I studied modern European history, and one of the most truly frightening conclusions that came out of it for me was that the Nazis were *not* monsters, nor demons, nor wild beasts. They were by and large, as Christopher Browning titled his magnificent book on the topic, ordinary men. They had families, they had children, they had headaches and drama and the flu. And they killed millions of human beings.
It's easy to call the Nazis monsters, to speak of Hitler as exercising a demonic seduction over the German people. And by focusing on a small subset of the perpetrators as monsters, Europe has largely managed to avoid confronting the complicity so many had in the regime. It's a lot harder to ask why they gained power, and why, in Germany and in the countries they conquered, so many of the local inhabitants turned against their neighbors with such avarice and brutality. It's a lot harder to honestly consider if we ourselves might have gotten swept up in the torchlight, the streetfighting, the uniforms and the marches, if we had been there.
The truly frightening thing about evil is not that it's monstrous, it's that it's human. And by making it monstrous, we let ourselves off the hook for the evil that surrounds us, the evil that's inside of us, the evil we try so desperately to ignore.
Thank you for writing this, Mr. Warwick. You're in my prayers