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- <text id=90TT1037>
- <title>
- Apr. 23, 1990: Settling Old Scores, Again
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Apr. 23, 1990 Dan Quayle:No Joke
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 97
- Settling Old Scores, Again
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <qt> <l>JUSTICE, NOT VENGEANCE</l>
- <l>by Simon Wiesenthal</l>
- <l>Grove Weidenfeld; 372 pages; $22.50</l>
- </qt>
- <p> When Simon Wiesenthal wrote his memoirs more than 20 years
- ago, with considerable help from Joseph Wechsberg of the New
- Yorker, he had a highly dramatic story to tell: how he had
- emerged from an Austrian concentration camp in 1945 and devoted
- the rest of his life to catching Nazi criminals; how he had
- helped to hunt down some, like Adolf Eichmann; and how others
- still remained, as he titled his book, The Murderers Among Us.
- </p>
- <p> At 80, Wiesenthal decided to tell his story all over again.
- Though presented as a new book, some of its narratives remain
- almost exactly the same--Wiesenthal's pursuit of the police
- officer who arrested Anne Frank, for example. Others needed
- updating. In The Murderers Among Us, Wiesenthal located
- Treblinka Commandant Franz Stangl working at a Volkswagen plant
- in Sao Paulo; shortly after Wiesenthal's book appeared, Stangl
- was arrested and sent to prison. On the other hand, Auschwitz
- doctor Josef Mengele, whom Wiesenthal had described as hiding
- in Paraguay, was subsequently found to have drowned in Brazil
- (though Wiesenthal continues to suspect that he is still alive).
- </p>
- <p> Wiesenthal's new editorial collaborators do not serve his
- purposes well. Instead of benefiting from Wechsberg's competent
- prose, this new autobiography has been translated from the
- German by Ewald Osers, and it is studded with Anglicisms like
- lorries, plimsolls, doing a bunk and getting the stick. And
- though the publishers exaggeratedly claim that Wiesenthal
- "engineered" the Eichmann capture, Wiesenthal himself says only
- that his effort to prevent Eichmann's wife from having Eichmann
- declared legally dead "was probably my most important
- contribution to the Eichmann case."
- </p>
- <p> While The Murderers Among Us had a clear thesis, coolly
- pursued, Wiesenthal's new memoir rambles through whole chapters
- on such marginal topics as whether Hitler had syphilis. And like
- some other memoirists in their 80s, Wiesenthal has lots of
- scores that he wants to settle. He is angry not only at all the
- ex-Nazis and all the authorities who have sheltered them in
- Germany, Austria, Latin America and the Middle East but also at
- the U.S. for recruiting killers like Klaus Barbie for cold war
- intelligence, and at the Soviets for all their political crimes
- (it was at their hands that Wiesenthal's father died).
- </p>
- <p> Wiesenthal also criticizes Israeli secret-service chief
- Isser Harel, whose memoirs did not mention Wiesenthal's
- contributions to the capture of Eichmann. (The story of that
- raid is vividly told in a new memoir by the actual capturer,
- Eichmann in My Hands, by Peter Z. Malkin and Harry Stein, to be
- published in May by Warner Books.) Other Wiesenthal targets
- include former Austrian Chancellor Bruno Kreisky, a Jewish
- Socialist, for including four ex-Nazis in his first Cabinet,
- and Elie Wiesel, for not including a Gypsy on the U.S. Holocaust
- Memorial Council.
- </p>
- <p> There is clearly a lot to be angry about, but it is a little
- odd for Wiesenthal to title his rancorous book Justice, Not
- Vengeance. One can argue that vengeance is a private reprisal,
- whereas justice comes from an impartial authority, but the two
- seem very tightly (and understandably) intertwined in the mind
- of Simon Wiesenthal.
- </p>
- <p>By Otto Friedrich.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-