Ordinary Men
Christopher R. Browning is a history professor at Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, Washington. His work on holocaust historiography has allowed Browning to contribute to the world's most important compendium of holocaust history at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem. The sources used to write Ordinary Men were primary sources only: documentary evidence mainly emerging in the legal trials that ensued. Therefore, the author is well qualified to address the matter of the Reserve Police Battalion 101. Browning's experience and background would not have made Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland easy to write, though. The material is summarily grim, troubling, and difficult to digest. However, the holocaust is a significant part of modern history that must be continually remembered in order to never forget.
Ordinary Men is about a group of working class middle-aged German men from Hamburg who are selected to participate in the Nazi Final Solution in Poland. Their initial appointment was rather vague, allowing the men to gradually adjust to the impact of their orders and become desensitized to the fact that they would become mass murderers. Browning traces the evolution of the men's consciences as they went from ordinary men with ordinary lives as truck drivers, teachers, and businessmen to brutal baby killers. The most disturbing feature of Ordinary Men is the fact that the transformation from family man to killer seemed relatively easy for...
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