Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland by Christopher R. Browning

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: March 1993
  • 304pp
  • Sales Rank: 25,717
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: March 1993
    • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
    • Format: Paperback, 304pp
    • Sales Rank: 25,717

    Synopsis

    The shocking account of how a unit of average middle-aged Germans became the cold-blooded murderers of tens of thousands of Jews.

    New York Times Book Review

    Helps us understand, better than we did before, not only what they did to make the Holocaust happen but also how they were transformed psychologically from the ordinary men of [the] title into active participants in the most monstrous crime in human history.

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    Biography

    Christopher R. Browning is professor of history at Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, Washington. He is a contributor to Yad Vashem's official twenty-four-volume history of the Holocaust and the author of two earlier books on the subject.

    Customer Reviews

    just the facts approach results in chills..by AvidReader711

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    September 09, 2009: This is a painful book to read because Browning clearly and concisely presents the facts surrounding one of the Nazi killing squads that murdered Jews in Poland ...we are shown how these "ordinary men," many of whom were older career soldiers who had fought in WWI, men who typically went to church on Sunday and were devoted to their families, slowly became capable of murdering Polish civilians for the simple reason that they were Jewish. The book challenges us to ask the hard questions: how capable are we of critical thinking? Would we resist unjust orders? Would we question authority? Would we risk our career if we were ordered to do something fundamentally and heinously immoral? Browning doesn't preach and there are no histrionics here...just the careful work of a world-class historian. He obviously cares about the issues but he lets the reader grapple with the information that he has painstakingly compiled through long hours spent in archives in Germany and Israel.

    The only way I got through this book was to read a book by one of Browning's protégés, a historian named Mark Klempner, who wrote a book called "The Heart Has Reasons" about righteous gentiles that were risking their lives to hide and help Jews in Holland, even as the killing squads were terrorizing their own county and an all-out effort was underway by the Nazis to make Holland "Jew-free." As Browning writes in the forward, "If the Holocaust is a story with all too many perpetrators and victims, and all too few heroes, the goodness of the rescuers is as difficult to explain as the evil of the perpetrators." Klempner, unlike Browning, used an oral history approach and actually interviewed the rescuers so that they could explain in their own words how and why they did what they did.

    I Also Recommend: The Heart Has Reasons.

    Fantasticby Anonymous

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    January 16, 2008: I am fascinated by World War II and the Holocaust. Ordinary Men is an incredible book about how Hitler and his top officers manipulated and changed regular citizens into mass murdering machines. It is very graphic at times. I am not a huge reader but I could not put this book down.


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