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- ETHICS, Page 65A Conspiracy of Goodness
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- Rescuing Jews during World War II took a special kind of heroism:
- ordinary human compassion
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- By CHRISTINE GORMAN
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- Adolf Hitler, Heinrich Himmler, Josef Mengele -- these
- are the familiar faces of evil from World War II. Architects of a
- genocidal collapse of the human soul, they remind everyone that
- indifference to the suffering of others is perhaps the most
- pervasive law of nature. And yet, 50 years later, some less
- familiar faces are beginning to emerge from the terrible history
- of the Holocaust. They belong to the handful of ordinary people
- who not only saw the horror around them but also risked their
- lives out of compassion for its victims: those under Nazi rule
- who dared to hide Jews in their houses and apartments and on
- their farms. According to Samuel and Pearl Oliner, researchers
- from Humboldt State University in California who conducted an
- eight-year study of altruism, these protectors may have saved
- 500,000 lives.
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- Why did they refuse to hide behind the mask of the
- innocent bystander donned by so many of their fellow citizens
- in Germany, Poland, France and elsewhere? That question sent an
- unlikely pair of friends, photographer Gay Block and children's
- book writer Malka Drucker, on a three-year journey to
- photograph and interview 105 rescuers from 10 countries. The
- often surprising answers are chronicled in their book, Rescuers:
- Portraits of Moral Courage in the Holocaust (Holmes & Meier;
- $29.95 soft cover), and in a photography exhibition at the
- Museum of Modern Art in Manhattan, which runs until April 7.
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- Again and again, the rescuers protest that what they did
- was natural and even quite ordinary. "We didn't think about
- it," says Johtje Vos, 82, who with her late husband Aart saved
- dozens of Jews in Laren, Holland. "You started off storing a
- suitcase for a friend, and before you knew it, you were in over
- your head. We did what any human being would have done."
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- History, sadly, does not bear out that claim. Throughout
- the Nazi occupation, cases of citizens rescuing Jews were the
- exception, not the rule. And denunciation in those cruel times
- seemed much more common. The rescuers know that, of course. But
- by insisting on the banality of their heroism, they have
- launched a powerful challenge to our jaded moral notions of the
- status quo. To single them out as unusual suggests, in effect,
- that there was something abnormal about them. On the other hand,
- to treat them as ordinary human beings is to argue that altruism
- is accessible to anyone -- saints and sinners alike. "It tells
- you that you don't have to be Mother Teresa," Drucker says. "You
- don't have to be a better person than you already are in order
- to do good." Turning protectors into paragons would let the rest
- of humanity off the hook.
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- The rescuers have not escaped controversy. Their very
- existence has been denied by some Jews who feared that the
- horror of the Holocaust might be whitewashed by acknowledging
- their presence. On the other hand, some rescuers have received
- hate mail and death threats for their long-ago roles in
- sheltering Jews. Yet Block notes that most people are strongly
- receptive to the rescuers' stories. "There is a hunger for
- examples of goodness," she says. "People want to find out that
- we can learn from goodness and not from evil."
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- "When you look at the rescuers as a large group, you
- cannot put them into any of the categories that you are used
- to," says Nechama Tec, professor of sociology at the University
- of Connecticut and author of When Light Pierced the Darkness:
- Christian Rescue of Jews in Nazi-Occupied Poland. They include
- both rich and poor, educated and barely literate, believers and
- atheists. "But on closer examination you see a series of
- interrelated characteristics," she notes. She found, for
- example, that many of the rescuers were individualists. "Most
- of us do what society demands at the moment. But because the
- rescuers were not as constrained by the expectations of the
- group, they were better able to act on their own."
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- In addition, Tec found that many of the rescuers had a
- history of doing good deeds before the war -- some visiting
- people in the hospital, others collecting books for poor
- students, still others taking care of stray animals. "They just
- got into the habit of doing good," she says. "If they hadn't
- perceived that pattern as natural, they might have been
- paralyzed into inaction." At the same time, most of them never
- planned to be rescuers. They found themselves responding to a
- need first and the danger second. Many shared a sense of
- universalism. "They saw the Jews not as Jews but as persecuted
- human beings," the sociologist says. In her research, Tec, who
- was herself sheltered in Poland, found that only 10% of the
- rescuers had confined their help to friends they had known
- before the war.
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- Perhaps most astounding of all, the majority of the
- rescuers believe that the gift of goodness can be passed on. "It
- is like flowers growing in a certain soil," says Helena
- Melnyczuk, 71, who with her brother Orest, 67, and their father
- sheltered Jews in their house, across the street from a
- Ukrainian police station. "It is natural in every human being,
- but it must be nourished and cultivated." For that lesson alone,
- the rescuers deserve the world's gratitude.
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