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Simon Wiesenthal: The Life and Legends [Hardcover]

Tom Segev
2.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)

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Book Description

September 7, 2010
This first fully documented biography of Simon Wiesenthal, the legendary Nazi hunter, is also a brilliant character study of a man whose life was part invention but wholly dedicated to ensuring both that the Nazis be held responsible for their crimes and that the destruction of European Jewry never be forgotten.

Like most Jews in Eastern Europe on the eve of Hitler’s invasion of Poland, twenty-four-year-old Simon Wiesenthal did not grasp the nature of the Nazi threat. But six years later, when a skeletal Wiesenthal was liberated from the concentration camp at Mauthausen, he fully fathomed the crimes of the Nazis. Within days he had assembled a list of nearly 150 Nazi war criminals, the first of dozens of such lists he would make over a lifetime as a Nazi hunter. A hero in the eyes of many, Wiesenthal was also attacked for his unrelenting pursuit of the past, when others preferred to forget.

For this new biography, rich in newsworthy revelations, historian and journalist Tom Segev has obtained access to Wiesenthal’s private papers and to sixteen archives, including records of the U.S., Israeli, Polish, and East German secret services. Segev is able to reveal the intriguing secrets of Wiesenthal’s life, including his stunning role in the capture of Adolf Eichmann, his relationship with Israel’s Mossad, his controversial investigative techniques, his unlikely friendships with Kurt Waldheim and Albert Speer, and the nature of his rivalry with Elie Wiesel.

Segev’s challenge in writing this biography was Wiesenthal’s own complicated relationship to truth. Wiesenthal told many versions of his life, his suffering in the camps, and his involvement with the arrest of individual Nazis. Segev shows that in order to gain the information he sought and twist the arms of reluctant government figures, Wiesenthal needed to seem more influential than he really was.

For two generations of Americans, Simon Wiesenthal was a Jewish superhero—depicted on film by Ben Kingsley and Laurence Olivier—and the muse for a Frederick Forsyth thriller. Now Segev demonstrates that the truth of Wiesenthal’s existence is as compelling as the fiction. Simon Wiesenthal is an unforgettable life of one of the great men of the twentieth century.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Bringing war criminals to justice makes for endless controversy, according to this thoughtful, knotty biography of the Jewish icon and Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthal. Israeli historian and newspaper columnist Segev (1967) recaps Wiesenthal's hair-raising travails in occupied Poland and in German concentration camps during WWII, then follows his unique postwar career as a freelance detective pushing for the arrest and prosecution of Holocaust perpetrators in his homeland of Austria and abroad. Just how many Nazis were tried and convicted as a result of Wiesenthal's actions is a vexed question; Segev's sympathetic but critical treatment grants him a central role in bringing down Adolf Eichmann, death-camp commandant Franz Stang, and hundreds of other Nazis, but allows that he embroidered his exploits and made up evocative stories. The author gives a similarly nuanced reading of Wiesenthal's maneuverings in the treacherous politics of Holocaust remembrance, which garnered him enemies in all quarters: he drew flak--" ÿSleazenthal'"--from Jewish groups for supporting former U.N. secretary-general Kurt Waldheim when he was outed as a Wehrmacht henchman and even Wiesenthal himself was falsely accused of wartime collaboration. Segev's Wiesenthal is a complicated man, by turns avuncular and prickly, idealistic and self-promoting, but he's ultimately a heroic, necessary figure who forced a world that would rather forget to acknowledge its debt to the dead.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Those who first witnessed the public persona of Simon Wiesenthal in the last decades of his life saw a grandfatherly figure with a benign smile, speaking with a vague middle-European accent and showing courtly manners. Yet this man endured Nazi concentration camps and then spent almost 60 years relentlessly exposing and helping to pursue those war criminals who had escaped justice. Segev, the widely acclaimed Israeli journalist, has written the first fully documented biography of this complicated and haunted man. Wiesenthal was born in a Jewish shtetel in the Polish-Russian borderland, but he regarded Austria as his cultural and political homeland. He always prized his Jewish identity, but he harbored strong resentments at what he viewed as the inaction of both Zionists and diaspora Jews as Nazi intentions became clear. Despite resistance from other Jewish Holocaust survivors, he insisted on viewing the Holocaust as a crime against humanity as a whole. He could be stubborn, quarrelsome, and prone to embellishing his accomplishments. Still, Segev illustrates that his blemishes cannot diminish his great role in demanding that the perpetrators of such outrages be called to account. --Jay Freeman

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 496 pages
  • Publisher: Doubleday; First Edition edition (September 7, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 038551946X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385519465
  • Product Dimensions: 6.4 x 1.7 x 9.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.9 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 2.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #248,902 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

2.9 out of 5 stars
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
20 of 23 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Thoughtful, Thorough and Dispassionate September 15, 2010
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
Tom Segev, an Israeli writer and reporter for Haaretz, has produced a scrupulously researched account of Simon Wiesenthal's life and "legends", by which he means the often varying versions of Wiesenthal's hunt for Nazi criminals. Wiesenthal did his work from an office, first in Linz, then in Vienna, combing through documents in search of SS officers -- "the murderers among us", as Wiesenthal termed it. Famous for locating Eichmann in Argentina, for hunting down the commandant of Treblinka and many others, most famously Mengele, Wiesenthal gave varying accounts of his activities. Segev has gone through the archives, the biographies, the adventure stories, with - I can only say the doggedness of a Wiesenthal.

Unfortunately, not all the details of Wiesenthal's work in, say, the 1950's are necessary. I could have skipped a lot of the minutiae without regret. Martin Gilbert also collects minute details about Churchill but as a historian he is a compelling, lucid writer and Tom Segev, at least in translation, is not. The narrative gets bogged down and the reader loses the thread. As the story develops and Wiesenthal gains greater reknown, however, the story picks up speed. Segev describes the establishment of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles and Wiesenthal's initial support for its director, Marvin Hier, and his growing dissatisfaction at being treated he felt, as a mere figurehead. Even more interesting was the rivalry Wiesenthal felt with Elie Wiesel for moral authority and indeed, for the Nobel Prize. Segev brings out the basic philosophical difference between the two: Wiesenthal was a universal humanist, insisting the Holocaust happened not just to the Jews, but to millions of other victims of the Nazis. Wiesel, on the other hand, in establishing the Washington Holocaust Museum spoke out for the primarily Jewish effect of the Holocaust, though there were other victims.

Segev's tone is strictly dispassionate. Nazi crimes are mentioned only in very general terms. The focus of the book is on retelling the life and sifting for the truth as thoroughly as possible. Segev is very factual. He asks at every turn, is there evidence?

Segev presents Wiesenthal as a difficult person, with reason. He seemed not to care about his wife and child. His daughter grew up and went to school in Austria, an anti-Semitic country. Wiesenthal brought many Nazis to justice, but he had many failures, too. Segev astutely assesses his motives for Nazi hunting as rooted in survivor guilt. He explains this better than I could in the last chapter. I think Segev's journalistic skepticism is needed, but at times I feel he is overly European in his outlook. For example, he dismisses Golda Meir as "a suspicious person with narrow horizons" in the same breath as he praises Austrian chancellor Bruno Kreisky as "a statesman who thought in the broadest international terms". Yet Segev's discussion of Kreisky's character in contrast to his arch-rival Wiesenthal in terms of Viennese Jew versus Ostjude, is right on target. Lots of good material here, but most of it is in the last 100 pages of a 400 page book.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars The Wisenthal we never knew May 14, 2012
Format:Paperback
Tom Segev gives a nuanced portrait of Simon Wiesenthal, the famed Nazi hunter and human rights advocate, in this full length biography. Part self-motivated genius and master of organization, part showman and pious fraud, Segev provides us with a portrait of a deeply flawed man, not always honest with himself or others. Rather than demonizing this many sided person, Segev offers a rich look at his life.

If the outcome is not always pretty to read, we shouldn't overly blame Segev (although at time, his tone is somewhat dismissive). He was given unprecedented access to Wiesenthal's documents spread across many continents. As far as I could tell, most of his conclusions are documented with hard evidence. Segev's work with Wiesenthal's papers, combined with interviews and secondary sources, provides a compelling, in depth analysis of a complex man.
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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Simon Wiesenthal November 3, 2010
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
Well researched, but the writing or translation was somewhat awkward and jumped from one topic to another without good transitions and often the topic ended incomplete.
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