Preparing the Eichmann Trial: Who Really Did the Job?

Hanna Yablonka, Ben-Gurion University

Abstract

The Eichmann trial has been one of the most important formative events in the short history of the State of Israel. The echoes of its impact on how Israelis as individuals and as a public perceive themselves reverberate even today in the most profound and existential of ways. In the public consciousness the trial was, and still is, fundamentally identified with its prosecutor then Attorney General Gideon Hausner. However the trial was not a one-man show as the public tended to perceive it. Behind the scenes were numerous people working and preparing for the trial and influencing the prosecution's case against Eichmann: the investigators in the special police unit Bureau 06 established to conduct the investigation and prepare the criminal file; the Holocaust survivor organizations and institutions; and all echelons of the political sphere. This paper will trace some of the stages in the preparation of the prosecution of Eichmann and the people involved, as well as the matter of the scope of the bill of indictment and of the historical narrative tolls at the trial and the fact that it emerged to he one of the most important trials in the history of the twentieth century.

Recommended Citation

Yablonka, Hanna (2000) "Preparing the Eichmann Trial: Who Really Did the Job?," Theoretical Inquiries in Law: Vol. 1 : No. 2, Article 5.
Available at: http://www.bepress.com/til/default/vol1/iss2/art5

 
 
 
 

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