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Hannah Arendt: You describe a book I never wrote.
Siegfried Moses: A book that will never be allowed in Israel. And won't appear anywhere else either if you have any decency left.
Hannah Arendt: You ban books, and lecture me about decency!
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Hannah Arendt: He swears he never personally harmed a Jew.
Kurt Blumenfeld: So he claims!
Hannah Arendt: Isn't it interesting that a man who did everything a murderous system asked of him, who even seems eager to give precise details of his fine work, that this man insists the personally has nothing against Jews.
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Mary McCarthy: [interrupting a German discussion] Whatever you are saying, I agree with all of you.
Hannah Arendt: Everybody, English now, please.
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Hannah Arendt: He transported people to their deaths, but didn't feel responsible for it. Once the trains were in motion his work was done.
Kurt Blumenfeld: So he can say he's free of guilt despite what happened to the people he transported?
Hannah Arendt: Yes! That's how he see's it. He's a bureaucrat!
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[last lines]
Hannah Arendt: Everyone is trying to prove me wrong. But no one noticed my one real mistake. Evil cannot be both banal and radical at once. Evil is only ever extreme. It's never radical. Only good can be profound and radical.
Heinrich Blücher: Would you have written about the trial if you'd known what would happen?
Hannah Arendt: Yes. I would have written about it. Maybe I had to find out who my real friends were.
Heinrich Blücher: Kurt was your friend. He still would be.
Hannah Arendt: Kurt was my family.
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Hannah Arendt: Western tradition mistakenly assumes that the greatest evils of mankind arise from selfishness. But in our century, evil has proven to be more radical than was previously thought. And we now know that the truest evil, the radical evil, has nothing to do with selfishness or any such understandable, sinful motives. Instead, it is based on the following phenomenon: making human beings superfluous as human beings. The entire concentration camp system was designed to convince the prisoners they were unnecessary before they were murdered. In the concentration camps men were taught that punishment was not connected to a crime, that exploitation wouldn't profit anyone, and that work produced no results. The camp is a place where every activity and human impulse is senseless. Where, in other words, senselessness is daily produced anew. So to summarize: If it is true that in the final stage of totalitarianism, an absolute evil emerges, absolute as it no longer relates to human motives, then it is equally true that without it, without totalitarianism, we would never have known the truly radical nature of evil.
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Hannah Arendt: How can you leave me like that? No hug, no kiss?
Heinrich Blücher: Never disturb a great philosopher when they're thinking.
Hannah Arendt: But they can't think without kisses.
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Hannah Arendt: I wrote no defense of Eichmann, but I did try to reconcile the shocking mediocrity of the man with his staggering deeds. Trying to understand him is not the same thing as forgiveness. And furthermore, I see it as my responsibility to understand. It is the responsibility of anyone who dares to put pen to paper on this subject.
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Hannah Arendt: But Kurt, you can't deny the huge difference between the unspeakable horror of the deeds and the mediocrity of the man.
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Hannah Arendt: The manifestation of the wind of thought is not knowledge, but the ability to tell right from wrong, beautiful from ugly. And I hope that thinking gives people the strength to prevent catastrophes in these rare moments when the chips are down.
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Hannah Arendt: Trying to understand is not the same as forgiveness.
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Hannah Arendt: I am, as you know, a Jew, and I have been attacked as a self-hating Jew who defends Nazis and scorns her own people. This is not an argument. That is a character-assassination.
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closing title card: The problem of evil became the fundamental subject for Hannah Arendt. She returned to it over and over again and she was still struggling with it at the time of her death.
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[first lines]
Mary McCarthy: But Hannah, how can you defend him?
Hannah Arendt: But I'm not defending him. You can hardly forget that your husband is only my friend because of you. And I don't throw away my friends so quickly.
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Hannah Arendt: God didn't let him get away.
Lotte Köhler: God didn't. But the Germans did.
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Lotte Köhler: The Pope would never help a Nazi escape.
Hannah Arendt: No, he helped him because he was such a good Catholic.
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Francis Wells: Philosophers - don't make deadlines.
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Hans Jonas: Everything's simple for a genius.
Hannah Arendt: Don't exaggerate.
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Hannah Arendt: Nixon calculates. But, Kennedy is young and handsome and inspiring. And that's what matters when the ships are down.
Mary McCarthy: Chips, Hannah. Chips. It's not ships.
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Thomas Miller: So, I see you were all students of the confounding Martin Heidegger.
Heinrich Blücher: Oh, I didn't even finish High School.
Thomas Miller: But, aren't you a professor at Bard?
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Kurt Blumenfeld: And how's my Heinrich? Is he good to you?
Hannah Arendt: Yes. Sometimes too good.
Kurt Blumenfeld: I miss arguing with him. I can no longer see my way through the maze of modern life.
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Hannah Arendt: Tell me how you are. How's your heart?
Kurt Blumenfeld: Not too good. It's never gotten used to the world we live in.
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Kurt Blumenfeld: Israel has aged faster than you, my little Hannah.
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Hannah Arendt: Israel has to be very careful that this doesn't become a show trial.
Kurt Blumenfeld: That's my Hannah! Just wait a bit. And try to understand Ben Gurion. Our young people refuse to confront what you call the "dark times." Either they're ashamed of their parents who didn't fight or protect themselves, or they accuse them of having behaved dishonorably. They think only criminals or whores could have survived the camps.
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Adolf Eichmann: I received the matter for its continued processing and dealt with it in an intermediate capacity. As I was ordered to do. I had to follow orders.
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Adolf Eichmann: I had orders. Whether people were killed or not, orders had to be executed.
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Hannah Arendt: He's so different than I imagined.
Kurt Blumenfeld: He was with the SS. They're scary creatures.
Hannah Arendt: But he's not. That's precisely it. He sits in his glass box like a ghost. A ghost who happens to have a cold. He's not spooky at all. He's a nobody.
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Hannah Arendt: Eichmann is no Mephistopheles.
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Adolf Eichmann: An officer swears an oath of allegiance. If he breaks this oath, then he is a rogue. I still hold this view. I have taken an oath here to tell the truth. That was how I viewed things then, too: An oath is an oath.
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Kurt Blumenfeld: I'm not getting any younger. That's why I wish you wouldn't leave me so quickly.
Hannah Arendt: I'm never very far from you. Never.
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Hannah Arendt: Miller begged me to take over another class. Someone's ill or getting a divorce or something typically American like that. My head's spinning as it is.
Heinrich Blücher: You have to learn to say no. But only to others, of course.
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Hannah Arendt: I'm so lucky to have you, Lotte. I'd never be such good friends with my own daughter.
Lotte Köhler: My father always says God gave us family, but thank God we can choose our friends.
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Martin Heidegger: You say you want me to teach you how to think. Thinking - is a lonely business.
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Mary McCarthy: Every time I even write a sex scene, I have you horribly on my conscious - as if you're talking to my elbow saying: stop!
Hannah Arendt: I have no problem with sex.
Mary McCarthy: I'm afraid you'll think I'm an exhibitionist or something.
Hannah Arendt: Well, you are.
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Hannah Arendt: I had the opportunity to spend some time in a French detention camp called Gurs.
Female Student: But, weren't the French on your side?
Hannah Arendt: In the beginning. They took us in. But when the Germans invaded France on May 10, 1940, our French friends put us into detention camps. We became a new kind of human being, put into concentration camps by our enemies and into detention camps by our friends.
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Male Student: What was your first impression of America.
Hannah Arendt: Paradise.
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Heinrich Blücher: Dearest. Don't cry.
Hannah Arendt: I spoke to the doctor. He said you only have a fifty percent chance.
Heinrich Blücher: Don't forget the other fifty percent.
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Hans Jonas: But Eichmann is a monster. And when I say monster, I don't mean Satan. You don't need to be smart or powerful to behave like a monster.
Hannah Arendt: You're being too simplistic. What's new about the Eichmann phenomenon is that there are so many just like him. He's a terrifyingly normal human being.
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Hannah Arendt: He considered himself an obedient servant of Germany who had to obey the Fuhrer's orders. "My loyalty is my honor." The Fuhrer's orders became the law. He didn't feel guilty in the sense of the indictment. He behaved according to the law.
Hans Jonas: Hannah, it's been proven that Eichmann pursued the Final Solution even after Himmler had long since forbidden it. And why? He wanted to finish *his* work.
Heinrich Blücher: Don't you see that every law, every commandment was turned upside down. It was not "Thou shalt not kill," but "Thou must kill." To do your duty, goodness was a temptation you had to resist.
Hans Jonas: Great. So no one is responsible or guilty. Every sane person knows murder is wrong.
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Mary McCarthy: Oh, Hemmingway was just an ambulance driver. Thomas, as a writer he was nothing more than the premature ejaculator of the 20th Century.
Thomas Miller: Oh, you just hate him because he wrote like a real man.
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Hannah Arendt: Why was Hans so furious with me?
Heinrich Blücher: He's in love with you. Has been ever since he was a student.
Hannah Arendt: Nonsense.
Heinrich Blücher: He hates Heidegger more for stealing your heart than for joining the Party.
Hannah Arendt: Then he should hate you even more.
Heinrich Blücher: Maybe he does.
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Heinrich Blücher: Celebrating my health is exhausting.
[spanks Hannah's fanny as she passes]
Heinrich Blücher: I'm off to bed.
[Hannah sighs, sits down, lights a cigarette]
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Martin Heidegger: Thinking does not bring knowledge, as do the sciences. Thinking does not produce usable, practical wisdom. Thinking does not solve the riddles of the universe. Thinking does not endow us with the power to act. We live because we are alive. And we think because we are thinking beings.
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Young Hannah Arendt: We are so used to considering reason and passion as opposites, that the idea of passionate thinking, where we think and being alive are one and the same, is terrifying for me.
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Hannah Arendt: All just a tempest in a tea cup.
Heinrich Blücher: This is no tempest. It's a hurricane, Hannah.
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Martin Heidegger: Time is mysterious: it can return and transform everything. As I saw you again and you stood there in your beautiful dress, I knew that this would be the beginning of something new for us.
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Martin Heidegger: Hannah, I'm like the lad who dreams and knows not what he does.
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Hannah Arendt: I refuse to explain myself to these - dimwits.
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Mary McCarthy: Fill in the blank: Heidegger was the greatest - - in my entire life. Oh, come on. I won't tell anybody.
Hannah Arendt: There are some things that are stronger than a single human being.
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William Shawn: You're all treating Hannah Arendt like a suspect in a police court, instead of a respected political thinker.
Lionel Abel: Please, Bill, no one has attacked Hannah Eichmann's character.
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Lionel Abel: Who does she think she is? Aristotle?
Mary McCarthy: Unlike all of you, Hannah was actually forced into exile. She was held in a brutal detention camp. Isn't it admirable that she is the only one who can discuss this subject without beating her breast.
Norman: And why do you think that is? Because she's smarter than people with feelings?
Mary McCarthy: Well, in your case, Norman, being smarter is easy. She's more courageous than you are.
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Kurt Blumenfeld: You have no love for Israel? No love for your own people? I can't laugh with you anymore.
Hannah Arendt: But Kurt, you know me. I've never loved any people. Why should I love the Jews? I only love my friends. That's the only love I'm capable of.
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Hannah Arendt: When I was a child my father was very sick. He died when I was seven, after a long fight. I only knew him as a sick man. And in the dream where he appears he is healthy. He's handsome. He looks at me and he says: I love you.
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Hannah Arendt: He protested time and again, contrary to the Prosecution's assertions, that he had never done anything out of his own initiative. That he had no intentions, whatsoever. Good or bad. That he had only obeyed orders. This - typical Nazi plea makes it clear that the greatest evil in the world is the evil committed by nobodies. Evil committed by men without motives, without convictions.
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Thomas Miller: You blame the Jewish people for their own destruction.
Hannah Arendt: I never blamed the Jewish people! Resistance was impossible. But, perhaps, there is something in-between resistance - and cooperation. And only in that sense do I say that maybe some of the Jewish leaders might have behaved differently. It is profoundly important to ask these questions. Because, the role of the Jewish leaders gives the most striking insight into the totality of the moral collapse that the Nazis caused in respectable human being society. And not only in Germany, but in almost all countries. Not only among the persecutors, but, also among the victims.
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Hannah Arendt: Since Socrates and Plato, we usually call thinking to be engaged in that silent dialogue between me and myself. In refusing to be a person, Eichmann utterly surrendered that single most defining human quality. That of being able to *think*. Consequently, he was no longer capable of making moral judgments. This inability to think created the possibility for many ordinary men to commit evil deeds on a gigantic scale - the like of which one had never seen before.
Hannah Arendt Quotes
Extended Reading
Director: Margarethe von Trotta
Language: German,English,French,Hebrew,Latin Release date: January 10, 2013