Through moving interviews with five ordinary people who rescued
Jews during the Holocaust, Kristen Monroe casts new light on a
question at the heart of ethics: Why do people risk their lives for
strangers and what drives such moral choice? Monroe's analysis
points not to traditional explanations--such as religion or
reason--but to identity. The rescuers' perceptions of themselves in
relation to others made their extraordinary acts spontaneous and
left the rescuers no choice but to act. To turn away Jews was, for
them, literally unimaginable. In the words of one German Czech
rescuer, "The hand of compassion was faster than the calculus of
reason."
At the heart of this unusual book are interviews with the
rescuers, complex human beings from all parts of the Third Reich
and all walks of life: Margot, a wealthy German who saved Jews
while in exile in Holland; Otto, a German living in Prague who
saved more than 100 Jews and provides surprising information about
the plot to kill Hitler; John, a Dutchman on the Gestapo's "Most
Wanted List"; Irene, a Polish student who hid eighteen Jews in the
home of the German major for whom she was keeping house; and Knud,
a Danish wartime policeman who took part in the extraordinary
rescue of 85 percent of his country's Jews.
We listen as the rescuers themselves tell the stories of their
lives and their efforts to save Jews. Monroe's analysis of these
stories draws on philosophy, ethics, and political psychology to
suggest why and how identity constrains our choices, both
cognitively and ethically. Her work offers a powerful counterpoint
to conventional arguments about rational choice and a valuable
addition to the literature on ethics and moral psychology. It is a
dramatic illumination of the power of identity to shape our most
basic political acts, including our treatment of others.
But always Monroe returns us to the rescuers, to their strong
voices, reminding us that the Holocaust need not have happened and
revealing the minds of the ethically exemplary as they negotiated
the moral quicksand that was the Holocaust.
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