Northwest Center for Holocaust, Genocide and Ethnocide Education
Review
A
Review of Saints
and Villains
as a Lesson
in Courage
and Faith
by
Kristin
Michaud
In
the novel, Saints
and Villians,
Denise
Giardina
speculates
upon the
life of
German
theologian
& Nazi
resister,
Dietrich
Bonhoeffer.
While
the
“facts”
that are
accredited
to
Bonhoeffer’s
life are
filtered
through the
mind of the
novelist and
create a
fictional
account of
the renowned
Nazi
resister,
Giardina’s
exploration
into his
humanity
offers an
important
perspective
on courage,
heroic
action,
resistance
and faith in
the face of
inhumanity.
Giardina
explores
Bonhoeffer’s
life
beginning in
his
childhood
and ending
with his
execution
upon the
charge of
treason
against the
German
government
for
participating
in a failed
plot to
overthrow
the Nazi
regime and
assassinate
Hitler.
In
the process,
Giardina
introduces
the reader
to a man who
is both
courageous
and humanly
complex.
Depicting
Bonhoeffer
as a man
that holds
claim to a
complicated
life filled
with
self-doubt,
love, loss
and
depression,
Giardina
challenges
the notion
that heroes
must be
exceptional
people.
In
The
Ballantine
Reader’s
Circle Guide
to Saints
and Villains,
the author
states,
"I don’t believe in such things as paragons of virtue or evil monsters. I never saw him as a paragon of virtue; I am predisposed to see complexity. I saw the flaws and was more interested in the complexities and layers that made him a real human being. As you begin to read about and get to know someone, you find the strange, quirky stuff that makes them distinct and interesting as individuals."
Bonhoeffer’s humanity demonstrates the average person’s capacity for courage and heroism when faced with injustice.
Additionally, the novel’s exploration of Bonhoeffer’s experiences in the United States, specifically in the Kentucky coal mines on Gauley Mountain, offer an important perspective on the connection between racism against African-Americans in the United States prior to World War II and the initial anti-Semitic policies of the German government at the onset of the Holocaust. Bonhoeffer’s letters to family members discuss his ethical opposition against the lynching, segregation, and mistreatment of African-Americans in the United States. Meanwhile, Bonhoeffer returns to Germany to find that the German government’s anti-Semitic policies resemble the treatment of black Americans in the United States. While the magnitude of the atrocities that characterized the Holocaust are incomparable, the similarities between the origins of the Holocaust and African-American’s treatment in the United States warn the reader of the possible enormity of marginalization if left unaddressed.
Thus, while the lens that Denise Giardina chooses to view Dietrich Bonhoeffer through may not hold true historical accuracy, it does raise important questions about personal responsibility in the face of inhumanity. The flaws and struggles that characterize Dietrich Bonhoeffer offer every average person a lesson in courage. Giardina does an exceptional job of going beyond a discussion of facts, and explores the humanity of an average man that showed not-so-average courage when faced with injustice.
Bonhoeffer's lessons hold profound implications for classroom instruction. Students can be made aware of Bonhoeffer's classification of individuals during the Holocaust as either victims, perpetrators, or guilty bystanders. Thus, when students become witness to the disparagement or victimization of their peers, they must self-reflect upon their own role in its occurrence, creating profound implications for student responsibility and leadership.
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