Will Bunch of the Philadelphia Inquirer writes:
When it comes to the topic of concentration camps, Andrea
Pitzer wrote the book — literally. The Washington, D.C.-area writer’s own
personal curiosity about the origins and history of this inhumane practice —
and her sense that many people view the subject too narrowly through the lens
of Nazi
Germany or Joseph
Stalin’s USSR — sparked her 2017 book, One
Long Night: A Global History of Concentration Camps.
Although her book traces the long arc of cruel and often
disease-ridden detention camps beginning in 1890s’ Cuba on the eve of
the Spanish-American War, one question loomed largest, especially when it was
published in the first year of Donald Trump’s first
term and a
crackdown on immigrants at the southern border.
Could it happen here?
Eight years later, Pitzer
has no doubt: The push for a network of American concentration camps —
rounding up people based on their identity rather than their crimes, holding
them indefinitely without due process, in crowded, squalid conditions — isn’t
just underway. It’s happening faster than the veteran author could have
imagined, especially when compared with the growth of Germany’s camps between
when Adolf Hitler took power in 1933 and the start of World War II six years
later.
“I’m particularly concerned about where we are now, because
we’re well into that five-year period in terms of we’re already doing sweeps,
right?” Pitzer said. “We’ve already got masked guys. We’re already disappearing
hundreds of people to … foreign countries, or to the Everglades, or now to Fort
Bliss” — the El Paso, Texas, military base, which the Trump regime just
awarded a $1.2 billion contract for a large new camp.
When I connected with Pitzer this week, she was trying to
finish an unrelated project, but kept getting interrupted by pesky journalists
like me wanting to talk about One Long Night and the rapid push to erect a U.S.
gulag
archipelago of camps like the large one hastily thrown up by Florida
officials in the fetid swamps of the Everglades.
Anyone clinging to their belief that a democracy like the
United States could never go down the trail of large-scale inhumanity blazed by
1930s’ Germany or Russia should
have had that faith shattered by the $600 million-a-year,
constructed-in-days immigrant detention camp that opened on July 1 in the
swampland west of Miami.
Just the quasi-official name bestowed on the new camp by
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis
and others — “Alligator Alcatraz,” reinforced by
government tweets of fierce reptiles wearing “ICE” caps and Trump’s jokes about
immigrants running from the Everglades’ man-eaters — is the
cruelty-is-the-point exclamation mark. Pitzer and other critics of the
regime’s mass deportation agenda refuse to call it by the sadistic name, but
the alligator branding is hardly the only clue to intentional inhumanity.
“It’s like a dog cage,” a detained Cuban immigrant, Rafael
Collado, said
by phone to reporters in Miami, describing a wetlands facility that floods
frequently, where detainees lack showers, the food is rancid, the overhead
light is continuous, and the mosquitoes are voracious.
For Pitzer, the mosquito plague at the Everglades camp is a
revelation of its common bond with the worst camps of the last 130 years.
“Mosquitoes have likewise long had a starring role in concentration camps
around the world, starting with the first reconcentrados in Cuba in the 1890s,”
she
posted recently on Bluesky. Malaria was endemic at early camps there and
with America’s early 20th-century detainees in the Philippines, but later the
USSR and China would intentionally torture their prisoners with exposure to the
biting and disease-bearing insects.
One of Pitzer’s goals in writing One Long Night and her
follow-up works has been to define what exactly a concentration camp is.
She called it “the mass detention of civilians without
any real trial. So if there’s a trial, it’s a show trial.” Detainees are
held “on the basis of race, ethnicity, religion, political affiliation, or some
aspect of identity instead of as a consequence of a specific crime that they’ve
done and been convicted of. And it was almost always done for political gain.
And what I saw all over, but also in the U.S., was the way, particularly after
9/11 in ‘the war on terror,’ that it was used to sort of consolidate
political power.”
The most famous case study, in Nazi Germany, is also the
source of many current misconceptions, since the “final solution” death
camps, such as Auschwitz in Poland, where some of the six million Jews
murdered in the Holocaust died in gas chambers, have often been what people
think of. But the first well-known German concentration camp, Dachau,
opened less than two months after Hitler took power in early 1933, and was used
to detain — not slaughter — the Nazis’ political opponents.
“It was used in a kind of social engineering way,” Pitzer
said of Hitler’s early camps. “There were a lot of homeless people, there were
a lot of career criminals that they put in the camps to kind of dilute the
percentage of political prisoners. So it would be more of a PR thing. People
would support it more. You saw detention, particularly, of gay men.”
For Pitzer, the controversial but ultimately unpunished
methods America used on Muslim detainees after the 2001 terror attack,
including torture
tactics such as waterboarding detainees at Guantánamo Bay in Cuba or CIA
“black sites” around the world, established a baseline of depravity the Trump
regime is now building on.
It’s clear the unsanitary Florida detention camp isn’t a
one-off, but rather a model for what the 47th president and his immigration
guru, Stephen Miller, hope to accomplish over the next three-and-a-half years.
Right now, the surge in raids on unauthorized immigrants by
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has already created an all-time high
number of detainees at more
than 56,000, which is far more than the federal government can handle.
That’s led to horrendous
makeshift situations like an ICE office in Manhattan, where leaked videos
show detainees held in what’s supposed to be an office, as a man shouts that
“they’re treating us like dogs in here.”
The Florida concentration camp model will expand, now that
Congress has approved a
massive $45 billion appropriation for new immigration detention sites, with
another $29 billion to hire more masked agents to arrest people and fill them.
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has unveiled a plan
for a new network of sites in military bases across the country, including one
at New Jersey’s Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst that a critic has already
dubbed “the Garden State Gulag.” A
5,000-bed camp planned for Fort Bliss, near the border with Mexico, has
already raised red flags after the contract went to an inexperienced firm, but
Pitzer noted this isn’t the only problem with using military sites.
“It’s not like it’s a secret prison, but it is a closed
space,” she said. “And it’s going to be harder to know what’s happening and to
keep track of it.” The author shares my concern that as the concentration camps
gain momentum, the purpose of them will shift — maybe to incarcerate protesters
or political prisoners, or Americans stripped of their citizenship.
Pitzer said her research has shown these camps “almost
always transcend whatever were the original goals of even the very bad actors
that imposed the camps in the first place. And so what we are looking at
potentially happening here is not just sort of Stephen Miller’s visions being
fulfilled. We could be looking at something much worse over time that we aren’t
even imagining yet.”
With Pitzer, I share a fascination with the history of
concentration camps and a sense of horror watching this story unfold on U.S.
soil, in my own lifetime. We do need to be honest about American history: This
has happened before, not just overseas, but here during World War II, when approximately
120,000 Japanese Americans were moved into camps. Still, the growing
prevalence of Holocaust
education with its rallying cry of “Never Again,” and a
U.S. apology over that Japanese internment made me hope — even believe —
that I’d never have to write a column like this.
I was wrong.
Pitzer told me that while she is worried about the speed
with which concentration camps are being implemented, and about the weakness of
institutions like Congress or the media that could play a role in stopping
this, she also feels some hope in sinking
public support for Trump’s immigration agenda and
the protests that have occurred.
“What they don’t have in place yet is that there’s actually
still a tremendous amount of personal liberty and ability to dissent among most
of the American population,” she said. Yet, if we don’t raise our voices
immediately, that ability could disappear quickly. The moment to scream “Never
Again” is right now, not during your grandchild’s history class.
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