Adolf Hitler

Why Didn't the Nazis High Five?

All together now ….
Getty Images
All together now ….

THE HITLER SALUTE: ON THE MEANING OF A GESTURE
By Tilman Allert
Metropolitan, 106 pages, $20

What if the Nazis had greeted each other with high fives instead of that stiff-armed, sharp-handed salute? What if Germans had been allowed to say hello to one another by name instead of invoking their Führer?

Tilman Allert’s The Hitler Salute, a joyously sharp account of a massively evil slice of human history, doesn’t treat the Nazis’ obligatory two-word, one-arm greeting as a product of evil, but as its enabler. He argues, movingly, that the salute wounded Germans’ sociability, connectedness and personal sovereignty, warping the holy human order.

A nation that’s forced to adopt inhuman gestures, in other words, is fated to oblige inhuman horrors: First hellos disappear, then morality.  read more »

Wiesel’s Near-Abduction by Holocaust Deniers Weirdly Uncovered

Nobel Peace Prize Laureate and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel.
Mario Tama/Getty Images
Nobel Peace Prize Laureate and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel.

I think I may have missed something important in my initial take on the assault and attempted kidnap  read more »

Satan, Meet Norman

Mailer's Morality: "Even the writer who can be a perfect scamp ... there is a moral under that."
Victor Juhasz
Mailer's Morality: "Even the writer who can be a perfect scamp ... there is a moral under that."

The Castle in the Forest, by Norman Mailer. Random House, 477 pages, $27.95.    read more »

My Assimilationist Christmas: 'This Too Survived Hitler'

I spent Christmas Eve at two parties in LA hosted by Jews—friends of my gentile brother-in-law. Didn't plan it that way; just worked out that way.

The first party was all film industry. I asked the host's daughter about being Jewish and having a Christmas party and she laughed and said, "Yeah. Basically we do whatever's fun. Like we had an Easter egg roll." I liked her attitude. California. No baggage.

The next party was more interesting because there was a Holocaust survivor there. He grew up in a wealthy German family, then spent years in Theresienstadt. After the war, stateless, he said No to Palestine and came here. In the last few years he has been able to recover some of the family's actual property. The survivor's wife took me in the kitchen and showed me some china they had finally gotten back. "This too survived Hitler," she said, touching the beautiful Deco-styled plates.

It felt like a west coast dream. Attitudes are different out there, people are more open to new ideas. At New York parties, I get in fights about Jewishness. Not in L.A.

I sat with the wife for a while at dinner and talked about my issues. She explained that she was firmly secular. Religion is a negative force in society. Jewish identity was important to her, but worship was no real part of her children's lives, and she'd never tried to separate them from kids of other creeds. She was a little regretful about intermarriage but it wasn't like she could have stopped it. Hey, it's America. The Holocaust was not something they talked that much about. When I asked her about Israel, she said, "Israel is important." When I asked her to elaborate, she repeated that statement.

I went in to get Christmas cake and passed a pretty towheaded girl singing, "Dreidel, dreidel, dreidel." It felt surreal to me.

One of the claims of Jewish parochialists is that Where Hitler failed, intermarriage is succeeding: eliminating the Jewish people. It may be an incorrect statement (the latest Forward reports that Jewish #s in the U.S. are up to between 6-7 million). But right or wrong on the #s, it's ugly. It's guilting Americans who are making free and wide cultural choices, saying they're betraying their people. And the answer of the Michael Steinhardts and Elliott Abrams is, Segregating youth. Segregating privileged youth, at that. Think of the little blonde girls who won't get to sing the dreidel song.

Queen of the Muckrakers— And Champion Letter-Writer

Jessica Mitford (1917-1996), second-youngest of the six Mitford sisters.
Alan Davidson/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
Jessica Mitford (1917-1996), second-youngest of the six Mitford sisters.

I remember an occasion in San Francisco, years ago, when the writer Tillie Olsen invited other women  read more »

Floored by Emo Flu, My Languor Soothed by Noir Guy Kerr

I credit the “emo flu.” If I hadn’t been stricken by this strange affliction going around, I w  read more »

My (Docile) Generation

moon11.jpg
Keith Moon.
When the late Keith Moon wasn't jokingly parading around in Hitler regalia, he could probably be found trashing one of the many hotels The Who stayed at. This weekend, The Times "Travel" section takes a look at the hard-living Moon--who "once nailed his room furniture to the ceiling"--along with members of Led Zeppelin, The Faces and the Red Hot Chili Peppers.

So what are younger rock bands up to these days? Well, they're not exactly riding motorcycles through the Chateau Marmont.

When the Canadian band Metric opened for the Rolling Stones at Madison Square Garden earlier this year they stayed not at the Chelsea, but at the Hotel on Rivington, a sleek tower of glass on the Lower East Side, where rooms are $400 a night.

And touring with the Rolling Stones (of all bands) must have led to some wild nights. Or not.

The modern rock star appears to be more docile than his television-hurling predecessors. According to Mr. Mesh, the tour manager, the most asked-for hotel features are high-speed Internet and a workout room. "Fifteen years ago, having a hotel bar was very important," he said. "But it's changed. Fifteen years ago everybody was partying."

And for Southland, a rock band from L.A., partying comes with life on the road. But so does trying to get a bargain.

"Our new move is Priceline.com," said Jed Whedon, the band's singer. "We can stay in four-star hotels and we get really cheap deals."

Things they do look awful cold.  read more »

- Michael Calderone

For a Guilty Nation, Docu-Satire My Bad Profoundly Scorches

Could it be that the public apology has become the iconic new literary art form of our times?  read more »

Three Worlds, One Book: Rieff Tries to Explain It All

The form in which we most often encounter sociology is David Brooks or Malcolm Gladwell, taking us o  read more »

Precise Moral Judgments Blurred by War's Messiness

In some contexts, the good, decent humanist approach seems more callous than sheer bloody-mindedness  read more »

Precise Moral Judgments Blurred by War’s Messiness

Dresden after three days of continuous Allied bombing.
Richard Petersen/Getty Images
Dresden after three days of continuous Allied bombing.

In some contexts, the good, decent humanist approach seems more callous than sheer bloody-mindedness  read more »

Terror-Porn Rampage, From Sleeper Cell To New Spielberg

<i>Sleeper Cell</i>
Showtime
Sleeper Cell

Can we say goodbye now to terror porn?  read more »

Architecture, Power, Gossip: Building Blocks of a Good Read

An artist
Santiago Calatrava SA via Getty Images
An artist

Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar.  read more »

Red Hook: Where Time Really Stands Still

Red HookOf course, there are quite a few characters in Red Hook, but The Real Estate never figured that the neighborhood would have a Nazi Party headquarters.
Red HookLo, this weekend we were scouring the streets, looking for new developments, when we came across the freshly poured foundation of 71 Coffey Street, which is at the corner of Richards Street. Coffey Gardens LLC is developing two carriage houses, each with three stories and 3,442 square feet. A rendering, if you can call it that, was nailed up on the construction site.
Red HookPretty ugly! Coffey Gardens is using Bricolage Designs, a company that seems to turn out horrible brick rowhouses that are remarkable for nothing more than their tedious uniformity and dullness. By the looks of it, 71 Coffey Street won't improve that track record too much.
Red HookBut check out the building next door! High up top, you can make out a swastika—which is, in this case, actually a rather oddly Celtic-looking piece of ornamentation. The building was erected in 1926, while Adolf Hitler was in prison writing Mein Kampf. And sure, the swastika wasn't even removed from the British Boy Scout's Medal of Merit until 1934—but still, you'd think someone might have come along and altered this building circa, oh, 1944?
—Matthew Grace
 read more »

Brecht Nominee: David Jones

We were wondering when somebody would rise to the bait Charles Barron has floated out there in the case of escaped cop-killer Joanne Chesimard. Barron, who serves on the side as Virginia's one-man shock brigade, wants clemency for Chesimard, who shot a New Jersey cop dead in 1973 and later fled to Cuba.

David Jones, the president of the New Jersey State Troopers Fraternal Association, differs in a press release sent our way (no link available), and wins himself a nomination for the Politicker's Brecht Award:  read more »

"Hitler had his Goebbels, Saddam Hussein had his Tariq Aziz, and now Joanne Chesimard has her Mr. Barron. People of ill will who promote terrorism and try to disguise their criminality by wrapping it in a cause are nothing new.... Saddam tried the same thing when he gassed 150,000 Kurds and Hitler blamed the slaughter of six million people on their religion. So this ill-informed politician is doing nothing different than any of the other self-serving lackeys of terrorist causes."

Given the degree to which, in a New York Mayor's race, candidates can be made to own their supporters (think Bloomberg and Fulani, Ferrer and Sharpton), it seems fair to ask Virginia what she thinks of this stuff.

Relentless Bush Baffles His Critics

Five days after D-Day, Winston Churchill got this message from Stalin: "My colleagues and I cannot b  read more »

Ridley Scott's Kingdom of Heaven: The War on Terror's Bloody Past

Ridley Scott's Kingdom of Heaven, from a screenplay by William Monohan, was reportedly conceived bef  read more »

Ernst Ludwig Kirchner Painted 20th Century As Terrible Bridge

The group of young Germans who, in 1905, proudly called themselves Die Brücke ("The Bridge") derive  read more »

Welcome Back, Costner!

At last, we have a winner.  read more »

A Familiar Tactic: Smear the Democrat!

Before the two Presidential candidates met face-to-face in last week’s debate, George Bush and the  read more »

Bush Looks to Heaven While Iraq Goes to Hell

To listen to George Bush, you would think that he was elected Pope or Chief Rabbi or something.  read more »

Why Jacques Lipchitz Was Left by Wayside: Aspired to Greatness

Jacques Lipchitz (1891-1973) enjoyed the kind of career that, from this distance in time, belongs as  read more »

Passion of Mel Is Mean, Gnarled, Next to the Sacred

This was the week when love, hate and stupidity all converged in a classic American train wreck.Let'  read more »

One Way to Order the World: Play Host to Everyone Else

The Duchess Who Wouldn't Sit Down: An Informal History of Hospitality , by Jesse Browner.  read more »

Are Critics of Israel Smeared as Anti-Semites?

The Anti-Defamation League, which keeps track of these matters, recently issued a press release noti  read more »

It's Sweepstime For Hitler, But Winter for Truth

It's springtime, I mean sweepstime, for Hitler in Hollywood.  read more »

Life During Wartime: We Manhattanites Defy Brooklyn Smirk

MONDAY, 3/17: Bush to speak tonight [the 48-hour-ultimatum speech].As war approaches, and more and m  read more »

The Pope, The Führer, A Secret Shame

So many movies about the Holocaust, so few moviegoers lining up to see them.  read more »

Adolf Hitler, Wannabe Artist

Where was I-before we were interrupted by Santa Claus, the transit strike that didn't happen and the  read more »

Protocols of Elder Named Gore Vidal: Wacko 9/11 Piece

Gore Vidal once tried to get me to print an alleged secret-a very big secret-about Richard Nixon's p  read more »

I Will Pay Dozen to Boo Al Pacino in Bogus Brecht

I would like to offer 12 of my readers-12 men and women, tried and true-a bottle of champagne each i  read more »

Goodbye, All That: How Left Idiocies Drove Me to Flee

So I went up to the antiwar demonstration in Central Park this weekend, hoping to hear some persuasi  read more »

The New Ship of Fools

Hollywood is the new Ship of Fools, and with a boring, amateurish, incomprehensible and stupefyingly  read more »

Can Wieseltier, D.C.'s Big Mullah, Have It Both Ways?

People have taken to calling it "The Second Holocaust Debate"-the polemical fracas that has followed  read more »

Does Poison Le Pen Auger Yet Another European Darkness?

And now Le Pen. Its seems as if the mask is coming off European anti-Semitism right and left.  read more »

'Second Holocaust,' Roth's Invention, Isn't Novelistic

The Second Holocaust. It's a phrase we may have to begin thinking about.  read more »

Getting Away With Murder: How We Let Genocide Happen

"AProblem From Hell": America and the Age of Genocide , by Samantha Power.  read more »

Jewish Museum Show, Full of Vile Crap, Not to Be Forgiven

There are many ways to trivialize history, especially in a culture as amnesiac as ours, where even t  read more »

Honoring a Picket Line At the Jewish Museum

All those who just can't bear the idea of hearing anythingfurther on the Jewish Museum's Mirroring  read more »

The Men Who Would Be Orwell

It's a little disconcerting, isn't it, that two expatriateBrits-Andrew Sullivan and Christopher Hitc  read more »

Has Everything Really Changed?

The world has changed since Sept. 11-or so thecommentators keep telling us.  read more »

Big Pussy, Philby and 'B': Scenes From a Mole Marriage

I was just watching the rerun of the final episode of The Sopranos ' second season, the one inwhich  read more »