The Holocaust has always provided an excellent argument for
atheism. Its utter inhumanity leads one to the classic three options to the
question “How could an all-powerful, all-knowing deity have allowed this to
happen”: 1) God is not
all-knowing and all powerful, so is therefore not the god of the Bible. 2) God is all-knowing and all-powerful,
so therefore must be malevolent. 3) There is no God. While this progression of
ideas makes sense to evidence-based thinkers, religion is based on beliefs.
Beliefs are, by definition, ideas that do not have evidence to support them.
Victims of the Holocaust are anything but mute on the
existence of God. At Mauthausen Concentration Camp in Austria, one victim wrote
on the wall next to his bunk “If there is a God, he will have to fall on his
knees and beg my forgiveness.” Nobel laureate Elie Wiesel is eloquent on this
point in his memoir Night. There, Wiesel recalls attending a religious
service, while he was an inmate at Auschwitz, where those present are blessing
God. He writes “Why should I bless Him? In every fiber I rebelled. Because He
had had thousands of children burned in His pits? Because He kept six crematories
working night and day, on Sundays and feast days? Because in His great might He
had created Auschwitz, Birkenau, Buna, and so many factories of death? … My
eyes were open and I was alone –terribly alone in a world without God. (Wiesel,
pp. 64-5).
After his liberation from Auschwitz, Wiesel’s religiosity
does rebound. His relationship to the God of his childhood is permanently
changed. But he identifies himself as a believer. This is not an uncommon
reaction to trauma or inhumanity. The book This Republic of Suffering: Death
and the American Civil War chronicles the continuing faith in God. Northern
citizens saw their victory as evidence of God’s championing of their righteous
cause. Southerners saw their loss and devastation as a test of their faith
provided by God. Only a minority contemplated the fields of slaughter and
thought “there is no God.” Of course tragedies like the Civil War and the
Holocaust do produce their share of atheists. But the majority of people fall
back on their faith as a support through times of crisis and loss. For many,
the idea that there is some all-powerful creature watching over them, even
though they do not understand their suffering, is more attractive than the idea
that there is no one in charge and events are open to chaos or chance. Rare is
the cancer patient who throws-off her religion the day of her diagnosis; or the
civilian during wartime who decides there is no God when the bombs are falling.
These examples exist, but they are the minority. People like order and
protection in their world. But that’s the way people are: afraid of the void.
Even as atheists, we have to admit that the Judeo-Christian
happy ending is more attractive than our version of the finale. The picture of
one’s self moving on to an afterlife when she dies; purportedly one where a
friendly cosmic father welcomes her and she gets to party with dead loved ones
for eternity, is more appealing than the scientific facts accepted by most
atheists. Accepting rational, scientific conclusions, means facing a stark
reality where you end when your brain ceases to function.
So, if the world is capable of having repeated genocides
like the Holocaust, and the human population persists in the belief in an
invisible super-dad, then we have a long road ahead towards a total acceptance
of science and reason. We may as well make the journey with equanimity. There’s
no point in frustration over the failure of most people to see what is evident
to any rational, scientific mind. We do not need others to validate our
perspective. Let’s leave that insecurity to the religious, whose worldview is
based upon a more ethereal foundation than ours. Sure, we are going to need to
respond to political abuses by believers with competence and intelligence. The
fundamentalist shooters (be they Christians at women’s health clinics or
Muslims at airports), the “God Hates Fags” protesters at funerals of LGBTQ
soldiers, the attempts at censorship and the attempts to impose religion on
government, these all require response. But let’s not lose sight of the
rationality that brought us to atheism. Let’s leave the emotionalism, which
burns those who bear it, to people of faith. There is no point in struggling to
make others accept our ideas. No one’s going to hell if they do not swallow our
catechism; that’s someone else’s story. If we have not learned to take that
cleansing breath in the face of religion, perpetual anger and bitterness will be
our reward.
So, when facing issues like the Holocaust, where one faith
tries to wipe another off the planet, where those of faith persist in belief, we
atheists can conduct ourselves sensibly. We have our communities (like this one
online). We can be thoughtful and responsive, rather than reactive. We can make
our points, share our ideas and live our lives the way we see fit.
Faust, Drew Gilpin. This Republic of Suffering: Death and
the American Civil War. New York: Vintage Books, 2009.
Wiesel, Elie. Night. New York: Bantam Books, 1982.
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