Europes most famous Nazi hunters worry about where the continent is headed
By James McAuley March 17
Serge and Beate Klarsfeld are not only Europes most famous Nazi hunters. For more than five decades, theyve also been the vigilante enforcers of the continents moral conscience.
The husband-and-wife team through painstaking research and often daring exploits has tracked down murderers from the suburbs of Damascus, Syria, to the jungles of Bolivia. They pushed for the arrests and ultimate convictions of former Nazis and French collaborators such as Maurice Papon, Paul Touvier and Klaus Barbie, known as the Butcher of Lyon. And they have documented the stories of thousands of French Jews sent to the Nazi gas chambers.
Their mission has been to seek justice, but also to force a European reckoning with questions of complicity and culpability in a war many people preferred to forget. It was largely their influence that prompted President Jacques Chirac, soon after taking office in 1995, to acknowledge that France, home of the Enlightenment and the Rights of Man .?.?. broke her word and delivered the people she was protecting to their executioners.
Yet today, at the respective ages of 82 and 79, Serge and Beate Klarsfeld say they are horrified by the state of affairs in Europe and beyond: the rise of right-wing populist movements, and now governments, across the continent, often fueled by support from young voters. The parallel forces of nationalism and xenophobia, once again permissible in the public sphere. The apparent desire from Poland to the United States to play with the truth of the past so as to alter the norms of the present, the norms the Klarsfelds spent decades upholding.
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https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/europes-most-famous-nazi-hunters-worry-about-where-the-continent-is-headed/2018/03/16/1f48cd14-2606-11e8-a227-fd2b009466bc_story.html?utm_term=.b8962b968bef