The Nuremberg Interviews
The Nuremberg Interviews reveals the chilling innermost thoughts of the former Nazi officials under indictment at the famous
postwar trial. The architects of one of history's greatest atrocities speak out about their lives, their careers in the Nazi Party, and their views on the Holocaust. Their reflections are recorded in a
set of interviews conducted by a U.S. Army psychiatrist. Dr. Leon Goldensohn was entrusted with monitoring the
mental health of the two dozen German leaders charged with carrying out genocide, as well as that of many of the defense and prosecution witnesses. These recorded conversations have gone largely
unexamined for more than fifty years.
Now, Robert Gellately-one of the premier historians of Nazi Germany-has transcribed, edited, and annotated the interviews, and makes them available to the public for the first time in this
volume. Here are interviews with the highest-ranking Nazi officials in the Nuremberg jails, including Hans Frank,
Hermann Goering, Ernst
Kaltenbrunner, and Joachim von Ribbentrop. Here, too, are interviews with the lesser-known officials
who were, nonetheless, essential to the workings of the Third Reich.
Goldensohn was a particularly astute interviewer, his training as a psychiatrist leading him to probe the
motives, the rationales, and the skewing of morality that allowed these men to enact an unfathomable evil. Candid and often shockingly truthful, these interviews are deeply disturbing in their
illumination of an ideology gone mad. Each interview is annotated with biographical information that places the man and his actions in their historical context. These interviews are a profoundly
important addition to ourunderstanding of the Nazi mind and mission.
ISBN-13: 9780375414695
Author : Leon Goldensohn
Publisher: Random House, Incorporated
Publication date: 05/10/2004
Editorial Reviews - William Grimes
[Gellately] has produced a gripping work of history, a series of oral narratives that drag the reader, almost by force, into the nightmarish mental landscape of the Third Reich. — The New York
Times
Fewer Reviews - From The Critics
"How did you figure a six-month-old Jewish infant must be killed-was it an enemy?" Goldensohn asked Otto
Ohlendorf at Nuremberg. "In the child," explained the SS lieutenant general, "we see the grown-up." Goldensohn, an army psychiatrist, was assigned in 1946 to the Nuremberg trials. In his evaluations of the German defendants, he quickly got over his shock at their casual
acceptance of Nazi doctrine and refusal to take personal responsibility for their acts. Goldensohn died in
1961, and recently his brother Eli collected the long-stored transcripts edited by historian Gellately (The Gestapo and
German Society). Goldensohn tried to coax childhood memories from the men, seeking early motivations for later monstrousness, and found little to go on. Most were ordinary people who took
unexpected opportunities in politically festering interwar Germany.
Few expressed even meager repentance, blaming betrayal of the Nazi ideal for the thwarting of the Garden of Eden promised by Hitler, who remained for them a political and military genius. Goldensohn's conversations with these men are perturbing because most of the them seem like many of us except for the
circumstances that lured them into opportunistic deviance. Goldensohn may not have left a headline-making legacy of belated revelations, but he has complicated further the tapestry of evil. 31
photos.