Authors: Andrew Nagorski
Police Captain Avner Less
and
“the privilege”:
Ibid., 4.
At their first meeting
and Less quotes: Ibid., v–vi.
He explained to Less
and
“wasn’t a Jew-hater”:
Ibid., 57.
“I was horrified”
and
“shaken”
and
“Even today”:
Ibid., 76–77.
“insignificant”:
Ibid., 90.
“unusual zeal”:
Ibid., 156.
“If they had”:
Ibid., 157, vi.
“But that’s horrible”:
Ibid., ix.
When Less began:
Ibid., xxi.
“the drink had been”:
Hoess, 155.
“I had nothing”:
Lang and Sybill, 101–2.
To undercut Eichmann’s claims
and subsequent examples and quotes: Ibid., 142–44.
“the cold sophistication”:
Ibid., vi.
“Thinking itself”:
Hannah Arendt,
The Last Interview and Other Conversations,
128.
“the most important”:
Hannah Arendt,
Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil,
153.
“Jew”
and
“enlightened”
and
“If one is attacked”:
Arendt,
The Last Interview and Other Conversations,
11–12, 20.
“a typical Galician Jew”
and
“ghetto mentality”:
Lipstadt, 152.
“One of my main”:
Arendt,
The Last Interview and Other Conversations,
130.
“If there was”:
Ibid., 46.
“he was genuinely incapable”:
Arendt,
Eichmann in Jerusalem,
48–49.
“Despite all”:
Ibid., 54.
“Except for”:
Ibid., 287.
“Eichmann displayed,” “only a minor transport officer,”
and
“tense, rigid”:
Hausner, 332, 325.
When the prosecution:
Gabriel Bach interview with the author.
“I will jump”
and Hausner’s account: Arendt,
Eichmann in Jerusalem,
46; Hausner, 359–60.
“bragging was”:
Arendt,
Eichmann in Jerusalem,
46.
“a saloon atmosphere”
and court ruling on Sassen tapes: Hausner, 348–49.
“What eventually”:
Arendt,
Eichmann in Jerusalem,
47.
“He was not”:
Ibid., 287–88.
“To a Jew”:
Ibid., 117.
“The tragedy”:
Hausner, 341.
“saved exactly”:
Arendt,
Eichmann in Jerusalem,
118.
“sold his soul”:
Jonah Lowenfeld, “Rudolf Kastner Gets a New Trial,”
Yom HaShoah,
April 26, 2011.
“chaos and plenty of misery”:
Arendt,
Eichmann in Jerusalem,
125.
“made it very clear”:
Musmanno,
The Eichmann Kommandos,
16.
“kept recurring”:
Albert Averbach and Charles Price, eds.,
The Verdicts Were Just: Eight Famous Lawyers Present Their Most Memorable Cases,
98.
“that Eichmann”:
Michael A. Musmanno, “No Ordinary Criminal,”
New York Times,
May 19, 1963.
In her reply
and rest of Arendt’s remarks and letters from readers: “Letters to the Editor: ‘Eichmann in Jerusalem,’ ”
New York Times,
June 23, 1963.
“One stands baffled”:
Jacob Robinson,
And the Crooked Shall Be Made Straight: The Eichmann Trial, the Jewish Catastrophe, and Hannah Arendt’s Narrative,
58–59.
“aghast”
and
“took pains”:
Ibid., 147, 160–62.
“We have done”:
Wiesenthal, 231.
“Legally and morally”:
Robinson, 159.
“In a way”:
Rafi Eitan interview with the author.
In 2011:
The German title of the book is
Eichmann vor Jerusalem: Das unbehelligte Leben eines Massenmörders.
“in thrall to”
and
“An ideology”:
Bettina Stangneth,
Eichmann Before Jerusalem: The
Unexamined Life of a Mass Murderer,
222.
“achieved the primary goal”
and
“Eichmann in Jerusalem”:
Ibid., xxiii.
In an early interview:
Arendt,
The Last Interview and Other Conversations,
26–27.
“sham existence”
and
“There’s something”:
Ibid., 50–51.
“mere functionary”
and
“If you succumb”:
Ibid., 44–45.
“victims”:
Ibid., 42.
“went to their death”
and
“But the sad truth”:
Arendt,
Eichmann in Jerusalem,
10–11.
“that Arendt’s conception”
and
“the disappearance”:
Stanley Milgram,
Obedience to Authority: An Experimental View
, 6, 8.
“The person who”:
Ibid., 11.
“monsters”:
“British PM on New ISIS Beheading,” ABC News, September 14, 2014.
“determined to go down”:
Douglas M. Kelley,
22 Cells in Nuremberg: A Psychiatrist Examines the Nazi Criminals,
71.
“a frank psychotic”:
Gilbert, 260.
“Insanity is no”:
Kelley, 3.
But it also led:
Jack El-Hai,
The Nazi and the Psychiatrist: Hermann Göring, Dr. Douglas M. Kelley, and a Fatal Meeting of the Minds at the End of WWII,
218–20.
“as a catalyst”:
Arendt,
The Last Interview and Other Conversations,
41.
About six weeks
and poll numbers: Hausner, 464.
On December 15, 1961
and rest of timing on appeals and hanging: Bascomb, 316–18.
The designated hangman
and Nagar’s account and quotes: “Snatching Eichmann,”
Zman
, May 2012.
“Long live Germany”:
Bascomb, 319.
“What should”:
Bernhard Schlink,
The Reader,
104.
Thomas Gnielka
and his interview with Emil Wulkan, dealings with Bauer, and history of the incriminating documents: Devin O. Pendas,
The Frankfurt Auschwitz Trial, 1963–1965: Genocide, History, and the Limits of the Law,
46–47; and Rebecca Wittmann,
Beyond Justice: The Auschwitz Trial,
62–63.
“Maybe this is”:
Claudia Michels, “Auf dem Büfett lagen die Erschiessungslisten,”
Frankfurter Rundschau,
March 27, 2004.
“souvenir”
and
“of legal significance”:
Wittmann, 62.
“he was green in the face”:
Claudia Michels, “Auf dem Büfett lagen die Erschiessungslisten,”
Frankfurter Rundschau
, March 27, 2004.
A total of 183:
Pendas, 2.
twenty thousand visitors:
Wittmann, 175.
211 concentration camp survivors:
Fritz Bauer exhibition, Jewish Museum of Frankfurt.
“really only”
and
“The question is”
and
“can and must”:
Steinke, 157, 156, 155.
“whoever operated”:
Wittmann, 256.
“an ordinary criminal trial”:
Ibid., 215.
“could consider only”:
Bernd Naumann,
Auschwitz: A Report on the Proceedings Against Robert Karl Ludwig Mulka and Others Before the Court at Frankfurt,
415, xiv.
“I have yet”
: Ibid., Hannah Arendt, Introduction, xiv.
“As they all”:
As quoted in Steinke, 180.
Newsreel footage:
Verdict on Auschwitz: The Auschwitz Trial, 1963–1965,
1993 German television documentary.
As the prosecution
and account of Baer’s arrest and death: Pendas, 48–49.
“the victims were”:
Wittmann, 139.
Another witness:
Pendas, 117–18.
But perhaps the most chilling
and Wasserstrom’s testimony: Wittmann, 88.
Medical orderly Josef Klehr:
Ibid., 75.
Dr. Victor Capesius:
Ibid., 197.
Then there was
and rest of Kaduk atrocities: Ibid., 140.
Dr. Ella Lingens
and her background:
www.yadvashem.org
.
“Do you wish”:
Pendas, 158.
Hans-Günther Seraphim
and
“not found”:
Wittmann, 80–81.
“As a little man”
and
“In Auschwitz”:
Naumann, 410, 409.
Then there were
and Frau Boger and Lingens quotes:
Verdict on Auschwitz: The Auschwitz Trial, 1963–1965,
1993 German television documentary.
The press coverage
and
“monsters”:
Pendas, 262.
“The Torture Swing”
and other headlines cited by Martin Walser: Wittmann, 176–77.
“The more horrible”
and
“Auschwitz was not”:
Ibid., 177, 180.
In the
Suddeutsche Zeitung: Pendas, 263.
“it would be a mistake”:
Naumann, 415.
The verdict itself
and sentences: Ibid., 412–13.
“the residual wishful fantasy”:
Wittmann, 255.
“The criminal facts”:
Naumann, viii.
“ ‘Mass murder’ ”
and
“Instead of”:
Ibid., xxii, xxix.
“Damn it!”:
Pendas, 256.
A poll taken
and both poll results: Ibid., 253.
“Naturally the Auschwitz Trial”
and
“in the same boat”:
Ibid., 256–57.
“In many ways”:
Wittmann, 190.
“It would be quite”:
Naumann, xvii.
During the Third Reich
and allegations: Perry Biddiscombe,
The Denazification of Germany: A History 1945-1950
, 212–13; and, for instance, “Eichmann to Testify on Dr. Globke’s Role in Deportation of Greek Jews,”
JTA,
January 31, 1961.
He requested documents
and subsequent fate of Bauer’s investigation into Globke:
Fritz Bauer exhibition, Jewish Museum of Frankfurt.
In 1963:
“Bonn Denounces Globke Trial in East Germany as Communist Maneuver,”
JTA,
July 10, 1963.
From 1950 to 1962
and statistics on investigations, trials, acquittals, and murder convictions: Wittmann, 15.
“We do not have”
and Ludwigsburg’s history: Thomas Will interview with the author.
the 1966 poll:
Pendas, 253.
“that something like that”
and exhibition: Ibid., 182–83.
“May it smooth”
and visit of West German delegation to Poland: Ibid., 179–80.
Playwright Peter Weiss:
Peter Weiss,
The Investigation: Oratorio in 11 Cantos.
“When I was taken down”:
Ibid., 73–74.
“Nineteen Sixty-eight cannot be”
and other Schlink quotes: Bernhard Schlink interview with the author.
But Peter Schneider:
Peter Schneider interview with the author.
Jan Sehn had a regular routine
and Kozłowska account, including anonymous letters: Maria Kozłowska interview with the author.
“The trial should show”:
Steinke, 218.
In an interview:
Death by Installments
documentary.
When the youth protests:
Steinke, 263.
Many Germans were angered
and threats, swastika, pistol, and bodyguard:
Death by Installments
documentary; and Steinke, 221.
“When I leave”:
Steinke, 257.
“The Attorney General”:
Wojak, 443.
“burning anti-Semitism”:
Ibid., 445.
In 1967
and
“Brown Book”:
Fritz Bauer exhibition, Frankfurt Jewish Museum.
“There is only a duty”:
Wojak, 453.
“How long”:
Steinke, 272.
“no proof”
and
“Yes”:
Ilona Ziok interview with the author.
“He was the greatest”:
Death by Installments
documentary.
“He won us”:
Wojak, 455.
“Because we were weak”:
Serge Klarsfeld interview with the author.
“reciting little poems”
and
“a conscientious”:
Beate Klarsfeld,
Wherever They May Be!
, 4.