fbpx
Wikipedia

Nazis and Nazi Collaborators (Punishment) Law

The Nazis and Nazi Collaborators (Punishment) Law (Hebrew: חוק לעשיית דין בנאצים ובעוזריהם, תש"י-1950) is a 1950 Israeli law passed by the First Knesset that provides a legal framework for the prosecution of crimes against Jews and other persecuted people committed in Nazi Germany, German-occupied Europe, or territory under the control of another Axis power between 1933 and 1945. The law's primary target was Jewish Holocaust survivors alleged to have collaborated with the Nazis, in particular prisoner functionaries ("kapos") and the Jewish Ghetto Police. It was motivated by the anger of survivors against perceived collaborators and a desire to "purify" the community.

The law criminalizes crimes against humanity, war crimes, and "crimes against the Jewish people", as well as a variety of lesser offenses. It has a number of unusual provisions, including ex post facto application, extraterritoriality, a relaxation in the usual rules of evidence, and mandatory death sentence for the most serious crimes laid out in the law.

Under the law, around forty alleged Jewish collaborators were put on trial between 1951 and 1972, of whom two-thirds were convicted. Such trials were highly controversial and have been criticized by judges and legal scholars due to the moral dilemma of judging someone who was also persecuted and under threat of death at the time the offense was committed. Three non-Jews were prosecuted under the law, including the high-profile cases of Adolf Eichmann (1961) and John Demjanjuk (1987). Although both Eichmann's and Demjanjuk's lawyers challenged the validity of the law, it was upheld by both Israeli and United States courts.

Background Edit

 
Jewish Ghetto Police in Łódź Ghetto, 1940

The Holocaust was a genocide committed primarily by Nazi Germany that claimed the lives of six million Jews living in Germany and German-occupied Europe.[1] Many Jews were forced into Nazi ghettos where a Jewish leadership (known as Judenrat) and Jewish Ghetto Police were appointed to execute Nazi orders. Refusal to hand over other Jews to the Nazis to be killed could result in execution.[2] The Jewish Ghetto Police was perceived as "the most hated Jewish organ during the Holocaust", according to Rivka Brot.[3] In Nazi concentration camps, a small number of Jews were recruited to become prisoner functionaries known as "kapos", which had the responsibility of supervising other prisoners and executing the orders of concentration camp guards. Not all prisoner functionaries were collaborators; some were considered to have "behaved honorably". Becoming a kapo could mean the difference between a chance to survive and near-certain death.[4] However, among other survivors functionaries are remembered for their brutality; survivors often charged that Jewish kapos were "worse than the Germans".[5]

Following World War II, some alleged collaborators were subject to extrajudicial violence and even murder from other Holocaust survivors.[6][7] In order to maintain order, postwar Jewish communities in displaced-persons camps set up "honor courts" that would judge alleged collaborators, handing down sentences of public condemnation and social ostracism. Similar clashes also erupted in Mandatory Palestine and informal honor courts were operated by landsmanshaften (organizations for immigrants from a certain country) and the World Zionist Congress.[6] After World War II, many Holocaust survivors immigrated to Israel; by the late 1950s, they consisted one-quarter of the population.[8]

While some Holocaust survivors preferred to leave the past behind them, others thought that the new state should be pure of collaborators with the Nazis.[9] Beginning in 1948, some Holocaust survivors brought petitions to the Israel Police alleging that other Holocaust survivors were Nazi collaborators, but there was no legal basis for prosecution in these cases. According to legal scholars Orna Ben-Naftali and Yogev Tuval, the drafters of the Nazis and Nazi Collaborators (Punishment) Law saw its purpose in pragmatic terms as assuaging the anger among Holocaust survivors in Israel.[10] This is disputed by other writers who argue that there were only a few dozen complaints among a large number of survivors, which could not be considered popular demand.[11] Understanding of how the Nazi genocide was carried out was limited in Israeli society at the time the law was passed.[12]

Legislative history Edit

 
Jewish kapo in Salaspils camp

An "Act against Jewish War Criminals" was drafted in August 1949 by Deputy Attorney General Haim Wilkenfeld.[13][14] On 26 December 1949, the Crime of Genocide (Prevention and Punishment) Law was introduced to the first plenary session of the First Knesset. A law without retrospective application that would codify the 1948 Genocide Convention into Israeli law, it was eventually passed on 29 March 1950.[15][16]

On 27 March 1950, Minister of Justice Pinkhas Rosen introduced the bill to prosecute Nazi collaborators, now renamed "Nazis and Nazi Collaborators (Punishment) Law", to the Knesset with an expanded scope that, in theory, would enable the prosecution of Holocaust perpetrators as well as collaborators.[17] Rosen said, "It is assumed that Nazi criminals, who could be charged on the basis of the crimes included in the law, would not dare come to Israel."[18] Instead, "the law will apply less to Nazis than to their Jewish collaborators who are here in the State of Israel", Rosen said, invoking the Hebrew phrase "let our camp be pure", derived from Deuteronomy 23:14.[19][20] Some Knesset members, including Hanan Rubin and Eri Jabotinsky, believed that Nazis might eventually be tried under the law either via extradition or other means.[20] However, the majority saw the provision for the prosecution of Nazis as symbolic rather than a genuine possibility.[21]

Knesset members debated exactly what form the punishment of Nazi collaborators would take. Nahum Nir and Yona Kesse argued for an institutionalized version of the honor courts that would be heard by a jury (in Israel, all trials are heard by a judge) and perhaps dispense moral rather than legal punishments. This proposal was rejected both out of a desire for harsh punishments and to avoid fragmenting the legal system.[22] Ya'akov Gil, the former chief rabbi of the Jewish Brigade, sponsored a successful proposal to add the offense "crimes against the Jewish people" to the law, in addition to war crimes and crimes against humanity.[21]

Lawmakers explicitly rejected a proposal by Zerach Warhaftig (United Religious Front) that would have distinguished offenses by Nazis and collaborators.[23] Wilkenfeld explained, "If a Nazi in a concentration camp beat inmates, and a Jewish kapo in the same camp did the same – how can we create a provision for each of them?"[24][14] Warhaftig rejected this, saying "The Nazi was a murderer and the Jew was forced to act as he did".[24][14] He was in the minority; the final version of the law made no distinction between acts committed by an SS guard and a Jewish prisoner.[14]

Mapam politician Yisrael Bar-Yehuda strongly rejected a suggestion to permit excusing conduct under duress or in self-defense:

I am opposed to … this kind of person being relieved [of legal responsibility] because he did what he did out of cowardice. If a person was told that if he did not kill another person, his daughter would be raped and killed, and, to save his daughter, he killed someone else, he is not, to my mind, relieved of criminal responsibility, even if he did all he could to prevent it.[14]

This attitude was based ideologically on his party's close association with the Zionist youth movements that led ghetto uprisings, often in opposition to the Jewish leadership. From this point of view, anyone who joined the Judenrat or the Jewish police, or became a kapo, was automatically considered a traitor.[14] This strict view was opposed by members of other parties, including Warhaftig, who did not see joining such institutions as a criminal act in of itself. In the end, the Knesset adopted a strict and limited form of exculpation, also rejecting Bar-Yehuda's suggestion that anyone who served in the underground should be granted immunity.[25]

The law originally carried a 20-year statute of limitations from the time the offense was committed for offenses less serious than murder, which was retroactively repealed in 1963.[26]

Provisions Edit

Article 1 covers crimes against humanity, war crimes, and "crimes against the Jewish people", all of which carry a mandatory death sentence unless an extenuating circumstance under Section 11(b) can be proven, in which case the minimum sentence is 10 years in prison. The definitions for crimes against humanity and war crimes are very similar to the definitions in the Nuremberg Charter, except that the time period covered is extended to the beginning of the Nazi regime rather than the outbreak of World War II.[15][27] "Crimes against the Jewish people" is based on the wording of the 1948 Genocide Convention.[28][15] Unlike the Genocide Convention, "destroying or desecrating Jewish religious or cultural assets and values" (a.k.a. cultural genocide) and "inciting to hatred of Jews" (as opposed to incitement to genocide) are included in "crimes against the Jewish people".[28] To be prosecutable under the law, the crimes must have been committed in an "enemy country" (Nazi Germany, German-occupied Europe, or territory controlled by another Axis power).[29] The law is limited to one victim group (Jews), one time period (1933–1945), and one location (Europe), whereas the Genocide Convention is of universal applicability.[30]

Articles 2 to 6 define offenses that do not carry a mandatory death penalty.[30] Article 2 covers various "crimes against persecuted persons" which are derived from the standard criminal code and applied as if they had been committed in Israel.[31] Article 3 outlaws "membership in enemy organization"; its language parallels the Nuremberg Charter's language against criminal organizations.[30][32] Article 4 covers offenses committed "in a place of confinement... against a persecuted person", which are also derived from the Israeli criminal code. This article was intended to cover crimes by functionaries in concentration camps and ghettos which were not severe enough to fall under Article 1.[33] Article 6 criminalizes "delivering up persecuted person to enemy administration", which according to Ben-Naftali and Tuval was primarily aimed at the actions of Jewish councils. Article 7 criminalizes the blackmail of persecuted persons, with an up to seven year sentence if the accused "received or demanded a benefit (a) from a persecuted person under threat of delivering up him or another persecuted person to an enemy administration; or (b) from a person who had given shelter to a persecuted person, under threats of delivering up him or the persecuted person sheltered by him to an enemy administration".[23] According to Ben-Naftali and Tuval, these last two articles are the only ones that make an (implicit) distinction between perpetrators and collaborators.[23]

Article 10 enumerates the circumstances that would lead to the acquittal of the defendant: if he acted to save himself from the danger of immediate death, or if his actions were intended to avoid worse consequences. Such circumstances did not excuse any of Article 1 crimes or murder. Article 11 lays out the only two circumstances that can be taken into account for the mitigation of sentencing: "that the person committed the offence under conditions which... would have exempted him from criminal responsibility or constituted a reason for pardoning the offence", assuming that the accused tried to mitigate the consequence of the offence, or that it was committed with the intent to avoid a more serious outcome.[34][35]

Several provisions in the law are considered "exceptional":[36][37][38]

Trials Edit

Kapo trials Edit

Within fifteen months of the law being passed, the Israel Police received at least 350 complaints from Holocaust survivors.[39] Some individuals fled the country, fearing prosecution.[40] In the first six months, the Attorney General indicted at least fifteen people under the law, charging them all with at least four counts of crimes including crimes against humanity.[41] Prosecutors initially considered anyone who served as a functionary as guilty until proven innocent[42][43] and in league with the Nazis.[41] Through 1952, verdicts were harsh with judges handing down an average five years' imprisonment.[42] In 1952, Yehezkel Enigster [he] / Jungster was convicted of crimes against humanity and sentenced to death, but this verdict was overturned on appeal by the Israeli Supreme Court and his sentence reduced to two years' imprisonment.[44][45][46] After the Enigster case, prosecutors mostly avoided charging Jewish defendants with Article 1 crimes and distinguished them from Holocaust perpetrators.[46]

According to Dan Porat, the 1958 verdict of the Kastner trial (a libel trial in which Rudolf Kastner was eventually cleared of collaborationism) led to another shift: defendants were now viewed as people who had good intentions but committed bad deeds. Following the 1961 trial of Adolf Eichmann, in which prosecutor Gideon Hausner set out to remove the guilt of collaboration from Jewish functionaries, defendants were more often viewed primarily as victims of the Nazis. This paradigm was challenged by the prosecutor David Libai who charged former Jewish policeman Hirsch Barenblat with membership in an enemy organization. If Barenblat had been convicted, it could have led to tens of thousands of other Israeli citizens also being considered guilty; Libai's superiors ordered him to drop the charge in order to avoid this outcome. Although Barenblat was convicted on other charges, his conviction was overturned by the Supreme Court in 1964 as the judges considered it inappropriate to punish those who took up positions as functionaries to save their own lives.[47] Additional trials were held for especially egregious behavior which continued until 1972.[48]

Between 1951 and 1972, around 40 trials were held against Jews accused of collaborating with the Nazis.[49][50] The exact number is not known because many of the records are sealed by a 1995 court order.[51] In the known cases, two-thirds of defendants were convicted and all but one sentenced to prison, with an average sentence of 28 months.[50] No Jewish defendant was charged with "crimes against the Jewish people".[52] The trials relied almost entirely on witness testimony as most of the alleged crimes left no documentation.[53] Israeli judges and prosecutors, however, realized that not all the witness testimony was reliable as some witnesses' memories were distorted by trauma and others added unverified information to their testimony, for reasons such as desire for retribution.[54] None of those questioned or tried admitted responsibility for wrongdoing.[41]

Israeli historian Idith Zertal writes that the trials

exposed the routine regime of terror, oppression, and abuse in the ghettos and camps, where inmates’ human character and moral stamina were obliterated long before their bodies were consumed, and brought to light the existential and moral hell created by the Nazis, the monstrous upside-down world which had transformed persecuted into persecutors, victims into reluctant wrongdoers and accomplices in their own oppression.[55]

In 2014 journalist Itamar Levin sought access to the files but was refused on privacy grounds.[56] Levin took it to court, but a police officer assigned to examine the files had not reported as of early 2021.[56] Yaacov Lozowick, the state archivist at the time, read 120 of the files himself and believes that public release of the files would for the most part exonerate the people who had been suspects.[56]

Trials of non-Jews Edit

Only three non-Jews were tried under the law.[49] The very first trial under the law involved Andrej Banik, accused of responsibility for the deportation of Jews from Slovakia; according to Porat, the timing was "clearly chosen for the symbolic value" of trying a non-Jew first.[49][57] Banik came to Israel with his wife, a Jewish convert to Christianity, but was soon identified as a member of the Hlinka Guard by survivors[58] and first questioned by police before the passage of the law.[59] He was ultimately acquitted[60] because the testimony against him was unreliable; the judges ruled that one witness in particular "either lied intentionally or is suffering from hallucinations and imagines things that he may have experienced which he attributes to the defendant with no basis whatsoever".[61] Other non-Jewish residents of Israel were arrested and charged with being Nazi collaborators, including Alfred Miller, a Hungarian waiter who was accused by a survivor of having handed him over to the Nazis and later cleared without trial. According to Porat, some Jews suspected that all non-Jews were Nazi collaborators due to suffering the experience of betrayal.[59]

Adolf Eichmann Edit

 
The Israeli Supreme Court hears Eichmann's appeal

In 1960, the major Holocaust perpetrator Adolf Eichmann was kidnapped in Argentina and brought to Israel to stand trial.[62] His trial, which opened on 11 April 1961, was televised and broadcast internationally, intended to educate about the crimes committed against Jews, which had been secondary to the Nuremberg trials.[63] Prosecutor Hausner also tried to challenge the portrayal of Jewish functionaries that had emerged in the earlier trials, showing them at worst as victims forced to carry out Nazi decrees while minimizing the "gray zone" of morally questionable behavior.[64] Hausner later wrote that available archival documents "would have sufficed to get Eichmann sentenced ten times over"; nevertheless, he summoned more than 100 witnesses, most of them who had never met the defendant, for didactic purposes.[65]

Eichmann was charged with fifteen counts of violating the law, including multiple counts of crimes against the Jewish people, crimes against humanity against both Jews and non-Jews, and war crimes.[66] Convicted on all counts, Eichmann was sentenced to death. He appealed to the Supreme Court, which confirmed the convictions and the sentence. President Yitzhak Ben-Zvi rejected Eichmann's request to commute the sentence. In Israel's only judicial execution to date, Eichmann was hanged on 31 May 1962 at Ramla Prison.[67]

Ivan Demjanjuk Edit

The last trial under the law was that of Ivan Demjanjuk,[49][68][69] who was convicted in 1987 of "crimes against the Jewish people", "crimes against humanity", "war crimes", and "crimes against persecuted people".[49][70] The conviction was based on the testimony of six eyewitnesses who identified him as the notorious guard known as "Ivan the Terrible" at Treblinka extermination camp.[71] Evidence not available to the court at the time cast doubt on this identification, and Demjanjuk's conviction was overturned on appeal by the Supreme Court on the basis of reasonable doubt.[72] In 2011, he was convicted in Germany of assisting in the murder of 28,000 people as a guard at Sobibor extermination camp.[68]

Reception Edit

Validity of the law Edit

 
Posters in Tel Aviv after the conviction of Adolf Eichmann, 1964

Eichmann's defense lawyer, Robert Servatius, challenged the jurisdiction of Israeli courts over Eichmann's crimes and the validity of the law because it was ex post facto and extraterritorial. Judge Moshe Landau responded that it was a valid Israeli law. In its judgement the district court extensively justified the law based on precedents in English law.[73] The verdict also stated that "The jurisdiction to try crimes under international law is universal."[74] Servatius also argued that law was invalid because the victims of the crimes punishable by the law were not Israeli citizens at the time. In response, the court stated that it was "the moral duty of every sovereign State... to enforce the natural right to punish, possessed by the victims of the crime whoever they may be, against criminals" who had violated international law.[75]

Servatius again challenged the law during Eichmann's appeal to the Supreme Court, arguing that the law was inconsistent with international law because it tried foreign citizens for actions committed on foreign soil before the creation of Israel. The Supreme Court dismissed the appeal, stating that "The District Court has in its judgment dealt with [these] contentions in an exhaustive, profound and most convincing manner."[76] Nevertheless, the court proceeded to give a full justification for the law according to the international and English law that Israeli law is based on.[76] The court ruled that there was no international principle prohibiting retroactive laws or those which applied to foreign nationals on foreign territory. Furthermore, the law was consistent with international law because it sought to establish international principles in Israeli law.[77]

Demjanjuk's lawyers also challenged the validity of the Israeli law during his extradition proceedings in United States federal court. The United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio ruled against him. Chief Judge Frank J. Battisti wrote that the law "conforms with the international law principles of 'universal jurisdiction'" and was not unconstitutionally retroactive because it merely provided a legal framework for punishing actions that were already illegal.[78][79]

Application to Holocaust survivors Edit

Judges and prosecutors Edit

Attorney General Haim Cohn filed dozens of indictments under the law. Later, he stated: "[I came] to believe that those of us who did not experience the Holocaust ourselves, have no ability or the right to try a person for his actions, intentions and constraints when he [was trapped in] that Hell".[80] Although Israeli judges were not of one mind about applying the law to Holocaust survivors (those who were more lenient to the accused tended to be survivors themselves), "the verdicts squirm with disquiet about the delegated task at hand", according to law professor Mark A. Drumbl.[81] Among the complaints was that judging the collaborators diminished the guilt of the Nazi perpetrators.[81] Overturning the conviction of Barenblat, Supreme Court judge Yitzhak Olshan found that "this is a question for history and not for the courts".[82]

In his judgement of the same case, Landau wrote:

[I]t would be presumptuous and self-righteous on our part, us who never walked in the shoes of those [who were there] ... to criticize those 'little people' who did not rise to a supreme level of morality, while they were subject to rampant persecution by a regime whose the primary purpose was to wipe out their humanity. We must not interpret the law ... according to a measure of moral behavior that only few were capable of ... [C]riminal law prohibitions, including the Nazi and Nazi Collaborators Law, were not written for exceptional heroes, but for ordinary mortals, with their ordinary weaknesses.[83][12]

Because the law applied exclusively to past events, it has been characterized as retributive justice.[84][38][a] According to Supreme Court justice Shneur Zalman Cheshin [he], the law's purpose was "revenge on Israel's enemies".[38]

Journalism Edit

The kapo trials attracted relatively little press coverage, but many Holocaust survivors attended court to observe the proceedings.[85][86] According to Israeli journalist Tom Segev, newspapers were reluctant to report on stories considered "filthy and embarrassing".[85] Rivka Brot writes that the framing of the law turned the cases into disputes between survivors which did not interest wider Israeli society.[87]

Following the quashing of the death sentence of Enigster, the editor-in-chief of Yediot Aharonot, Herzl Rosenblum, published an op-ed in the 8 April 1952 edition of the paper praising the verdict. Arguing that no German Holocaust perpetrators were executed primarily for crimes against Jews, Rosenblum contended that it would be unjust "to hang the few Jewish helpers in these circumstances—who did what they did under the most unbearable pressure".[88] He also argued that it was difficult, if not impossible, for someone who had not been in that position to judge, considering that "different moral laws reigned there".[89]

According to a 1962 article in Davar, the Mapai party newspaper, many Israelis felt ambivalent about the trials. "After all, to some degree, they too [the defendants] were, in carrying out their crimes victims of the Nazi beast—moral victims who in their weaknesses participated in an unprecedented crime, and a crime against their people."[90]

Academic analysis Edit

In a book that they coauthored, law professors Michael Bazyler and Frank Tuerkheimer were unable to agree on a conclusion to the chapter on the kapo trials. Bazyler condemned the "bad law that should never have been passed by the Knesset". He disagreed that any Jewish survivor should be tried under criminal law for such offenses, "because of the extreme, in fact, inconceivable circumstances of Jews in the concentration camps".[91] In contrast, Tuerkheimer argued that "even in the horrid environment of the camp, kapos could make choices. Those who opted for the brutal should not escape punishment simply because they were Jews or concentration camp inmates."[92]

In a separate article, Bazyler and Julia Scheppach argue that the law's "intention most likely was to distance Israelis from what they regarded as the shameful response of Europe’s Jews to their destruction", and should be viewed in light of general hostility and contempt for Holocaust survivors in Israel, who were seen as having gone "like sheep to the slaughter".[15] Zertal argues that trials "in every sense of the word, were purges" and that the law would have been more accurately titled "Law for Punishment of Minor Collaborators of the Nazis".[55] She highlights the fact that for a decade after it was passed, "not one of the defendants tried under the law was charged with or found guilty of directly or indirectly causing the death of a single person".[93][85]

Porat finds that some prosecutors who took part in the trials forgot them or misleadingly omitted them from discussion of the law.[94] Furthermore, he charges that Israeli institutions such as Yad Vashem omit the issue from their public presentations and in fact "have been suppressing the memory of the kapo trials for fear of tainting the image of the victims".[95] Porat sees this omission as part of a broader trend in which Israelis identify with Holocaust victims, in his view excessively.[96]

Rivka Brot notes that "criminal law recognizes only two outcomes: innocence or guilt". In her view, this is an insufficient frame to deal with the phenomenon of the "gray zone" which existed between these two poles.[87] According to Drumbl, "[l]aw lacked the vocabulary or finesse; the courtroom was a poor conduit" for reckoning with the behavior of kapos[97] and the law's "quest for condemnation, finitude, and clarity effectively constructed the persecuted Jew as a Nazi".[52] Ben-Naftali and Tuval conclude that the law was drafted without consideration for ordinary humans and set out to expel "collaborators" (who in historical terms were also victims) from the imagined community of survivors and instead classify them "into the only other remaining category that the Law recognized: the Nazis".[98]

According to Israeli law professor Mordechai Kremnitzer [he], the blurring of lines between Holocaust perpetrators and Jewish collaborators in the law is reminiscent of the ideas proposed by Holocaust deniers that Jews were responsible for the crimes against them. Kremnitzer argues that "[c]riminal law should not demand courageous resistance".[12] Therefore, forced participation in collaboration should not be criminalized and the necessity defense should be allowed for any prosecutions of Nazi collaborators.[99] Multiple authors have compared the case of judging kapos to 2010s trials of current or former child soldiers who committed war crimes, such as Dominic Ongwen and Omar Khadr.[100][101]

Explanatory notes Edit

  1. ^ One judge commented, "This law has almost no intention of deterrence, not in regard to the defendant or another person. I see the rationale of the law… in payback."[84] According to Supreme Court justice Shneur Zalman Cheshin [he], "The stipulated punishments ... were not, in the main, meant to reform the offender or deter potential offenders, but – as the law’s name suggests – to take revenge on Israel’s enemies."[38]

Citations Edit

  1. ^ "Introduction to the Holocaust: What was the Holocaust?". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved 7 November 2020.
  2. ^ "Jewish Councils (Judenraete)". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved 7 November 2020.
  3. ^ Brot 2020, p. 92.
  4. ^ Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, p. 419.
  5. ^ Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, p. 420.
  6. ^ a b Porat 2019, p. 6.
  7. ^ Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, pp. 420–421.
  8. ^ Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, p. 417.
  9. ^ Porat 2019, p. 67.
  10. ^ Ben-Naftali & Tuval 2006, p. 144.
  11. ^ Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, p. 424.
  12. ^ a b c d Kremnitzer 2020, p. 168.
  13. ^ Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, p. 421.
  14. ^ a b c d e f Porat 2019, p. 77.
  15. ^ a b c d Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, p. 427.
  16. ^ Ben-Naftali & Tuval 2006, p. 133.
  17. ^ Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, p. 426.
  18. ^ Ben-Naftali & Tuval 2006, p. 143.
  19. ^ Ben-Naftali & Tuval 2006, pp. 143, 144, 147.
  20. ^ a b Porat 2019, p. 75.
  21. ^ a b Porat 2019, p. 76.
  22. ^ Porat 2019, pp. 74–75.
  23. ^ a b c Ben-Naftali & Tuval 2006, p. 137.
  24. ^ a b Zertal 2005, p. 63.
  25. ^ Porat 2019, p. 78.
  26. ^ Section 12(b), 1963 amendment
  27. ^ Ben-Naftali & Tuval 2006, p. 134.
  28. ^ a b Ben-Naftali & Tuval 2006, pp. 131–132.
  29. ^ Section 16
  30. ^ a b c Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, p. 428.
  31. ^ Ben-Naftali & Tuval 2006, pp. 135–136.
  32. ^ Ben-Naftali & Tuval 2006, p. 135.
  33. ^ Ben-Naftali & Tuval 2006, p. 136.
  34. ^ Ben-Naftali & Tuval 2006, p. 138.
  35. ^ Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, p. 429.
  36. ^ a b c d e f g Ben-Naftali & Tuval 2006, pp. 138–139.
  37. ^ a b Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, pp. 426–427.
  38. ^ a b c d e f g h Zertal 2005, p. 65.
  39. ^ Porat 2019, p. 81.
  40. ^ Porat 2019, p. 82.
  41. ^ a b c Porat 2019, p. 84.
  42. ^ a b Porat 2019, pp. 6–7.
  43. ^ Zertal 2005, p. 64.
  44. ^ Ben-Naftali & Tuval 2006, p. 157.
  45. ^ Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, p. 431.
  46. ^ a b Porat 2019, p. 7.
  47. ^ Porat 2019, pp. 7–9.
  48. ^ Porat 2019, pp. 9, 209–210.
  49. ^ a b c d e Ben-Naftali & Tuval 2006, p. 129.
  50. ^ a b Porat 2019, p. 5.
  51. ^ Ben-Naftali & Tuval 2006, p. 151.
  52. ^ a b Drumbl 2019, p. 246.
  53. ^ Porat 2019, p. 59.
  54. ^ Porat 2019, pp. 67, 70.
  55. ^ a b Zertal 2005, p. 66.
  56. ^ a b c Yaacov Lozowick (28 May 2021). "70 years later, These Holocaust survivors' names are still tarnished". Haaretz.
  57. ^ Porat 2019, p. 58.
  58. ^ Porat 2019, p. 48.
  59. ^ a b Porat 2019, p. 49.
  60. ^ Porat 2019, p. 73.
  61. ^ Porat 2019, p. 70.
  62. ^ Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, p. 438.
  63. ^ Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, p. 439.
  64. ^ Porat 2019, p. 173.
  65. ^ Porat 2019, p. 174.
  66. ^ Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, p. 443.
  67. ^ Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, p. 449.
  68. ^ a b Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, p. 453.
  69. ^ Drumbl 2016, pp. 229–230.
  70. ^ Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, p. 457.
  71. ^ Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, p. 456.
  72. ^ Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, pp. 457–458.
  73. ^ Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, p. 441.
  74. ^ Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, pp. 441–442.
  75. ^ Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, p. 442.
  76. ^ a b Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, pp. 450–451.
  77. ^ Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, p. 451.
  78. ^ Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, p. 455.
  79. ^ Saxon, Wolfgang (21 October 1994). "Frank Battisti, 72, Federal Judge Presiding Over Demjanjuk Case". The New York Times. Retrieved 22 April 2021.
  80. ^ Porat 2019, p. 166.
  81. ^ a b Drumbl 2016, p. 232.
  82. ^ Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, p. 436.
  83. ^ Ben-Naftali & Tuval 2006, p. 173.
  84. ^ a b Porat 2019, p. 137.
  85. ^ a b c Bazyler & Scheppach 2012, p. 430.
  86. ^ Zertal 2005, p. 87.
  87. ^ a b Brot 2020, p. 91.
  88. ^ Porat 2019, pp. 92–93.
  89. ^ Porat 2019, p. 93.
  90. ^ Porat 2019, p. 204.
  91. ^ Bazyler & Tuerkheimer 2014, p. 224.
  92. ^ Bazyler & Tuerkheimer 2014, p. 225.
  93. ^ Zertal 2005, p. 67.
  94. ^ Porat 2019, pp. 213–214.
  95. ^ Porat 2019, pp. 214–215.
  96. ^ Porat 2019, pp. 215–216.
  97. ^ Drumbl 2019, p. 247.
  98. ^ Ben-Naftali & Tuval 2006, pp. 147, 173–174.
  99. ^ Kremnitzer 2020, pp. 168–169.
  100. ^ Drumbl 2016, p. 221.
  101. ^ Kremnitzer 2020, p. 169.

Sources Edit

  • Bazyler, Michael; Scheppach, Julia (2012). "The Strange and Curious History of the Law Used to Prosecute Adolf Eichmann". Loyola of Los Angeles International and Comparative Law Review. 34 (3): 417–461. ISSN 0277-5417.
  • Bazyler, Michael J.; Tuerkheimer, Frank M. (2014). "The Jewish Kapo Trials in Israel: Is There a Place for the Law in the Gray Zone?". Forgotten Trials of the Holocaust. NYU Press. pp. 195–226. ISBN 978-1-4798-8606-7.
  • Ben-Naftali, Orna; Tuval, Yogev (2006). "Punishing International Crimes Committed by the Persecuted". Journal of International Criminal Justice. 4 (1): 128–178. doi:10.1093/jicj/mqi022.
  • Brot, Rivka (2020). "The illusive collective memory: Revisiting the role of law in Israel's Holocaust narrative". Journal of Israeli History. 38 (1): 77–101. doi:10.1080/13531042.2020.1799526. S2CID 222136004.
  • Drumbl, Mark A. (2016). "Victims who victimise". London Review of International Law. 4 (2): 217–246. doi:10.1093/lril/lrw015.
  • Drumbl, Mark A. (2019). "Histories of the Jewish 'Collaborator': Exile, Not Guilt". In Tallgren, Immi; Skouteris, Thomas (eds.). The New Histories of International Criminal Law: Retrials. Oxford University Press. pp. 237–252. doi:10.1093/oso/9780198829638.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-256513-6.
  • Kremnitzer, Mordechai (2020). "An Argument for retributivism in international criminal law". In Jeßberger, Florian; Geneuss, Julia (eds.). Why Punish Perpetrators of Mass Atrocities?: Purposes of Punishment in International Criminal Law. Cambridge University Press. pp. 161–175. ISBN 978-1-108-47514-3.
  • Porat, Dan (2019). Bitter Reckoning: Israel Tries Holocaust Survivors as Nazi Collaborators. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-24313-2.
  • Zertal, Idith (2005). Israel's Holocaust and the Politics of Nationhood. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-139-44662-4.

Further reading Edit

  • Yablonka, Hanna (1996). "החוק לעשיית דין בנאצים ובעוזריהם: היבט נוסף לשאלת הישראלים, הניצולים והשואה" [The Law for Punishment of the Nazis and their Collaborators: Legislation, Implementation and Attitudes]. Cathedra: For the History of Eretz Israel and Its Yishuv (in Hebrew) (82): 135–152. ISSN 0334-4657. JSTOR 23403774.
  • Weitz, Yechiam (1996). "החוק לעשיית דין בנאצים ובעוזריהם ויחסה של החברה הישראלית בשנות החמישים לשואה ולניצוליה" [The Law for Punishment of the Nazis and their Collaborators as Image and Reflection of Public Opinion]. Cathedra: For the History of Eretz Israel and Its Yishuv (in Hebrew) (82): 153–164. ISSN 0334-4657. JSTOR 23403775.

External links Edit

  • Legislative history (in Hebrew)

nazis, nazi, collaborators, punishment, hebrew, חוק, לעשיית, דין, בנאצים, ובעוזריהם, תש, 1950, 1950, israeli, passed, first, knesset, that, provides, legal, framework, prosecution, crimes, against, jews, other, persecuted, people, committed, nazi, germany, ger. The Nazis and Nazi Collaborators Punishment Law Hebrew חוק לעשיית דין בנאצים ובעוזריהם תש י 1950 is a 1950 Israeli law passed by the First Knesset that provides a legal framework for the prosecution of crimes against Jews and other persecuted people committed in Nazi Germany German occupied Europe or territory under the control of another Axis power between 1933 and 1945 The law s primary target was Jewish Holocaust survivors alleged to have collaborated with the Nazis in particular prisoner functionaries kapos and the Jewish Ghetto Police It was motivated by the anger of survivors against perceived collaborators and a desire to purify the community The law criminalizes crimes against humanity war crimes and crimes against the Jewish people as well as a variety of lesser offenses It has a number of unusual provisions including ex post facto application extraterritoriality a relaxation in the usual rules of evidence and mandatory death sentence for the most serious crimes laid out in the law Under the law around forty alleged Jewish collaborators were put on trial between 1951 and 1972 of whom two thirds were convicted Such trials were highly controversial and have been criticized by judges and legal scholars due to the moral dilemma of judging someone who was also persecuted and under threat of death at the time the offense was committed Three non Jews were prosecuted under the law including the high profile cases of Adolf Eichmann 1961 and John Demjanjuk 1987 Although both Eichmann s and Demjanjuk s lawyers challenged the validity of the law it was upheld by both Israeli and United States courts Contents 1 Background 2 Legislative history 3 Provisions 4 Trials 4 1 Kapo trials 4 2 Trials of non Jews 4 2 1 Adolf Eichmann 4 2 2 Ivan Demjanjuk 5 Reception 5 1 Validity of the law 5 2 Application to Holocaust survivors 5 2 1 Judges and prosecutors 5 2 2 Journalism 5 2 3 Academic analysis 6 Explanatory notes 7 Citations 8 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksBackground Edit nbsp Jewish Ghetto Police in Lodz Ghetto 1940The Holocaust was a genocide committed primarily by Nazi Germany that claimed the lives of six million Jews living in Germany and German occupied Europe 1 Many Jews were forced into Nazi ghettos where a Jewish leadership known as Judenrat and Jewish Ghetto Police were appointed to execute Nazi orders Refusal to hand over other Jews to the Nazis to be killed could result in execution 2 The Jewish Ghetto Police was perceived as the most hated Jewish organ during the Holocaust according to Rivka Brot 3 In Nazi concentration camps a small number of Jews were recruited to become prisoner functionaries known as kapos which had the responsibility of supervising other prisoners and executing the orders of concentration camp guards Not all prisoner functionaries were collaborators some were considered to have behaved honorably Becoming a kapo could mean the difference between a chance to survive and near certain death 4 However among other survivors functionaries are remembered for their brutality survivors often charged that Jewish kapos were worse than the Germans 5 Following World War II some alleged collaborators were subject to extrajudicial violence and even murder from other Holocaust survivors 6 7 In order to maintain order postwar Jewish communities in displaced persons camps set up honor courts that would judge alleged collaborators handing down sentences of public condemnation and social ostracism Similar clashes also erupted in Mandatory Palestine and informal honor courts were operated by landsmanshaften organizations for immigrants from a certain country and the World Zionist Congress 6 After World War II many Holocaust survivors immigrated to Israel by the late 1950s they consisted one quarter of the population 8 While some Holocaust survivors preferred to leave the past behind them others thought that the new state should be pure of collaborators with the Nazis 9 Beginning in 1948 some Holocaust survivors brought petitions to the Israel Police alleging that other Holocaust survivors were Nazi collaborators but there was no legal basis for prosecution in these cases According to legal scholars Orna Ben Naftali and Yogev Tuval the drafters of the Nazis and Nazi Collaborators Punishment Law saw its purpose in pragmatic terms as assuaging the anger among Holocaust survivors in Israel 10 This is disputed by other writers who argue that there were only a few dozen complaints among a large number of survivors which could not be considered popular demand 11 Understanding of how the Nazi genocide was carried out was limited in Israeli society at the time the law was passed 12 Legislative history Edit nbsp Jewish kapo in Salaspils campAn Act against Jewish War Criminals was drafted in August 1949 by Deputy Attorney General Haim Wilkenfeld 13 14 On 26 December 1949 the Crime of Genocide Prevention and Punishment Law was introduced to the first plenary session of the First Knesset A law without retrospective application that would codify the 1948 Genocide Convention into Israeli law it was eventually passed on 29 March 1950 15 16 On 27 March 1950 Minister of Justice Pinkhas Rosen introduced the bill to prosecute Nazi collaborators now renamed Nazis and Nazi Collaborators Punishment Law to the Knesset with an expanded scope that in theory would enable the prosecution of Holocaust perpetrators as well as collaborators 17 Rosen said It is assumed that Nazi criminals who could be charged on the basis of the crimes included in the law would not dare come to Israel 18 Instead the law will apply less to Nazis than to their Jewish collaborators who are here in the State of Israel Rosen said invoking the Hebrew phrase let our camp be pure derived from Deuteronomy 23 14 19 20 Some Knesset members including Hanan Rubin and Eri Jabotinsky believed that Nazis might eventually be tried under the law either via extradition or other means 20 However the majority saw the provision for the prosecution of Nazis as symbolic rather than a genuine possibility 21 Knesset members debated exactly what form the punishment of Nazi collaborators would take Nahum Nir and Yona Kesse argued for an institutionalized version of the honor courts that would be heard by a jury in Israel all trials are heard by a judge and perhaps dispense moral rather than legal punishments This proposal was rejected both out of a desire for harsh punishments and to avoid fragmenting the legal system 22 Ya akov Gil the former chief rabbi of the Jewish Brigade sponsored a successful proposal to add the offense crimes against the Jewish people to the law in addition to war crimes and crimes against humanity 21 Lawmakers explicitly rejected a proposal by Zerach Warhaftig United Religious Front that would have distinguished offenses by Nazis and collaborators 23 Wilkenfeld explained If a Nazi in a concentration camp beat inmates and a Jewish kapo in the same camp did the same how can we create a provision for each of them 24 14 Warhaftig rejected this saying The Nazi was a murderer and the Jew was forced to act as he did 24 14 He was in the minority the final version of the law made no distinction between acts committed by an SS guard and a Jewish prisoner 14 Mapam politician Yisrael Bar Yehuda strongly rejected a suggestion to permit excusing conduct under duress or in self defense I am opposed to this kind of person being relieved of legal responsibility because he did what he did out of cowardice If a person was told that if he did not kill another person his daughter would be raped and killed and to save his daughter he killed someone else he is not to my mind relieved of criminal responsibility even if he did all he could to prevent it 14 This attitude was based ideologically on his party s close association with the Zionist youth movements that led ghetto uprisings often in opposition to the Jewish leadership From this point of view anyone who joined the Judenrat or the Jewish police or became a kapo was automatically considered a traitor 14 This strict view was opposed by members of other parties including Warhaftig who did not see joining such institutions as a criminal act in of itself In the end the Knesset adopted a strict and limited form of exculpation also rejecting Bar Yehuda s suggestion that anyone who served in the underground should be granted immunity 25 The law originally carried a 20 year statute of limitations from the time the offense was committed for offenses less serious than murder which was retroactively repealed in 1963 26 Provisions EditArticle 1 covers crimes against humanity war crimes and crimes against the Jewish people all of which carry a mandatory death sentence unless an extenuating circumstance under Section 11 b can be proven in which case the minimum sentence is 10 years in prison The definitions for crimes against humanity and war crimes are very similar to the definitions in the Nuremberg Charter except that the time period covered is extended to the beginning of the Nazi regime rather than the outbreak of World War II 15 27 Crimes against the Jewish people is based on the wording of the 1948 Genocide Convention 28 15 Unlike the Genocide Convention destroying or desecrating Jewish religious or cultural assets and values a k a cultural genocide and inciting to hatred of Jews as opposed to incitement to genocide are included in crimes against the Jewish people 28 To be prosecutable under the law the crimes must have been committed in an enemy country Nazi Germany German occupied Europe or territory controlled by another Axis power 29 The law is limited to one victim group Jews one time period 1933 1945 and one location Europe whereas the Genocide Convention is of universal applicability 30 Articles 2 to 6 define offenses that do not carry a mandatory death penalty 30 Article 2 covers various crimes against persecuted persons which are derived from the standard criminal code and applied as if they had been committed in Israel 31 Article 3 outlaws membership in enemy organization its language parallels the Nuremberg Charter s language against criminal organizations 30 32 Article 4 covers offenses committed in a place of confinement against a persecuted person which are also derived from the Israeli criminal code This article was intended to cover crimes by functionaries in concentration camps and ghettos which were not severe enough to fall under Article 1 33 Article 6 criminalizes delivering up persecuted person to enemy administration which according to Ben Naftali and Tuval was primarily aimed at the actions of Jewish councils Article 7 criminalizes the blackmail of persecuted persons with an up to seven year sentence if the accused received or demanded a benefit a from a persecuted person under threat of delivering up him or another persecuted person to an enemy administration or b from a person who had given shelter to a persecuted person under threats of delivering up him or the persecuted person sheltered by him to an enemy administration 23 According to Ben Naftali and Tuval these last two articles are the only ones that make an implicit distinction between perpetrators and collaborators 23 Article 10 enumerates the circumstances that would lead to the acquittal of the defendant if he acted to save himself from the danger of immediate death or if his actions were intended to avoid worse consequences Such circumstances did not excuse any of Article 1 crimes or murder Article 11 lays out the only two circumstances that can be taken into account for the mitigation of sentencing that the person committed the offence under conditions which would have exempted him from criminal responsibility or constituted a reason for pardoning the offence assuming that the accused tried to mitigate the consequence of the offence or that it was committed with the intent to avoid a more serious outcome 34 35 Several provisions in the law are considered exceptional 36 37 38 It applies to past events ex post facto law that occurred before the creation of Israel 36 37 38 The law applies extraterritorially to crimes committed exclusively outside of Israel 36 38 A mandatory death sentence is instituted for crimes under Article 1 36 Trying a defendant twice for the same offense is allowed 36 38 Many usual defenses are banned including the necessity defense 36 12 The court may deviate from the usual rules of evidence if it is satisfied that this will promote the ascertainment of the truth and the just handling of the case 36 38 Trials EditKapo trials Edit Within fifteen months of the law being passed the Israel Police received at least 350 complaints from Holocaust survivors 39 Some individuals fled the country fearing prosecution 40 In the first six months the Attorney General indicted at least fifteen people under the law charging them all with at least four counts of crimes including crimes against humanity 41 Prosecutors initially considered anyone who served as a functionary as guilty until proven innocent 42 43 and in league with the Nazis 41 Through 1952 verdicts were harsh with judges handing down an average five years imprisonment 42 In 1952 Yehezkel Enigster he Jungster was convicted of crimes against humanity and sentenced to death but this verdict was overturned on appeal by the Israeli Supreme Court and his sentence reduced to two years imprisonment 44 45 46 After the Enigster case prosecutors mostly avoided charging Jewish defendants with Article 1 crimes and distinguished them from Holocaust perpetrators 46 According to Dan Porat the 1958 verdict of the Kastner trial a libel trial in which Rudolf Kastner was eventually cleared of collaborationism led to another shift defendants were now viewed as people who had good intentions but committed bad deeds Following the 1961 trial of Adolf Eichmann in which prosecutor Gideon Hausner set out to remove the guilt of collaboration from Jewish functionaries defendants were more often viewed primarily as victims of the Nazis This paradigm was challenged by the prosecutor David Libai who charged former Jewish policeman Hirsch Barenblat with membership in an enemy organization If Barenblat had been convicted it could have led to tens of thousands of other Israeli citizens also being considered guilty Libai s superiors ordered him to drop the charge in order to avoid this outcome Although Barenblat was convicted on other charges his conviction was overturned by the Supreme Court in 1964 as the judges considered it inappropriate to punish those who took up positions as functionaries to save their own lives 47 Additional trials were held for especially egregious behavior which continued until 1972 48 Between 1951 and 1972 around 40 trials were held against Jews accused of collaborating with the Nazis 49 50 The exact number is not known because many of the records are sealed by a 1995 court order 51 In the known cases two thirds of defendants were convicted and all but one sentenced to prison with an average sentence of 28 months 50 No Jewish defendant was charged with crimes against the Jewish people 52 The trials relied almost entirely on witness testimony as most of the alleged crimes left no documentation 53 Israeli judges and prosecutors however realized that not all the witness testimony was reliable as some witnesses memories were distorted by trauma and others added unverified information to their testimony for reasons such as desire for retribution 54 None of those questioned or tried admitted responsibility for wrongdoing 41 Israeli historian Idith Zertal writes that the trials exposed the routine regime of terror oppression and abuse in the ghettos and camps where inmates human character and moral stamina were obliterated long before their bodies were consumed and brought to light the existential and moral hell created by the Nazis the monstrous upside down world which had transformed persecuted into persecutors victims into reluctant wrongdoers and accomplices in their own oppression 55 In 2014 journalist Itamar Levin sought access to the files but was refused on privacy grounds 56 Levin took it to court but a police officer assigned to examine the files had not reported as of early 2021 56 Yaacov Lozowick the state archivist at the time read 120 of the files himself and believes that public release of the files would for the most part exonerate the people who had been suspects 56 Trials of non Jews Edit Only three non Jews were tried under the law 49 The very first trial under the law involved Andrej Banik accused of responsibility for the deportation of Jews from Slovakia according to Porat the timing was clearly chosen for the symbolic value of trying a non Jew first 49 57 Banik came to Israel with his wife a Jewish convert to Christianity but was soon identified as a member of the Hlinka Guard by survivors 58 and first questioned by police before the passage of the law 59 He was ultimately acquitted 60 because the testimony against him was unreliable the judges ruled that one witness in particular either lied intentionally or is suffering from hallucinations and imagines things that he may have experienced which he attributes to the defendant with no basis whatsoever 61 Other non Jewish residents of Israel were arrested and charged with being Nazi collaborators including Alfred Miller a Hungarian waiter who was accused by a survivor of having handed him over to the Nazis and later cleared without trial According to Porat some Jews suspected that all non Jews were Nazi collaborators due to suffering the experience of betrayal 59 Adolf Eichmann Edit Main article Eichmann trial nbsp The Israeli Supreme Court hears Eichmann s appealIn 1960 the major Holocaust perpetrator Adolf Eichmann was kidnapped in Argentina and brought to Israel to stand trial 62 His trial which opened on 11 April 1961 was televised and broadcast internationally intended to educate about the crimes committed against Jews which had been secondary to the Nuremberg trials 63 Prosecutor Hausner also tried to challenge the portrayal of Jewish functionaries that had emerged in the earlier trials showing them at worst as victims forced to carry out Nazi decrees while minimizing the gray zone of morally questionable behavior 64 Hausner later wrote that available archival documents would have sufficed to get Eichmann sentenced ten times over nevertheless he summoned more than 100 witnesses most of them who had never met the defendant for didactic purposes 65 Eichmann was charged with fifteen counts of violating the law including multiple counts of crimes against the Jewish people crimes against humanity against both Jews and non Jews and war crimes 66 Convicted on all counts Eichmann was sentenced to death He appealed to the Supreme Court which confirmed the convictions and the sentence President Yitzhak Ben Zvi rejected Eichmann s request to commute the sentence In Israel s only judicial execution to date Eichmann was hanged on 31 May 1962 at Ramla Prison 67 Ivan Demjanjuk Edit The last trial under the law was that of Ivan Demjanjuk 49 68 69 who was convicted in 1987 of crimes against the Jewish people crimes against humanity war crimes and crimes against persecuted people 49 70 The conviction was based on the testimony of six eyewitnesses who identified him as the notorious guard known as Ivan the Terrible at Treblinka extermination camp 71 Evidence not available to the court at the time cast doubt on this identification and Demjanjuk s conviction was overturned on appeal by the Supreme Court on the basis of reasonable doubt 72 In 2011 he was convicted in Germany of assisting in the murder of 28 000 people as a guard at Sobibor extermination camp 68 Reception EditValidity of the law Edit nbsp Posters in Tel Aviv after the conviction of Adolf Eichmann 1964Eichmann s defense lawyer Robert Servatius challenged the jurisdiction of Israeli courts over Eichmann s crimes and the validity of the law because it was ex post facto and extraterritorial Judge Moshe Landau responded that it was a valid Israeli law In its judgement the district court extensively justified the law based on precedents in English law 73 The verdict also stated that The jurisdiction to try crimes under international law is universal 74 Servatius also argued that law was invalid because the victims of the crimes punishable by the law were not Israeli citizens at the time In response the court stated that it was the moral duty of every sovereign State to enforce the natural right to punish possessed by the victims of the crime whoever they may be against criminals who had violated international law 75 Servatius again challenged the law during Eichmann s appeal to the Supreme Court arguing that the law was inconsistent with international law because it tried foreign citizens for actions committed on foreign soil before the creation of Israel The Supreme Court dismissed the appeal stating that The District Court has in its judgment dealt with these contentions in an exhaustive profound and most convincing manner 76 Nevertheless the court proceeded to give a full justification for the law according to the international and English law that Israeli law is based on 76 The court ruled that there was no international principle prohibiting retroactive laws or those which applied to foreign nationals on foreign territory Furthermore the law was consistent with international law because it sought to establish international principles in Israeli law 77 Demjanjuk s lawyers also challenged the validity of the Israeli law during his extradition proceedings in United States federal court The United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio ruled against him Chief Judge Frank J Battisti wrote that the law conforms with the international law principles of universal jurisdiction and was not unconstitutionally retroactive because it merely provided a legal framework for punishing actions that were already illegal 78 79 Application to Holocaust survivors Edit Judges and prosecutors Edit Attorney General Haim Cohn filed dozens of indictments under the law Later he stated I came to believe that those of us who did not experience the Holocaust ourselves have no ability or the right to try a person for his actions intentions and constraints when he was trapped in that Hell 80 Although Israeli judges were not of one mind about applying the law to Holocaust survivors those who were more lenient to the accused tended to be survivors themselves the verdicts squirm with disquiet about the delegated task at hand according to law professor Mark A Drumbl 81 Among the complaints was that judging the collaborators diminished the guilt of the Nazi perpetrators 81 Overturning the conviction of Barenblat Supreme Court judge Yitzhak Olshan found that this is a question for history and not for the courts 82 In his judgement of the same case Landau wrote I t would be presumptuous and self righteous on our part us who never walked in the shoes of those who were there to criticize those little people who did not rise to a supreme level of morality while they were subject to rampant persecution by a regime whose the primary purpose was to wipe out their humanity We must not interpret the law according to a measure of moral behavior that only few were capable of C riminal law prohibitions including the Nazi and Nazi Collaborators Law were not written for exceptional heroes but for ordinary mortals with their ordinary weaknesses 83 12 Because the law applied exclusively to past events it has been characterized as retributive justice 84 38 a According to Supreme Court justice Shneur Zalman Cheshin he the law s purpose was revenge on Israel s enemies 38 Journalism Edit The kapo trials attracted relatively little press coverage but many Holocaust survivors attended court to observe the proceedings 85 86 According to Israeli journalist Tom Segev newspapers were reluctant to report on stories considered filthy and embarrassing 85 Rivka Brot writes that the framing of the law turned the cases into disputes between survivors which did not interest wider Israeli society 87 Following the quashing of the death sentence of Enigster the editor in chief of Yediot Aharonot Herzl Rosenblum published an op ed in the 8 April 1952 edition of the paper praising the verdict Arguing that no German Holocaust perpetrators were executed primarily for crimes against Jews Rosenblum contended that it would be unjust to hang the few Jewish helpers in these circumstances who did what they did under the most unbearable pressure 88 He also argued that it was difficult if not impossible for someone who had not been in that position to judge considering that different moral laws reigned there 89 According to a 1962 article in Davar the Mapai party newspaper many Israelis felt ambivalent about the trials After all to some degree they too the defendants were in carrying out their crimes victims of the Nazi beast moral victims who in their weaknesses participated in an unprecedented crime and a crime against their people 90 Academic analysis Edit In a book that they coauthored law professors Michael Bazyler and Frank Tuerkheimer were unable to agree on a conclusion to the chapter on the kapo trials Bazyler condemned the bad law that should never have been passed by the Knesset He disagreed that any Jewish survivor should be tried under criminal law for such offenses because of the extreme in fact inconceivable circumstances of Jews in the concentration camps 91 In contrast Tuerkheimer argued that even in the horrid environment of the camp kapos could make choices Those who opted for the brutal should not escape punishment simply because they were Jews or concentration camp inmates 92 In a separate article Bazyler and Julia Scheppach argue that the law s intention most likely was to distance Israelis from what they regarded as the shameful response of Europe s Jews to their destruction and should be viewed in light of general hostility and contempt for Holocaust survivors in Israel who were seen as having gone like sheep to the slaughter 15 Zertal argues that trials in every sense of the word were purges and that the law would have been more accurately titled Law for Punishment of Minor Collaborators of the Nazis 55 She highlights the fact that for a decade after it was passed not one of the defendants tried under the law was charged with or found guilty of directly or indirectly causing the death of a single person 93 85 Porat finds that some prosecutors who took part in the trials forgot them or misleadingly omitted them from discussion of the law 94 Furthermore he charges that Israeli institutions such as Yad Vashem omit the issue from their public presentations and in fact have been suppressing the memory of the kapo trials for fear of tainting the image of the victims 95 Porat sees this omission as part of a broader trend in which Israelis identify with Holocaust victims in his view excessively 96 Rivka Brot notes that criminal law recognizes only two outcomes innocence or guilt In her view this is an insufficient frame to deal with the phenomenon of the gray zone which existed between these two poles 87 According to Drumbl l aw lacked the vocabulary or finesse the courtroom was a poor conduit for reckoning with the behavior of kapos 97 and the law s quest for condemnation finitude and clarity effectively constructed the persecuted Jew as a Nazi 52 Ben Naftali and Tuval conclude that the law was drafted without consideration for ordinary humans and set out to expel collaborators who in historical terms were also victims from the imagined community of survivors and instead classify them into the only other remaining category that the Law recognized the Nazis 98 According to Israeli law professor Mordechai Kremnitzer he the blurring of lines between Holocaust perpetrators and Jewish collaborators in the law is reminiscent of the ideas proposed by Holocaust deniers that Jews were responsible for the crimes against them Kremnitzer argues that c riminal law should not demand courageous resistance 12 Therefore forced participation in collaboration should not be criminalized and the necessity defense should be allowed for any prosecutions of Nazi collaborators 99 Multiple authors have compared the case of judging kapos to 2010s trials of current or former child soldiers who committed war crimes such as Dominic Ongwen and Omar Khadr 100 101 Explanatory notes Edit One judge commented This law has almost no intention of deterrence not in regard to the defendant or another person I see the rationale of the law in payback 84 According to Supreme Court justice Shneur Zalman Cheshin he The stipulated punishments were not in the main meant to reform the offender or deter potential offenders but as the law s name suggests to take revenge on Israel s enemies 38 Citations Edit Introduction to the Holocaust What was the Holocaust United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Retrieved 7 November 2020 Jewish Councils Judenraete United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Retrieved 7 November 2020 Brot 2020 p 92 Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 p 419 Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 p 420 a b Porat 2019 p 6 Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 pp 420 421 Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 p 417 Porat 2019 p 67 Ben Naftali amp Tuval 2006 p 144 Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 p 424 a b c d Kremnitzer 2020 p 168 Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 p 421 a b c d e f Porat 2019 p 77 a b c d Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 p 427 Ben Naftali amp Tuval 2006 p 133 Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 p 426 Ben Naftali amp Tuval 2006 p 143 Ben Naftali amp Tuval 2006 pp 143 144 147 a b Porat 2019 p 75 a b Porat 2019 p 76 Porat 2019 pp 74 75 a b c Ben Naftali amp Tuval 2006 p 137 a b Zertal 2005 p 63 Porat 2019 p 78 Section 12 b 1963 amendment Ben Naftali amp Tuval 2006 p 134 a b Ben Naftali amp Tuval 2006 pp 131 132 Section 16 a b c Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 p 428 Ben Naftali amp Tuval 2006 pp 135 136 Ben Naftali amp Tuval 2006 p 135 Ben Naftali amp Tuval 2006 p 136 Ben Naftali amp Tuval 2006 p 138 Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 p 429 a b c d e f g Ben Naftali amp Tuval 2006 pp 138 139 a b Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 pp 426 427 a b c d e f g h Zertal 2005 p 65 Porat 2019 p 81 Porat 2019 p 82 a b c Porat 2019 p 84 a b Porat 2019 pp 6 7 Zertal 2005 p 64 Ben Naftali amp Tuval 2006 p 157 Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 p 431 a b Porat 2019 p 7 Porat 2019 pp 7 9 Porat 2019 pp 9 209 210 a b c d e Ben Naftali amp Tuval 2006 p 129 a b Porat 2019 p 5 Ben Naftali amp Tuval 2006 p 151 a b Drumbl 2019 p 246 Porat 2019 p 59 Porat 2019 pp 67 70 a b Zertal 2005 p 66 a b c Yaacov Lozowick 28 May 2021 70 years later These Holocaust survivors names are still tarnished Haaretz Porat 2019 p 58 Porat 2019 p 48 a b Porat 2019 p 49 Porat 2019 p 73 Porat 2019 p 70 Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 p 438 Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 p 439 Porat 2019 p 173 Porat 2019 p 174 Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 p 443 Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 p 449 a b Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 p 453 Drumbl 2016 pp 229 230 Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 p 457 Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 p 456 Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 pp 457 458 Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 p 441 Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 pp 441 442 Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 p 442 a b Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 pp 450 451 Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 p 451 Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 p 455 Saxon Wolfgang 21 October 1994 Frank Battisti 72 Federal Judge Presiding Over Demjanjuk Case The New York Times Retrieved 22 April 2021 Porat 2019 p 166 a b Drumbl 2016 p 232 Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 p 436 Ben Naftali amp Tuval 2006 p 173 a b Porat 2019 p 137 a b c Bazyler amp Scheppach 2012 p 430 Zertal 2005 p 87 a b Brot 2020 p 91 Porat 2019 pp 92 93 Porat 2019 p 93 Porat 2019 p 204 Bazyler amp Tuerkheimer 2014 p 224 Bazyler amp Tuerkheimer 2014 p 225 Zertal 2005 p 67 Porat 2019 pp 213 214 Porat 2019 pp 214 215 Porat 2019 pp 215 216 Drumbl 2019 p 247 Ben Naftali amp Tuval 2006 pp 147 173 174 Kremnitzer 2020 pp 168 169 Drumbl 2016 p 221 Kremnitzer 2020 p 169 Sources EditBazyler Michael Scheppach Julia 2012 The Strange and Curious History of the Law Used to Prosecute Adolf Eichmann Loyola of Los Angeles International and Comparative Law Review 34 3 417 461 ISSN 0277 5417 Bazyler Michael J Tuerkheimer Frank M 2014 The Jewish Kapo Trials in Israel Is There a Place for the Law in the Gray Zone Forgotten Trials of the Holocaust NYU Press pp 195 226 ISBN 978 1 4798 8606 7 Ben Naftali Orna Tuval Yogev 2006 Punishing International Crimes Committed by the Persecuted Journal of International Criminal Justice 4 1 128 178 doi 10 1093 jicj mqi022 Brot Rivka 2020 The illusive collective memory Revisiting the role of law in Israel s Holocaust narrative Journal of Israeli History 38 1 77 101 doi 10 1080 13531042 2020 1799526 S2CID 222136004 Drumbl Mark A 2016 Victims who victimise London Review of International Law 4 2 217 246 doi 10 1093 lril lrw015 Drumbl Mark A 2019 Histories of the Jewish Collaborator Exile Not Guilt In Tallgren Immi Skouteris Thomas eds The New Histories of International Criminal Law Retrials Oxford University Press pp 237 252 doi 10 1093 oso 9780198829638 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 256513 6 Kremnitzer Mordechai 2020 An Argument for retributivism in international criminal law In Jessberger Florian Geneuss Julia eds Why Punish Perpetrators of Mass Atrocities Purposes of Punishment in International Criminal Law Cambridge University Press pp 161 175 ISBN 978 1 108 47514 3 Porat Dan 2019 Bitter Reckoning Israel Tries Holocaust Survivors as Nazi Collaborators Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 24313 2 Zertal Idith 2005 Israel s Holocaust and the Politics of Nationhood Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 44662 4 Further reading EditYablonka Hanna 1996 החוק לעשיית דין בנאצים ובעוזריהם היבט נוסף לשאלת הישראלים הניצולים והשואה The Law for Punishment of the Nazis and their Collaborators Legislation Implementation and Attitudes Cathedra For the History of Eretz Israel and Its Yishuv in Hebrew 82 135 152 ISSN 0334 4657 JSTOR 23403774 Weitz Yechiam 1996 החוק לעשיית דין בנאצים ובעוזריהם ויחסה של החברה הישראלית בשנות החמישים לשואה ולניצוליה The Law for Punishment of the Nazis and their Collaborators as Image and Reflection of Public Opinion Cathedra For the History of Eretz Israel and Its Yishuv in Hebrew 82 153 164 ISSN 0334 4657 JSTOR 23403775 External links EditLegislative history in Hebrew Full text in English translation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nazis and Nazi Collaborators Punishment Law amp oldid 1110333629, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.