It was Göth's firm belief that the Jews themselves should pay for their own execution, and it was wholly in this spirit when on May 11, 1942, in the small town of Szczebrzeszyn, the Gestapo ordered the Jewish council to pay 2,000 zloty and 3 kilos of coffee to cover the expenses for the ammunition used to kill the Jews.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amon_G%C3%B6th
This great German naturally attracted much "attention" from Jews after the war that he became a sort of celebrity among holocaust fanatics. He became the all-time blueprint for evil-Nazi:
- cultured
- cold/intolerant
- violent
- crazy
- anti-Semitic
Although nothing of his words survive except from Jewish sources (which amount to zero credibility), one can rest assured that his actions bear the landmark of an intelligent and thoroughly admirable individual.
Of course his heritors do not live up to his name:
In 2002, an interview book with Göth's daughter, Monika, was published in Germany under the name "Ich muß doch meinen Vater lieben, oder?" (But I must love my father, mustn't I?). For the first time, Göth's daughter spoke of her mother, who unconditionally glorified her father until faced with his role in the Holocaust, and had committed suicide after giving an interview in the 1980s.[5]
Göth's daughter's experiences in dealing with the legacy of her Nazi father's crimes are detailed in Inheritance, a 2008 documentary directed by James Moll.[6] Also appearing in the documentary is Helen Jonas who was one of Amon Göth's slaves at his villa. The documentary details the meeting of the two women at the Plaszlow memorial site in Poland.
"Any man who is not attacked in the Jewish newspapers, not slandered and vilified, is no decent German and no true National Socialist." - Adolf Hitler