We’re 15 years on from the September 11 attacks, and it’s
Gratitude Monday. It’s also the last two months of the most vicious and
divisive presidential election I’ve ever experienced, so my prevailing emotions
are disgust and anger.
So today I’m grateful that I recently came across this
story in the Washington Post
about a man the reporter calls a legal giant, Benjamin Ferencz.
Ferencz, who emigrated with his family to the United States
from what’s now Hungary to escape anti-Semitic persecution, grew up in New York
City and went to college at CCNY. He graduated from Harvard Law School and served
the 3rd Army from 1943, seeing action in Normandy and Bastogne, and
present at the liberation of several concentration camps, including Buchenwald,
Flossenburg and Mauthausen. He wanted to be a pilot, but at 5’2”, his feet
wouldn’t reach the pedals.
After the end of the war he joined the legal team that was
trailblazing international law with the concept of prosecuting war crimes.
Telford Taylor was his boss. At age 27, he drove the investigation and
prosecuted 22 Einsatzgruppen commanders. Einsatzgruppen were the units that
followed in the wake of the Wehrmacht in Eastern Europe; their job was to
eradicate Jews—and commissars, and gypsies, and some others; but primarily Jews—from
the conquered territories.
In what the Associated Press called the “biggest murder
trial in history”, and Ferencz’s first prosecution, he called a single witness, who
certified the sheaves of ledgers that documented the murdered. All 22 were
convicted. Ferencz told the judge, “If these men be immune, then law has lost its
meaning, and man must live in fear.”
Take a few minutes to watch this video; Ferencz describes
his work at Nuremberg.
From that very first case, Ferencz has worked for the rule
of law; his achievements include the establishment of the International
Criminal Court at The Hague. He’s 96 years old, now, living in retirement in
Florida, and he’s given more than a million dollars (renewable annually up to
ten million) to the Holocaust Memorial Museum for an international justice
initiative.
This year we’re bombarded by politicians and their supporters strutting across the media stage proclaiming how the time has come to pursue
our enemies with all our military might without regard to that pesky law. Carpet
bomb! Take the oil! Lock them in camps! Anything is legal in war! And I am
reminded of two things:
In A Man for All
Seasons, playwright Robert Bolt gives Thomas More and his son-in-law Will
Roper this exchange:
Roper: “So, now you give the Devil the benefit of law!”
More: “Yes! What would you do? Cut a great road through the law to get after the Devil?”
Roper: “Yes. I’d cut down every law in England to do that!”
More: “Oh? And when the last law was down, and the Devil turned ‘round on you, where would you hide, Roper, the laws all being flat? This country is planted thick with laws, from coast to coast, Man’s laws, not God’s! And if you cut them down—and you’re just the man to do it—do you really think you could stand upright in the winds that would blow then? Yes, I’d give the Devil benefit of law, for my own safety’s sake!”
And in 1958, President Dwight D. Eisenhower (who had been
Ferencz’s ultimate ETO commander) warned, “In a very real sense, the world no
longer has a choice between force and law. If civilization is to survive, it
must choose the rule of law.”
As a civilized society, you don’t bomb them into the Stone
Age, you hold them accountable according to the rule of law.
The day after our annual remembrance of 9/11 and in the
fetid pool of the presidential race, it brings me to tears to know that there
are some men and women like Benjamin Ferencz, who understand that if we do not
live by the rule of law, we are not alive at all.
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