpora in this powerful indictment of U.S. intervention in Central America. Comparing the general public's reaction to the Holocaust in Nazi Germany with American public opinion of U.S. participation in the genocidal policies of Nicaraguan counter-revolutionary forces, and the governments of Guatemala and El Salvador among others, Porpora demonstrates that moral indifference to the suffering of others was the common response. With reference to Hannah Arendt's thesis of the banality of evil, he develops the concept of a "Holocaust-like event" and examines how even a democratic society can be capable of something on the order of a Holocaust.

Unlike other accounts of the Holocaust and genocide, this book focuses on the citizenry served or ruled by genocidal governments rather than on the governments themselves. Porpora argues that moral indifference and lack of interest in critical reflection are key factors that enable Holocaust-like events to happen And he characterizes American society as being typically indifferent to the fate of other people, uninformed, and anti-intellectual.

Porpora cites numerous horrifying examples of U.S.-backed Latin American government actions against their own peasants, Indians, and dissident factions. He offers finally a theory of public moral indifference and argues that although such indifference is socially created by government, the media, churches, and other institutions, we, the public, must ultimately take responsibility for it.How Holocausts Happenis at once a scholarly examination of the nature of genocide and a stinging indictment of American society.

eISBN: 978-1-4399-0453-4
Subjects: History, Political Science
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  1. Front Matter
    Front Matter (pp. i-vi)
  2. Table of Contents
    Table of Contents (pp. vii-viii)
  3. Acknowledgments
    Acknowledgments (pp. ix-2)
  4. 1 Introduction
    1 Introduction (pp. 3-14)

    “Never Again.” That is the Jewish response to the Holocaust. It is the response of many non-Jews as well. It is also the response that motivates this book. The Holocaust refers to the extermination of over six million Jews and millions of others by the Nazi government of Germany between 1941 and 1945. Elie Wiesel has said that today the Jew must stand as a witness before humanity that the Holocaust occurred so that by that witnessing, it may never happen again.

    To vow “Never Again” in response to the Holocaust implicitly assumes that it could happen again, that the...

  5. 2 The Banality of Evil
    2 The Banality of Evil (pp. 15-38)

    The Nazi program to exterminate the Jews was an evil of monstrous proportions. Does that mean that the men who actually carried out that program were themselves monstrously evil? Clearly, to the extent that these men participated in such a crime, they behaved like monsters, but the question is whether they behaved like monsters because they were fundamentally different from normal human beings to begin with. It is very difficult for us to believe that the Nazi war criminals were ordinary human beings. We just cannot imagine ordinary human beings behaving as they did. For this reason we tend to...

  6. 3 Moral Indifference, the Rise of Hitler, and the Extermination of the Jews
    3 Moral Indifference, the Rise of Hitler, and the Extermination of the Jews (pp. 39-70)

    Popular opinion has it that Hitler was carried into power on a wave of intense anti-Semitism. The lesson we generally draw is that to prevent anything like the Holocaust from happening again, we must be on guard against anti-Semitism in particular and racism in general. This focus, however, is misguided. The real lesson of the Holocaust is that it is not necessary for us to be extremely hateful for us to give power to extremely hateful people. All we need do is overlook the evil in leaders we otherwise find appealing. That, in fact, is how Hitler came to power....

  7. 4 The Two Faces of Genocide in Central America
    4 The Two Faces of Genocide in Central America (pp. 71-118)

    There were actually two processes transpiring in Central America during the 1980s that could arguably be compared with the Holocaust. There was first of all the genocidal violence so much in the news: the government-organized murders, disappearances, torture, and even wholesale elimination of village populations. But there was also a quieter genocidal process—the process of mass hunger. Although we heard much less about this quieter and still continuing genocide, it was the root cause of the first. It was because the poor of Central America were attempting to resist the quiet genocide of mass hunger that the second, violent...

  8. 5 Has the United States Become a Party to Genocide? To a Holocaust-like Event?
    5 Has the United States Become a Party to Genocide? To a Holocaust-like Event? (pp. 119-146)

    Are the atrocities the United States has been sponsoring in Central America genocidal? Can we legitimately refer to those atrocities and to the complicity of the United States public in them as a Holocaust-like event? What is genocide? What would count as a Holocaust-like event? These are the questions we shall address in this chapter.

    The words genocide and Holocaust both originated with the reaction to the Nazis’ wholesale attempt to destroy the Jewish people during World War II. The word Holocaust, which literally means burnt offering, gained currency in the late 1950s.¹ It was coined by Jews to label...

  9. 6 How We Allowed Ourselves to Become a Party to Genocide
    6 How We Allowed Ourselves to Become a Party to Genocide (pp. 147-182)

    Why for eight years did the people of the United States allow the Reagan administration to pursue what were virtually genocidal policies in Central America? It was not because the American people by and large supported these policies; quite clearly, they did not. Public opinion polls showed over and over again that the overwhelming majority of the American people disapproved of their government’s involvement in Central America. Then, why in “the world’s greatest democracy” did this popular disapproval not bring these policies to a halt? Because, just as clearly, although the American people disapproved of what was going on, they...

  10. 7 In the Footsteps of the Righteous
    7 In the Footsteps of the Righteous (pp. 183-202)

    Yad Vashem. It is a memorial park in Jerusalem, established in 1953. Literally, it means name and place. The places are embedded in the massive, stone floor of the Hall of Remembrance located there: Treblinka, Buchenwald, Auschwitz … The names are recorded in the Hall of Names: over two million by now with more continually being added: the names of the Jewish victims of the Holocaust. Yad Vas hem is a place of remembrance. It contains a synagogue for meditation and a museum for learning. An eternal flame burns in memory of the lives lost. It is an austere and...

  11. Notes
    Notes (pp. 203-216)
  12. Index
    Index (pp. 217-224)