logo
Simon Schama: The Road to Auschwitz review – this gripping show isn't afraid to ask awkward questions

Simon Schama: The Road to Auschwitz review – this gripping show isn't afraid to ask awkward questions

The Guardian07-04-2025
It is 80 years since the liberation of Auschwitz. That means it won't be long before all the people who lived through the Holocaust are gone. It is now left to those who weren't there – such as the historian Simon Schama, born in London two weeks after the liberation – to ensure it is never forgotten or misremembered, and to preserve its lessons for future generations.
But how to go about it? In his new show, one of Schama's main methods is to unflinchingly relive the depravity. The Road to Auschwitz holds you in its grip and forces you to absorb the details. We hear of Jewish people being murdered using high-pressure water hoses. We see photographs of the cramped, repellent ghettoes, in which they were starved until they resembled walking skeletons as children froze to death in the streets. We see the piles of shrivelled corpses in Auschwitz. We hear that the slaughter was so prolific that the camp's purpose-built crematoriums became clogged with fat; in Schama's words, 'the furnaces were gagging'. An inmate of Auschwitz – who buried his testimony in the ground before he perished – describes the burning of corpses: the skin blisters and bursts in seconds, the stomach explodes, blue flames come out from the eye sockets, the head burns longest.
Told in this way, the Holocaust will never not be shocking to the point of utter incomprehensibility. But The Road to Auschwitz is also concerned with how the murder of Jewish people on an industrial scale was tolerated by Europe as a whole. This is not a journey back to the advent of antisemitism (that was a subject for Schama's 2013 series, The Story of the Jews), although centuries of hatred obviously played a key role. Instead, Schama returns to the early years of the second world war.
First, he visits Kaunas in Lithuania, occupied by Germany in 1941. There, a local rabbi was decapitated before Jews were killed in the town centre as their neighbours watched. A local film-maker has spent decades interviewing witnesses, including a man who remembers crying at the spectacle as a child – because he couldn't get a clear view. In footage seemingly from the 1990s, a woman shows off her gold tooth, which was wrenched from the mouth of a Jewish person. She seems to be repressing a smile.
Lithuania was a test case for the Nazis – it proved, we hear, that there was a voracious appetite for the murder of Jews. The allies knew what the Nazis were doing in eastern Europe, but believed it could never happen in 'tolerant' Britain. This is one misapprehension that still needs to be corrected, and by examining how the Holocaust took hold in the Netherlands – which had hitherto been the safest place in Europe for Jews – Schama lands on an extremely effective way of doing so. Initially, the Dutch deplored German antisemitism, 'doffing their hats' to those forced to wear yellow stars and putting them at the front of queues. They even staged a widespread strike against their persecution. In the end, it didn't make any difference: the public became fearful of their new overlords and 75% of Dutch Jews were murdered. The moral is simple: no country is immune to the forces of fascism.
Yet there are moments in this documentary when the very act of remembering the Holocaust feels hopelessly complicated. Schama's decision to retell it via graphic depictions of the violence and horror does an important job: it ensures the Holocaust continues to rank as one of the very worst events in human history. However, the events in the Netherlands suggest the power of sympathy is negligible. Rather than naked fear or a vicarious sense of personal trauma, 'pity is what others [who] aren't Jews feel' about the Holocaust, says Schama, standing on the site of Auschwitz for the first time in his life. 'Screw the pity.'
What should go in its place is a question this programme doesn't answer, unless you count a close synonym. Schama spends much of this documentary bumping up against the limits of language when attempting to articulate his response to the atrocity; 'deeply distressing' is sometimes the best English can do. He gives the final word to the Holocaust survivor Marian Turski, who died in February this year. 'Evil comes step by step,' says Turski. 'And therefore you shouldn't be indifferent. Let's start with reducing hatred.' He reads from a poem: 'The most important thing is compassion. Its absence dehumanises.' Pity, compassion, sympathy: they can't fight fascism alone – but a world without them doesn't bear thinking about.
Simon Schama: The Road to Auschwitz aired on BBC Two and is available on iPlayer.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Living Nostradamus' makes ominous Meghan Markle & Prince Harry prediction & claims they're ‘more distant than ever'
‘Living Nostradamus' makes ominous Meghan Markle & Prince Harry prediction & claims they're ‘more distant than ever'

Scottish Sun

time17 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

‘Living Nostradamus' makes ominous Meghan Markle & Prince Harry prediction & claims they're ‘more distant than ever'

Athos Salomé has also given a grave warning to the Duke of Sussex about how he must reconcile with his father King Charles Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A PSYCHIC who has correctly predicted a string of huge global events has given an ominous new forecast on Meghan Markle and Prince Harry - and it seems a "separation" could be on the cards. Athos Salomé, 38, from Brazil, has been dubbed the 'Living Nostradamus' after accurately predicting the Covid 19 pandemic and Queen Elizabeth II's death. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 5 Are Meghan and Harry going their separate ways? The 'Living Nostradamus' gives his insights Credit: GETTY 5 Athos Salomé, 38, from Brazil, predicted Queen Elizabeth II's death and the Covid 19 pandemic Credit: @athos_salome/Instagram Now, he's making a serious prediction about Meghan and Harry, plus has given new insight into the Duke of Sussex's troubled relationship with his father, King Charles. Salomé told The Sun there may be new issues for Meghan's growing business and has explained why Harry should return to the UK. And his delve into the future comes as the couple were dealt a fresh blow, with reports their multi-million dollar Netflix deal is dead in the water after 'dismal' viewing figures. Here, Salomé exclusively shares with us his latest insights... Are Meghan and Harry going their separate ways? Five years after Megxit, Meghan and Harry "continue to sell authenticity and philanthropy, while cultivating their personal brands in an increasingly divided climate", Salomé claims. Salomé believes the couple is currently experiencing "the most fragile moment of their strategy". According to Salomé, his predictions are not just vague intuitions: they derive from studies in the Kabbalah, which is the ancient Jewish tradition of mystical interpretation of the Bible, analysis of symbolic patterns, and a precise reading of power cycles. In 2025, these cycles point to a silent split, risky political alliances and wear and tear that will be difficult to circumvent. According to Salomé, he does not foresee divorce but "separation on a professional level". He believes that Meghan and Harry will maintain their marriage, but with increasingly independent professional and personal lives. According to him, "they may remain married for convenience and brand management. But emotionally, they will be more distant than ever". Harry's 'peace talks' have scheming Meghan's hand all over them, he looks lost in his sad little life The teams already operate independently. Meghan will concentrate all her resources on As Ever - her lifestyle and wellness brand - while Harry will consolidate his image as patron of the Invictus Games and mental health projects. 5 Meghan's lifestyle brand As Ever has been a huge success so far Credit: AS EVER 5 Prince Harry is the founder of the Invictus Games Credit: Rex This professional split looks strategic to shield the businesses from the possible failure of the other. Salomé points out that the separation of brands would not immediately mean the end of the marriage, but it would shape a model of cohabitation that would be increasingly functional and less effective. For Meghan, the way forward is to consolidate As Ever, which aims to make an annual turnover of between 25 and 40 million dollars over the next two years. But Salomé warns: "According to the predictions from the Kabbalah, there are strong indications of problems in the production chain and the exhaustion of the niche if she doesn't reinvent the brand's storytelling." Salomé points out that Meghan seems willing to sell herself as a Californian progressive icon, something that would generate increasing polarisation. Harry, for his part, seeks to maintain global relevance with the Invictus Games and mental health projects - bets with royal and diplomatic appeal. Will Harry reconcile with Charles? 5 There are supposedly "limited signs of reconciliation with King Charles" According to Salomé, the Kabbalah, sadly, points to signs of limited reconciliation with King Charles. It predicts that Harry "should publicly travel to the UK before the European summer of 2026 to seal a formal rapprochement, even if Meghan remains in the US or makes restricted appearances". This rapprochement is not an emotional whim, but - according to Salomé - part of "an image survival strategy". Harry "knows that he needs to regain some of the British support if he wants to maintain institutional relevance", Salomé claims.

Superman has always been ‘woke'
Superman has always been ‘woke'

Spectator

time2 days ago

  • Spectator

Superman has always been ‘woke'

The moment I heard that there'd been a backlash against James Gunn's reboot of the Superman franchise on the grounds that he'd ruined this great American icon by turning the Man of Steel 'woke', I thought, sign me up! Until then, I hadn't been planning to go. Even as a longtime enthusiast for all things men-in-tights, I have always found the big blue schoolboy a bit of a bore. But now I was intrigued. Were they going to make the Man of Steel gender fluid? Have him bop some thinly disguised avatar of Donald Trump on the nose like Captain America socking Hitler? Friends, I was bitterly disappointed. Of wokeness, in this messy and basically terrible new movie, there was very little sign. It turns out that there's one scene in which Lex Luthor denounces him as an 'alien' – which he is – and Supes makes some syrupy speech about our common humanity. This, I guess, has been taken to be a ruthless attack on ICE's mission to purge the US of immigrants. And, y'know, our hero stops one country with a very well-funded military from invading its armed-with-sticks-and-stones neighbours (it's Israel/Palestine! No: it's Russia/Ukraine!… or maybe it is, even more insidious, a general principle). And the villain is a megalomaniac tech billionaire, which comic book villains have been since long before megalomaniac tech billionaires actually became comic book villains. All comic book properties these days are positively marinated in nostalgia But if you think that broad-brush comic book endorsements of defending the weak against the strong, or objecting to rolling tanks over people armed with sticks and stones, or any suggestion that undocumented aliens can be human too, constitutes 'woke propaganda', you need to give your head a bit of a wobble. If standing up for 'truth, justice and the American way' strikes you as unfairly partisan, we may have to start wondering what principles we're allowed to give goodies in movies. I thought it was the left that these guys liked to accuse of moral relativism. Also, I can't wait to tell you about Jesus. Does it need repeating for the zillionth time that by these standards, Superman has always been 'woke'? That he was the creation of two nerdy Jewish boys whose families fled European anti-Semitism, that he made his debut just before the second world war made its debut, and that opposition to fascism was kind of his big thing? Do we have to dig out all those spot-coloured panels from half a century ago in which Superman piously lectures passers-by about how un-American it is to discriminate against people on the grounds of race, creed or colour? The more interesting and more subtle question, I think, is not to do with the predictable conniptions that this children's movie has caused in pantwetting Maga influencers of a certain stripe. It is, rather, that of whether superhero movies (and comics) are by their nature not 'woke' but, at a deep level, what the young people would call fascist-coded. There's a decent case that they are. Their narrative roots are in the oral mythologies of the pre-democratic, pre-Christian world. They are myths, and their heroes are spandex-clad godlings, and their basic message is that humanity needs the vigilante violence of near-invincible individuals, answerable only to themselves, to keep it on the straight and narrow. Comic book universes and superhero stories offer the fantasy of a world in which problems are simple to solve through violence, and the goodies and baddies are painted in bold bright colours – the same fantasy populist and, at the extreme of this tendency, fascist politics depend on. It can't have escaped anyone that 'superman' is the most common translation of Nietzsche's 'Ubermensch' – and we know who loved that idea. Also, all comic book properties these days are positively marinated in nostalgia – the nostalgia of the grown adults who encounter them now for the pristine thrill of their childhood encounters with these characters (I don't mind admitting that includes me). And nostalgia is a cornerstone of fascism – a fantasy of returning to a simpler, purer world before the wokes or the postmodernists or the feminists or the rootless cosmopolitans ruined it for everyone. All these, be it said, are points that the more intelligent writers of superhero comics have repeatedly addressed. Marvel's Civil War plotline (somewhat adapted for the Avengers movie) addressed the vigilante question: unexpectedly and interestingly, Captain America (Marvel's own big blue schoolboy), comes out in the no-democratic-oversight corner, while Iron Man goes to bat for democratic oversight and the military-industrial complex. Alan Moore's Watchmen – named for its on-the-nose evocation of Juvenal ('quis custodiet…') – had looked at just the same issue some years earlier. It concluded that anyone who wanted to set the world to rights by dressing up in a cape and mask and beating spit out of the bad guys deserved a psychological once-over. And it's no accident that 'Nostalgia' was the brand name of the villain's perfume. At the same time as that, back in the late 1980s, Frank Miller's Batman: The Dark Knight Returns drew thrilling power from the mythic grandeur of its set-up, without stinting on the darker aspects of that set-up's appeal: Bats, in despair at juvenile delinquents and liberal apologists for the Joker, comes out of retirement to beat and murder these unwelcome avatars of modernity. (Frank Miller's later politics suggest that he may have got a bit too high on his own supply.) So we can rebuke comics for peddling dangerously simplistic narratives of violent redress by godlike creatures answering to nothing so boring as democracy or the rule of law. But at the same time, I'd suggest we should also step back and – rather than getting our knickers in a twist about whether they are woke propaganda or fascist myth-making – sidestep the whole thing by recognising that they are children's entertainments. Children's entertainments can and should be enjoyed by grown-ups too, but their moral outlooks only make a difference in the world when those grown-ups are childish enough to think that they need to. I took my 11-year-old. What's your excuse?

Justin Bieber's ex manager Scooter Braun takes brutal jab at former friend Kanye West
Justin Bieber's ex manager Scooter Braun takes brutal jab at former friend Kanye West

Daily Mail​

time4 days ago

  • Daily Mail​

Justin Bieber's ex manager Scooter Braun takes brutal jab at former friend Kanye West

Justin Bieber 's ex manager Scooter Braun took a jab at his former friend Kanye West in a new interview. Braun, 44, shared where he stands with the controversial rapper, 48, following his numerous antisemitic statements and a song praising Adolf Hitler. 'I don't know him anymore,' the Jewish music executive said while appearing on an episode of the Question Everything podcast on Thursday. Speaking of Kanye's antisemitic social media posts, Braun — whose grandparents are Holocaust survivors — said: 'I think the person that I knew wasn't someone who says those things.' 'Sometimes the hardest thing to do with someone you care about is mourn them while they're still here,' Braun, who managed Kanye for 'two to three years', went on. 'The person that I knew is not the person that I'm seeing, so I don't have a relationship anymore.' He added, 'I'd rather stand proudly in who I am and who my people are, and be gracious and kind to all people, than be a part of that.' When asked if Kim Kardashian's ex-husband could potentially be redeemed, the music mogul — who officially parted ways with Bieber in 2023 — reiterated that he no longer knows him. He added, 'I have three beautiful kids that need a dad to focus on them and make sure they're prepared and strong in this world. That's going to be my focus.' It comes after West released a song praising Hitler. The track, titled Heil Hitler, was dropped by the singer on May 8 and was deemed to be 'promoting Nazism'. His chosen day to release the song was also of significance because it fell on VE Day - the 80-year anniversary of when fighting against Nazi Germany in Europe came to an end. He claimed that be became a Nazi because of his custody battle with ex Kim over their four children, singing: 'With all of my money and fame I still don't get to see my children / N*****s see my Twitter but they don't see how I be feeling / So I became a Nazi, yeah b***h, I'm the villain.' The line, 'N****r, heil Hitler' is repeated 15 times in the song. Kanye has remained in the crosshairs of controversy for much of the year amid a torrent of posts propagating antisemitism. On February 11, the shop on Kanye's Yeezy Website - which he advertised with an expensive ad during the Super Bowl - was taken offline by Shopify after he was selling a white shirt with a black swastika in the center. However, the rapper seemingly did a 180 following substantial backlash and in May he renounced antisemitism via X, writing 'I am done with antisemitism' before adding 'I love all people.' It comes after Scooter was fiercely slammed by Taylor Swift fans after he seemed to claim elsewhere in the interview that his drama with the singer led to the 'biggest moment of her career.' The music mogul reflected on his purchase and ultimate sale of the Cruel Summer songstress' masters. Scooter famously bought the rights to Taylor's old songs when he acquired her former record label in 2019 for $300 million. At the time, the hitmaker, 35, said she was blindsided by the news, and accused Scooter of 'incessant, manipulative bullying.' Taylor went on to re-recorded many of her old albums, and Scooter eventually sold the songs to an investment firm called Shamrock Holdings for $405 million. The singer then bought the masters back in May for a deal reportedly worth $360 million. 'She did incredibly well and basically had the biggest moment of her career, reinvigorating her career with each one,' he said of her re-recorded albums. 'It was brilliant on her part. But also, each time she released one, you saw a spike in the original catalog.' Despite Taylor's initial and very public upset over the news that he had bought her old songs, Scooter insisted that 'everyone won' in the end. 'Funny enough, everyone involved in the saga, from a business standpoint, won,' he continued. 'She's the biggest she's ever been, biggest artist of all time. We did really well with the asset. The people who bought the asset did really well because of those spikes.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store