What Our Fathers Did: A Nazi Legacy
Dir: David Evans
2015
****
Philippe Sands 2015 documentary is a shocking
and rather unsettling look at two elderly men, Niklas Frank and Horst von Wächter,
whose fathers were Nazi Officers responsible for sending thousands of
Jews to their deaths, including Sand's own
grandparents. Sands, a human rights lawyer, speaks to both
men separately to understand what it was like to be the child of a
Nazi officer during the Second World War. Niklas Frank (son of Hans Frank,
Governor of Occupied Poland and Hitler's personal Lawyer, also known as The
Butcher of Poland) had quite an unhappy and loveless childhood. When he learnt
the truth about his father he faced his family’s demons and became quite
outspoken and honest about the atrocities his father
had committed. He certainly wasn't at peace (one of his siblings remained
a Nazi and Escaped to South Africa, another committed suicide due to
guilt) but becoming a spokesperson for civil rights has given him a level of
peace of mind, while he certainly doesn't feel responsible for any wrong, he
does feel it is his responsibility to speak out against Nazism in all
is guises. His 1987 book The
Father: A Settling of Accounts, was a controversial novel that took Germany
by storm and was celebrated among critics. He keeps a picture of his
father just after he was hanged in his breast pocket at all times as a reminder
of who he is. Horst von Wächter, son of Otto Wächter is a
different kettle of fish. After a very awkward first interview, it is
clear that Horst is either uncomfortable
with taking about his father or in denial of what he was responsible
for. In the end both appear true. The documentary starts to take
an unexpectedly dark corner when the two sons get together. Both know
each other and consider each other friends but the more they talk and visit
sites where their fathers worked, the more it becomes clear that Horst
doesn't believe his father was guilty of any wrong doing. The film then gets
even darker, when visiting a church near a mass grave in the Ukraine, the three
men encounter a funeral organised by a group of local neo-Nazis (some in full Nazi uniform).
While Niklas questions the group in a forcibly calm manner, Horst
soon lets himself become a hero among them, once they realize who his
father was. What follows is disturbing and frightening in equal measure.
The film is never forced in any way. Sands focuses on fact but never
intimidates of tricks his interviewees and the documentary is never
sensationalist. It will stay with you for days later, the sign of a
good documentary and a reflection of the scary world we live in.
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