Laqueur was born in 1921 |
If Max von Oppenheim is remembered today, it is as an
unlikely, if also unsuccessful, proponent of jihad. The grandson and namesake of the founder of
the famous German Jewish
banking family, Oppenheim. Oppenheim was fascinated by
North Africa and the Arab world and eventually settled in Cairo, where he
became a prominent fixture in the city’s social life in the years before and
after WWI. His great ambition was to enter the diplomatic service, but his
application was turned down time and again—the main reason appearing from the
files was that someone of Jewish, or even part-Jewish origin was undesirable.
After many futile attempts Oppenheim became an attaché, not a permanent,
regular member of the diplomatic service.
Max Oppenheim |
After visiting Tell Halaf, a place some 200 kilometers from
Cairo, Oppenheim became a passionate archaeologist and resigned from the
diplomatic service a year after the excavations at the site began in earnest in
1909. He was in touch with fellow archaeologists such as T.E. Lawrence.
Lawrence thought he was stupid and disliked him. He published on his archaeological findings, and
participated in professional conferences, despite the fact that he had not
trained as an archaeologist and some of his interpretations were disputed by
leading figures in the field. He also had a great interest in the customs and
manners of the Bedouin tribes and published and edited widely on this subject.
Soon after the outbreak of WWI, Oppenheim submitted a now-famous jihad
memorandum (Denkschrift) in which he
argued for enlisting pan-Islamism in the struggle against Britain (and also
Russia). Pan-Islamism had been discussed and preached for a number of
years before the outbreak of the war. In 1940, he submitted his second Denkschrift to
the German government of the day, suggesting that use should be made of pan-Islamism
and jihad as a major weapon in the war against Germany’s enemies.
Oppenheim’s second memorandum—dated July 1940, after the defeat
of France—complained about the lack of German support for the anti-British
forces in the Middle East such as the grand mufti of Jerusalem (The grand mufti
was a fugitive WWII war criminal who escaped punishment.), Rashid Ali in Iraq,
and the Lebanese politician Shaqib Arslan, who was a personal friend of
Oppenheim. In his memorandum Oppenheim mentioned his lifelong involvement in
Middle Eastern affairs and his close personal relationship with (anti-British)
Muslim politicians. He specifically mentioned Palestine, where the struggle
against the British and the Jews was to be taken up “as energetically as
possible.” Oppenheim
suggested that the Jews living in Palestine in 1914 should be permitted to
stay, but all others should be removed. Some Nazi support was given to
the Arab politicians mentioned by Oppenheim at the time. But on the whole, the
German foreign ministry was far more skeptical with regard to the help expected
on the part of the Muslims and particularly the Arabs. This view was also
shared by Hitler; Italian interests had to be taken into account, and there was
the hope that an agreement with Britain could somehow be reached. After 1941
Germany suffered military setbacks in North Africa, and Nazi planning for the
future of the Middle East was considered premature to say the least.
Oppenheim’s memorandum was shelved.
In later years, the second
Oppenheim Denkschrift became of interest for very different
reasons: How to explain the extreme views of a person of part-Jewish extraction
who had suffered discrimination in Wilhelmian Germany and a fortiori in
the Nazi Reich where he was considered a Mischling, hence a person of inferior
racial background. Indeed, Oppenheim’s story, as told in a recent
full-scale biography by Lionel Gossman, The Passion of Max Von
Oppenheim, and in a recent study by Sean McMeekin, The Berlin Baghdad
Express, sheds an odd and fascinating light not only on the recent
history of the Middle East, but
on the small but not insignificant cohort of Germans of Jewish descent who in
one way or another are portrayed by latter-day historians as having served
Adolf Hitler and the Nazi regime.
Max van Oppenheim with an unidentified German officer |
By and large, Oppenheim did not greatly suffer under the Nazis. Many people of a background
similar to Oppenheim were ashamed of their Jewish (or part-Jewish) origins and
hid it from their offspring. Others thought it unimportant and more or less
successfully suppressed it. The 19th-century German Jewish establishment in its
majority no longer felt Jewish and to a considerable extent converted to
Christianity. Judaism was not intellectually or emotionally attractive
and constituted a hindrance in most careers—the state service, the armed
forces, academia, and elsewhere. The motives were not always ignoble and
careerist. Judaism as the
walls of the ghetto came down was considered by some German Jews to be an
ossified religion inferior to other creeds. Jewish intellectuals in
central but also often in Eastern Europe unsurprisingly preferred Faust and War
and Peace to Fishke der Chigger.
Max Oppenheim felt not in the least Jewish. In his letters after 1945, he
blamed Hitler for having caused the death of millions of German soldiers, with
nary a mention of the fate of his fellow Jews. His German patriotism was
intense and, since not all accepted him as a fully fledged bona fide
German aristocrat, he may have felt doubly motivated to prove his patriotism. He truly believed in German
conservatism and belonged to the leading right-wing clubs and political
organizations of that world both before WWI and after. While radical
assimilation sometimes led to anti-Semitism, for Oppenheim the whole issue was
apparently so irrelevant that he did not become an outspoken anti-Semite—as
some of his fellow former Jews did.
All this was by no means a
specific German phenomenon. An interesting similar case is that of Daniel
Halevy (1872-1962), a French historian and man of letters and close friend of
Marcel Proust who became a propagandist of the Vichy regime. Another
fascinating case was Bertrand de Jouvenel (1903-1987) a person of considerably
greater political acumen than Oppenheim, who prior to WWII became a deputy of
the fascist leader Jacques Doriot. The French historian Marc Bloch (author of Les Rois Thaumaturges)
was one of the great medievalists of his time and was shot by the Germans for
his resistance activities. But about the more recent Jewish arrivals in France
he wrote in 1941 that their problem was not his.
Similarly, while Tsarist Russia was not propitious ground for
Jewish assimilation, the cases of Boris Pasternak and Semyon Frank were by no
means unique. Both writers believed that total identification with Russia and
Russian culture implied embracing the Orthodox church. Pasternak’s father, the
painter Leonid Pasternak, had already converted (as had Anton Rubinstein
[1829-1894], the famous pianist and composer). But Pasternak junior went further,
recommending that all Jews should convert. A list of leading prewar Polish
writers also makes interesting reading: Moshe Agatstein became Mieczyslaw
Jastrun, Wiktor Zisman is better known as Bruno Jasienski, Aizik Wagman was
transformed into Adam Wazyk, Boleslaw Lesman polonized his name slightly but
significantly, and Wiktor Lesman ended up as Jan Brzechwa. Julian Tuwim did not
convert or change his name, but what he wrote about his fellow Jews prior to
WWII was not complimentary.
Oppenheim was by no means
a dyed-in-the-wool Nazi, though he was not critical of the new regime either. His post-1945 denigration of the Nazi regime was quite
dishonest—but this was a fairly frequent phenomenon in Germany. But why did the
Nazis, with their relentless persecution of the Jews, spare him, and perhaps
even make use of him? Nazi
policy toward half- and quarter-Jews (Mischlinge of the first and
second degree) was contradictory and changed over time. Half-Jews who were not
brought up as Jews (Geltungsjuden) were not deported and killed: There
were legal problems, and Hitler, who did not want to be bothered by lawyers,
declared that he would take a binding decision only after the final victory.
Those of military age had to serve in the army both at the beginning of the war
and its end when the armed forces were depleted. But in between they were
excluded from military service, and they were not permitted to serve in
positions of command. It was quite common for half-Jews to try to improve their
status by becoming quarter Jews and of quarter Jews to turn into full Aryans
simply by claiming that their non-Aryan father or grandfather was not their
biological grandfather—in this respect Nazi authorities were quite liberal in
helping to improve the records (Goering’s famous “I decide who is a Jew”).
In 1943, Goebbels had the male partners in mixed marriages arrested in
order to have them deported and killed. But there were spontaneous mass
protests in Berlin (the famous Rosenstrasse incident), and
he had to beat a hasty retreat. There was a handful who escaped
the net of persecution—among them the Jewish doctor who had been treating Hitler’s mother in
her illness. There was also the case of Leo Blech, a world-famous
conductor who, owing to the intervention of Goering, was permitted to emigrate
from Riga to Sweden in the middle of the war. While there was no more rabid
anti-Semite than Goebbels in his later years, when he was told that an
enthusiastic racial researcher had established beyond any shadow of doubt that
the great-grandfather of Johann Strauss had been a Hungarian Jew he ordered the
evidence suppressed: “For if we go on like this, all we shall be left with of
our racially pure cultural heritage will be Alfred Rosenberg (his pet aversion
among fellow Nazi leaders) and this may not be enough.”
Those who did not live through that period and had no personal
experience of life in a totalitarian state are bound to find it difficult to
make sense of these currents and crosscurrents especially in a time of war.
This has given rise to all kind of explanations that are sometimes very
offensive but are more often rooted in ignorance rather than ill will. Why, it
is frequently asked, did German, Austrian and Czech Jews not leave their country
hurriedly at any price in view of the horrible fate awaiting them? The brief
answer is of course that Auschwitz did not yet exist in 1933 or even in 1936.
Auschwitz was established after the Germans occupied Poland in 1939. There was
also the false hope that Nazi policy vis-à-vis the Jews would improve or at
least not become harsher. Some authors blamed Jewish leaders in Germany, especially
Zionists, for having negotiated with the Nazi government to facilitate Jewish
immigration—as if there would have been an alternative approach to get Jews out
of Germany. Central European Jewry consisted to a large extent of elderly
people who were neither mentally nor physically capable of envisaging a new
life in another country. These were the years of a global economic crisis and
mass unemployment—no one wanted immigrants, especially not Jewish immigrants.
All this should have been
obvious, but instead a literature was forthcoming that was sometimes
malevolent, more often ignorant, and breathtakingly obtuse in its conclusions.
One such study about Hitler’s Jewish soldiers (Bryan Mark Rigg’s 2004 book) found not less than
150,000 of them accepted the Nazi racialist definition of being a Jew and even
went beyond it: no longer “once a Jew, always a Jew,” but “once a quarter-Jew—always
a full Jew.” But even if one added all the male half- and quarter-Jews of
military age and even those one-eighth Jewish according to the Nuremberg laws,
the total figure was closer to 15,000 than 150,000, and even this was probably
an exaggeration.
I should note here that I personally experienced many of these
issues in my own family. Half, perhaps more, had been converted a long time
ago; there were half- and quarter-Jews and not a few mixed marriages. The
Jewish partner in a mixed marriage would usually survive—but during the war no
one could be sure. There was my cousin Hans Bodle, a few years older, who
coached me in mathematics, which was my weakest subject in school. His father,
of Huguenot extraction, had been killed on the western front during the last
year of WWI. Hans was in and out of the German army according to the changing
Nazi policy. Toward the end of WWII, with a fanatical commander in charge of
the defense of our home town, Hans had again to join the army, which of course
he hated. He was killed in Breslau on the very last day of WWII.
Tracing the strange story of Baron Oppenheim we have followed so
far the reliable account presented by Prof. Gossman. Unfortunately Gossman,
having written an excellent biography of Max Oppenheim showing sovereign
mastery of the sources and fairness in his approach, suddenly changes gears
toward the end when he deals with “Oppenheim’s relations with the National
Socialist regime in context.” This section deals with several Jewish
personalities and organizations that (the author believes) also showed
pronounced Nazi sympathies. Somewhere the author also notes that the case of
Oppenheim may well have been sui generis. If so, what does the
author want to prove? Oppenheim was not a Jew except in accordance with Nazi
doctrine. He was as much identified with Buddhism as with Judaism, probably
more so. It should be noted in passing that other members of the family,
Oppenheim’s cousins and second cousins, half- and quarter-Jews according to
Nazi doctrine, while staunch German patriots and conservatives, behaved on the
whole decently during the Third Reich. Some were arrested and persecuted. They
helped their Jewish business partners to escape Germany during the war even at
a certain risk to their own lives. In later years the Israeli government noted their decent behavior and
included them in the list of righteous gentiles.
The politics of German Jews were centrist or left of center,
some were Communists but these had usually left the community or in any case
were no longer active in it. A handful belonged to the extreme right, and their
writings quoted by Gossman make for very embarrassing reading—for instance
those of Hans Joachim
Schoeps, a student of theology.
Hans Joachim Schoeps |
(The author should perhaps have
mentioned that Schoeps was in his early twenties at the time.) He emigrated to
Sweden, both his parents perished in Nazi camps. After the war he became a
professor at Erlangen University. He continued to denigrate parliamentary
democracy, believed in the Prussian spirit, and was a monarchist at heart.
More space is devoted to Nikolaus Pevsner, who went probably furthest
expressing sympathy for
Nikolaus Pevsner |
Nazism. But Pevsner left Germany for England in 1933,
and having been baptized at age 19 he was not a Jew—and since his father held
Russian nationality he was probably not a German either. In England he became a
celebrity and something of a national treasure by authoring 40 volumes listing
all buildings of historical or architectural interest. His history of European
architecture became a best-seller, selling more than a million copies, and
eventually led to a knighthood.
The history professor Hans Rothfels, a student of Meinecke also
mentioned by Gossman as a witness for the prosecution, was perilously close to being a Nazi fellow
traveler. Gossman again calls him a Jew even though he converted at age
19.
Ernst Kantororowicz |
Number four and five in the author’s rogues gallery are the medievalist Ernst Kantorowicz
(“Eka”) and Edith Landmann, a philosopher married to a well-known economist.
Stefan George |
Both Eka and Landmann belonged to the inner circle of the poet Stefan George, whose
esoteric and powerful poetry attracted people of very different views and
backgrounds. There were anti-Semites among them,
The brothers Satuffenberg |
but the brothers Stauffenberg, who almost
managed to kill Hitler in July 1944, were also part of George’s circle, about a
quarter of whose members were Jews. What attracted Jews to this cult (George
was always “the Master” to them) is a fascinating question. It rested on the
famous German-Jewish symbiosis—a fatal, one-sided misunderstanding, as Gershom
Scholem later put it. But George was not a Nazi—when he wrote about das
Reich he did not have Hitler’s Third Reich in mind. The year the Nazis
came to power George moved to Switzerland, where he died. He never endorsed the
Nazis and rejected the offer to become head of the German writers academy. Nor
did he ever publicly condemn Nazism. He did not comment on current affairs; on
WWI he had written—“this is not our war.” His (and Kantorowicz’s) cult of a
hidden, secret Germany referred to something in the realm of the spirit, not of
this world.
To call Kantorowicz
a Nazi as the medievalist Norman Cantor has done, betrays a profound ignorance
of German politics and probably politics in general—namely the difference between conservatives and
Nazis. Kantorowicz’s main work prior to WWII, which made him famous, was
about Emperor Friedrich II (1194-1250). But Kantorowicz admired and probably
somewhat idealized Friedrich not because he was a war hero but on the contrary,
in view of his chivalry and humanism, which led his contemporaries to call him stupor
mundi, the wonder of the world. At his court in Sicily he assembled Muslim
and Jewish savants to learn from them—this at a time when rulers were not known
for their intellectual interests and when religious tolerance was anything but
common. Kantorowicz was a conservative and in the words of his friends a
“Draufgaenger,” a daredevil. Politically naïve, he would join the unsavory Freikorps after
WWI. But after WWII as a tenured professor at Berkeley this ardent
anticommunist was also one of the few who refused to sign an anticommunist
loyalty oath demanded by the university. This was no one’s business, an
intolerable infringement of privacy and his rights. It cost him his job, but he
could not care less. He had no difficulty finding another position—at the
Princeton Institute of Advanced Studies.
Like Kantorowicz, Edith Landmann was highly educated but political common sense
was not her forte. She
wrote George in early 1933 that some of the Nazi views were in certain respects
close to the ideas she and her friends had expressed earlier on. She had also
been an anti-Semite (her own words); her views about Jews who were less
patriotic-German than she was were similar to those of Marc Bloch. Later, on
realizing how bad her judgment had been, she became not only a Zionist (as Gossman notes) but a
sympathizer of the Irgun.
Gossman also deals with some patriotic German Jewish
organizations active in the 1930s. One is the association of WWI veterans (RJF),
which had at one time 40,000 members. The other is a youth group named Schwarzes
Faehnlein. A number of declarations are quoted in which the RJF expressed
its loyalty to the government that came to power in 1933; no political
declarations were expected from a youth group. (Under pressure from the Gestapo
it was forced to dissolve in summer 1934.) Since I was a member of both
organizations (albeit at the tender age of 12), I can bear witness that the
quotations are correct. And yet—the general picture presented is quite
misleading. Why? Because there was a world of difference between declarations
made, forced or unforced, and what really went on in these organizations. In
order to survive, to lead a more or less normal life in a totalitarian regime, dissimulation was the first
commandment. There is a good description in Czeslaw Milosz’Captive
Mind about the need to practice dissimulation (ketman in
the Shi’ite tradition, taqi’a among the Sunnis) in such
circumstances. But this is difficult, perhaps impossible, to understand by
people who have had the great good fortune to lead lives entirely free of such
pressures.
Why did Jews join an organization like the RJF? For the simple
reason that those who had
served in the army in WWI enjoyed certain exemptions from the anti-Jewish laws.
According to the Nazi version of history Jews had shirked military service;
this was not true, most had served, and 12,000 had been killed. These
exemptions did not last long, at most a year or two, but who could blame
those who wanted to make use of the temporary benefits?
As far as my generation was concerned, the explanation was even
more obvious—the reasons were not ideological but pragmatic: They joined the
sports branch of the RJF. True, there was also a Zionist sports organization,
but it existed only in a few places and the RJF usually had better facilities.
Since Jews were excluded from German sports groups, it was only natural that
most would join associations such as the RJF where such facilities existed. No
ideology was involved, no patriotic speeches, not even the national anthem but
soccer, swimming, track and field, and some other sports. There was a legendary
boxing trainer in our town named Lachmann; under cover of darkness non-Jewish
boxers came for a workout with him. I served as a sparring partner of someone
five or six years older than I was at the time. They went on to the 1936
Olympic games, including athletes such as Buettner, Miner 1, and his brother
Miner 2. Some came home with medals. For me, it certainly was a useful
experience.
Gossman had the good fortune to
attend the Pollokshields primary school in Glasgow and schools in Renfrewshire
and Ayrshire, and he handsomely thanks his teachers, to whom his book is
dedicated. Had he gone to a German school after 1933 as the present writer did,
he would have been given an assignment to write an essay on “Ludwig Uhland in
the light of National Socialism”—a demeaning task that would have helped him to
understand life in a totalitarian dictatorship. There was no way out but to
comply with the assignment. The very subject was preposterous: Ludwig Uhland (1787-1862),
a fine poet who wrote about castles (“and the moon about it standing and the
mist rise solemnly”—translation by Longfellow), and his spiritual connection to
the author of Mein Kampf.
The activities of the youth organization after 1933 were by no
means identical with those officially stated. Anti-Nazi literature was
circulated, including the Communist Manifesto. Groups had their signature
songs—ours happened to be the Warszawianka and Unsterbliche
Opfer (Immortal Martyrs), that is to say left-wing revolutionary
statements. The head of our group (nicknamed Tom), who became a lifelong
friend, suddenly disappeared in 1934. The Gestapo had made a search at his home
and found literature they did not like at all, as well as a revolver. He went
to South Africa, where he became one of the leaders of the Liberal party.
Not all Jews living in Germany in 1933 were clear-eyed militant
anti-fascists of pure heart.
There were many similar cases,
whereas the hyper-patriots were very few. One of these few was Günter Holzmann (nicknamed
Akela, derived from The Jungle Book) at one time head of the
local branch of our little movement, a young man of great personal courage and
monumental political stupidity. Soon after the Nazis’ rise to power he
published an advertisement in a local newspaper making it known that he had
nothing in common with the Jewish community. One day in 1933 he decided to pay
a visit to the head of the Hitler Youth in Berlin, trying to persuade him to recognize
the little movement to which he belonged. He did not stay long in that
building; in his 1997 autobiography On
Dit Que J’ai Survécu Quelque Part au-delà des Mers…, he called this venture
one of the stupidest things he ever did.
Holzmann was probably the closest approximation to the
“Oppenheim context.” But his story did not end there. He went on to Cambridge
to study mineralogy and geology. Later he emigrated to Peru, worked there and
in Bolivia for a leading company (Hochschild or Patino, I believe),
and lived and worked in places where few were willing to stay for any length of
time. He made a considerable fortune, which, having become a militant
left-winger, he left to Le
Monde Diplomatique,
the main organ of Castroism. On Page 1 or 2 of this weekly, readers will
encounter an announcement expressing gratitude to the Fondation Gunter
Holzmann; it would probably be too much to expect to be told that he was a
latecomer to the cause.
Not all Jews living in Germany in 1933 were clear-eyed militant
anti-fascists of pure heart. Many, perhaps most, lacked political
understanding, hoping against hope that Nazi rule would quickly end. There were fools among them and
traitors. There was a handful collaborating with the Gestapo, mostly under
pressure. But were there more of them in Germany than elsewhere? I do
not know of statistics that say that there were. As far as I know, there was no
“Oppenheim context.” It is doubtful whether the story of the Kaiser’s spy from
Cologne and Cairo teaches anything except that with a greater distance from the
age of totalitarian dictatorship it is becoming more and more difficult for
later generations to understand what life was really like in those far-away
days. German political language has provided an expression applicable in such
cases: Die Gnade der spaeten Geburt—the good fortune of having
being born too late. But there is a price to be paid for such good fortune.
This is an abridged version of an
essay to appear in Optimism in Politics:
Reflections on Contemporary History by Walter Laqueur
(Transaction 2014).
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