The German people as a whole knew of the atrocities …show more content…
An example of such a protest focuses on a concentration Commandant named Oskar Schindler. Louis Bulow, a contributor to Schindler’s official website wrote, “To 1200 Jews a womanizing, heavy-drinking, German-Catholic industrialist and Nazi Party member named Oskar Schindler was all that stood between them and death at the hands of the Nazis. He was a man all too human, full of flaws like the rest of us. The unlikeliest of all role models. An ordinary man who answered the call of conscience. He remained true to 'his' Jews, the workers he always referred to as 'my children'. He rose to the highest level of humanity and gave them a second chance at life. He spent millions to protect them, everything he possessed, and eventually risked his life in desperate rescue attempts. Even on the days when the air was black with the ashes from bodies on fire, there was hope in Crakow because Oskar Schindler was there” (Bulow, 2014). There are many more examples of morality involving German citizens and their attempts to save as many Jewish people as possible from Hitler’s chambers of …show more content…
Generations of hatred and intolerance of the Jewish people by sectional Germans was a ticking bomb, detonated by the insane ideology of Adolf Hitler. Are German people guilty for turning their heads to arguably the worst atrocities in history? The answer is no. The German people did not lack the capacity of morality and failed to thwart the Nazi agenda of genocide, either through fear of retribution and/or death themselves. In the end, the entire German people may not be guilty of crimes committed by the Third Reich, but their conscious will surely torment those who did