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Holocaust Education

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Title: Holocaust Education


1
Holocaust Education
  • Week 3
  • Personal Testimony

2
The Importance of Testimony
  • Thanks to a series of increasingly wide-ranging
    and rigorous studies the problem of historical,
    material, technical, bureaucratic, and legal
    circumstances in which the extermination of the
    Jews took place has been sufficiently clarified.
    Future studies may shed new light on particular
    aspects of the events that took place in the
    concentration camps, but a general framework has
    already been established.
  • The same cannot be said for the ethical and
    political significance of the extermination, or
    even for a human understanding of what happened
    there that is, for its contemporary relevance
    (Agamben, 200511).

3
The Structure of Testimony
  • On the one hand, what happened in the camps
    appears to the survivors as the only true thing
    and, as such, absolutely unforgettable on the
    other hand, this truth is to the same degree
    unimaginable, that is, irreducible to the real
    elements that constitute it. Facts so real that,
    by comparison, nothing is truer a reality that
    necessarily exceeds its factual elements such
    is the aporia of Auschwitz. As Lewental writes,
    the complete truth is far more tragic, far more
    frightening More tragic, more frightening that
    what? (Agamben, 200512).

4
Aporia of Auschwitz (Agamben)
  • The aporia of Auschwitz, is indeed, the very
    aporia of historical knowledge a non-coincidence
    between facts and truth, between verification and
    comprehension (Agamben, 200512).
  • Some want explanations/understanding for
    everything
  • Some refuse explanations/understanding for
    anything
  • The only way forward lies in investigating the
    space between these two options (Agamben,
    200513).

5
Silence, Confession and witnessing
  • We can only testify after the event
  • Restoring the human
  • The inmates of the death camps had become
    convinced of their inhumanity (Chare, 200641).
  • The damage to the self sustained by the witness
    in the death camps must be at least partially
    undone before the event that has been recorded
    unconsciously can be recounted (Chare, 200641).
  • Is testimony
  • Restoration of self
  • Confession
  • Record of events

6
  • Testimonies largely come from ordinary people
    (perpetrators and victims)
  • One of the lessons of Auschwitz is that it is
    infinitely harder to grasp the mind of an
    ordinary person than to understand the mind of a
    Spinoza or a Dante (Agamben, 200513).
  • Holocaust testimony contains at its core an
    essential lacuna in other words, the survivors
    bore witness to something it is impossible to
    bear witness to. (Agamben, 200513).
  • To explore survivors testimony one must
    interrogate and listen to this lacuna.
  • To listen to the absent
  • To listen to the unsaid

7
Witnessing the event
  • We, the survivors, are not the true witnesses
    We speak in their stead, by proxy (Levi, 2005
    xi)
  • At a distance of years one can today definitely
    affirm that the history of the Lagers has been
    written almost exclusively by those who, like
    myself, never fathomed them to the bottom. Those
    who did so did not return, or their capacity for
    observation was paralysed by suffering and
    incomprehension (Levi, 20056).

8
Witnessing
  • Some survivors said that they were driven to
    survive in order to bear witness
  • Some preferred silence
  • 2 words for witness in Latin
  • The third party (in a lawsuit for example)
    (testis)
  • Someone who has lived through/experienced
    something (superstes)

9
The Value of Testimony
  • the value of testimony lies essentially in what
    it lacks at its centre it contains something
    that cannot be borne witness to and that
    discharges the survivors of authority. The true
    witnesses, the complete witnesses, are those
    who did not bear witness and could not bear
    witness. They are those who touched bottom
    the muslims, the drowned Whoever assumes the
    charge of bearing witness in their name knows
    that he or she must bear witness in the name of
    the impossibility of bearing witness. (Agamben,
    200534)
  • Meaning in unexpected areas

10
Memory reliving the suffering.
  • Memories within us are not carved in stone
    (Levi, 200511).
  • Can become erased, can increase or can change.
  • Recollection is not an orderly happening.
  • Personal to us.
  • Some things affect memory e.g. traumas (physical
    and emotional)

11
Reliving the memory
  • The memory of trauma is itself traumatic because
    recalling is painful or at least disturbing
    (Levi, 200512)
  • The wounded block out memory in an attempt to not
    relive/renew the pain
  • The perpetrators block it out to be rid of it,
    to alleviate the feeling of guilt (Levi,
    200512).

12
  • Read with a critical eye not because of
    inaccuracy but because
  • For knowledge of the Lagers, the Lagers
    themselves were not always a good observation
    post. In the inhuman conditions to which they
    were subjected, the prisoners could barely
    acquire an overall vision of their universe
    (Levi, 20056)

13
  • Desire to understand and to be understood
  • Explain the unexplainable.
  • No clarity, no simple explanations
  • No simple identifiable separation between good
    and evil (Levi)
  • Complexity of human relations (Levi - The Drowned
    and the Saved p23-4)

14
  • Lets end, then, with the words of Primo Levi in
    the preface to Survival in Auschwitz
  • As an account of atrocities, this book of mine
    adds nothing to what is already known to readers
    throughout the world on the disturbing question
    of the death camps. It should be able, rather to
    furnish documentation for a quiet study of
    certain aspects of the human mind. Many people
    many nations can find themselves holding, more
    or less wittingly, that every stranger is an
    enemy. For the most part this conviction lies
    deep down like some latent infection it betrays
    itself only in random, disconnected acts, and
    does not lie at the base of a system of reason.
    But when this does come about, when the un-spoken
    dogma becomes the major premiss in a syllogism,
    then, at the end of the chain, there is the
    lager. Here is the product of a conception of
    the world carried rigorously to its logical
    conclusion so long as the conception subsists,
    the conclusion remains to threaten us. The story
    of the death camps should be understood by
    everyone as a sinister alarm signal (Levi,
    19969).
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