Monday, October 2, 2017

#81, "Adolf Hitler: The Definitive Biography"

"Adolf Hitler: The Definitive Biography"
By John Toland

This is by far the largest book I have read this year; probably it will remain the largest as I go through the remainder of the year. Toland tells the story, year by year, month by month, day by day, and occasionally hour-by-hour, of Adolf Hitler: his origins, his childhood, his formative teenage years, experiences in the First World War, his pledge to join politics, his rise to power as head of the National Socialist Party, his leadership of Germany as chancellor and Fuhrer, the actions that he took to lead to the Second World War, and finally the inevitable defeat of Germany and his suicide in the final year of the war. The amount of information is staggering, as is Toland's exquisite attention to detail. He leverages historical documents, public domain as well as personal interviews, photographs, personal letters and government paperwork to bring every point of Hitler's life to light. There is almost no editorializing, speculating, or prescribing. Toland is a pure scholar, and faithfully reports facts. You can really feel his painstaking devotion to presenting each moment as an artifact, without allowing his subjective opinions to color it. He achieves this scholarly aim as well as any historian can. In fact, occasionally you think, "Good God, he has to have a comment on THIS insanity." But he rarely comments at all. I think that puts the burden of opinion, on analysis and critique, on the reader. You aren't told how to think. You are given facts, and expected to come to your own conclusions. That makes for a great history.

Hitler was fanatical. That word is used over and over again in the book to describe his thoughts, motivations, and deeds. Once he had decided the path his life would take, he followed it with incredible, unyielding passion and drive. The result is that his life is, arguably, the most influential single life that existed in the 20th century. Without Hitler, Germany would have taken much longer to recover in the aftermath of World War I. Without Hitler, National Socialism would have been just one of hundreds of insignificant political parties in the 1920's and 30's that sought to reclaim Germany's former glory and re-establish her place in the global community. Without Hitler, the names Goering, Goebbels, and Himmler would all be standard German names, without their modern historical weight. The United States as it stands today would not exist, as its current status as a superpower was born in the destruction of the WWII. Paradoxically, as Toland points out, the Jewish state of Israel would probably not exist without the turmoil brought on by Hitler's extreme antiSemitism and the Holocaust. These things, and a thousand others, mark Hitler's life as one of distinction. He changed the course of history. Persistence makes a difference, and I think there must be some lesson in the unrelenting doggedness of his fanaticism. If only those who seek truth, justice, goodness, righteousness were so unmovingly driven! What might be done in such a life? As it was, his crusade was one of death, of suffering, of horrifying tragedy at every level. The dangers of fanaticism are as clear to see as the benefits.

I had so many thoughts as I read this book and learned about this man, possibly the most reviled name in any tongue and in any history. One thing I wanted to say that stood out to me was on the nature of national pride. Today, we hear lots of talk of patriotism, of being proud of our country and our heritage. Proud to be an American, we say. I see in the life of Hitler the dangerous extreme of nationalism, an extreme that, as I analyze the world day by day, becomes more and more normalized in America. We should--no, we must make ourselves cognizant of where national pride can lead to if not held in check. Hitler thought first and only of his people; their racial purity and supposed superiority to other peoples, their economy and borders at the expense of other nations, Germany-first, Germany-only. His message of victimhood resonated with the common people of Germany in 1924. His party, rooted in Germany pride, went from less than a dozen people to over half of the country in less than ten years. It then devastated the entire world. National pride can bring us community and common goals. It gives us protection, and it recognizes the sacrifices made in order to bring us to where we exist today. Yet when it brings a nation to the point of despising other peoples, it cannot anymore be legitimized. In this time of flux and continuous change, we are not merely citizens of one nation. We are truly citizens of the world. We must take the lessons of Nazi Germany--the lessons of history--and apply them to our our times, or else we fall in danger of following in similar paths. National pride is shameful if your nation exists only to belittle, subjugate, and control others. Therefore be wary of being too proud of your nation. I say this especially as a Christian, and now I write to the Christian reading this: We are first citizens of heaven, not of any arbitrary borders written by man. Do not allow blind nationalism to distract you from your true citizenship. Hitler wanted to rekindle Germany's greatness after being "betrayed" by world. His nationalist spirit controlled his every move, and led to horrors the earth has yet to recover from.

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