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Books > Humanities > History > European history > From 1900 > Second World War
Anne Frank's The Diary of a Young Girl is an inspiring and tragic
account of an ordinary life lived in extraordinary circumstances
that has enthralled readers for generations. This Penguin Classics
edition is edited by Otto H. Frank and Mirjam Pressler, translated
by Susan Massotty, and includes an introduction by Elie Wiesel,
author of Night. 'June, 1942: I hope I will be able to confide
everything to you, as I have never been able to confide in anyone,
and I hope you will be a great source of comfort and support.' In
Amsterdam, in the summer of 1942, the Nazis forced teenager Anne
Frank and her family into hiding. For over two years, they, another
family and a German dentist lived in a 'secret annexe', fearing
discovery. All that time, Anne kept a diary. Since its publication
in 1947, Anne Frank's diary has been read by tens of millions of
people. This Definitive Edition restores substantial material
omitted from the original edition, giving us a deeper insight into
Anne Frank's world. Her curiosity about her emerging sexuality, the
conflicts with her mother, her passion for Peter, a boy whose
family hid with hers, and her acute portraits of her fellow
prisoners reveal Anne as more human, more vulnerable and more vital
than ever. 'One of the greatest books of the twentieth century'
Guardian 'A modern classic' Julia Neuberger, The Times
In the spring of 1944, nearly 500,000 Jews were deported from the
Hungarian countryside and killed in Auschwitz. In Budapest, only
150,000 Jews survived both the German occupation and dictatorship
of the Hungarian National Socialists, who took power in October
1944. Zsuzsanna Ozsvath's family belonged among the survivors. This
memoir begins with the the author's childhood during the Holocaust
in Hungary. It captures life after the war's end in Communist-ruled
Hungary and continues with her and her husband's flight to Germany
and eventually the United States. Ozsvath's poignant story of
survival, friendship, and love provides readers with a rare glimpse
of an extraordinary journey.
The fateful story of Adolf Hitler's transformation from awkward,
feckless loner to lethal, charismatic demagogue. The story of the
making of Adolf Hitler that we are all familiar with is the one
Hitler himself wove in his 1924 trial, and then expanded upon in
Mein Kampf. It tells of his rapid emergence as National Socialist
leader in 1919, and of how he successfully rallied most of Munich
and the majority of Bavaria's establishment to support the famous
beer-hall putsch of 1923. It is an account which has largely been
taken at face value for over ninety years. Yet, on closer
examination, Hitler's account of his experiences in the years
immediately following the First World War turns out to be every bit
as unreliable as his account of his experiences as a soldier during
the war itself. In Becoming Hitler, Thomas Weber continues from
where he left off in his previous book, Hitler's First War,
stripping away the layers of myth and fabrication in Hitler's own
tale to tell the real story of Hitler's politicization and
radicalization in post-First World War Munich. It is the gripping
account of how an awkward and unemployed loner with virtually no
recognizable leadership qualities and fluctuating political ideas
turned into the charismatic, self-assured, virulently anti-Semitic
leader with an all-or-nothing approach to politics with whom the
world was soon to become tragically familiar. As Weber clearly
shows, far from the picture of a fully-formed political leader
which Hitler wanted to portray in Mein Kampf, his ideas and
priorities were still very uncertain and largely undefined in early
1919 - and they continued to shift until 1923. It was the failed
Ludendorff putsch of November 1923 - and the subsequent Ludendorff
trial - which was to prove the making of Hitler. And he was not
slow to spot the opportunity that it offered. As the movers and
shakers of Munich's political scene tried to blame everything on
him in the course of the trial, Hitler was presented with a golden
opportunity to place himself at the centre of attention, turning
what had been the 'Ludendorff trial' into the 'Hitler trial'.
Henceforth, he would no longer be merely a local Bavarian political
leader. From now on, he would present himself as a potential
'national saviour'. In the months after the trial, Hitler cemented
this myth by writing Mein Kampf from his comfortable prison cell.
His years of metamorphosis were now behind him. His years as Fuhrer
were soon to come.
The powerful and bestselling memoir of a young Jewish pianist who
survived the war in Warsaw against all odds. Made into a Bafta and
Oscar-winning film. 'You can learn more about human nature from
this brief account of the survival of one man throughout the war
years in the devastated city of Warsaw than from several volumes of
the average encyclopaedia' Independent on Sunday 'We are drawn in
to share his surprise and then disbelief at the horrifying progress
of events, all conveyed with an understated intimacy and dailiness
that render them painfully close - riveting' Observer 'A book so
fresh and vivid, so heartbreaking, and so simply and beautifully
written, that it manages to tell us the story of horrendous events
as if for the first time' Daily Telegraph
As the Nazis staged their takeover in 1933, instances of
antisemitic violence began to soar. While previous historical
research assumed that this violence happened much later, Hermann
Beck counteracts this, drawing on sources from twenty German
archives, and focussing on this early violence, and on the reaction
of German institutions and the elites who led them. Before the
Holocaust examines the antisemitic violence experienced in this
period - from boycotts, violent attacks, robbery, extortion,
abductions, and humiliating 'pillory marches', to grievous bodily
harm and murder - which has hitherto not been adequately
recognized. Beck then analyses the reactions of those institutions
that still had the capacity to protest against Nazi attacks and
legislative measures - the Protestant Church, the Catholic Church,
the bureaucracies, and Hitler's conservative coalition partner, the
DNVP - and the mindset of the elites who led them, to determine
their various responses to flagrant antisemitic abuses. Individual
protests against violent attacks, the April boycott, and Nazi
legislative measures were already hazardous in March and April
1933, but established institutions in the German State and society
were still able to voice their concerns and raise objections. By
doing so, they might have stopped or at least postponed a
radicalization that eventually led to the pogrom of 1938
(Kristallnacht) and the Holocaust.
Built in 1927, the German ocean liner SS Cap Arcona was the
greatest ship since the RMS Titanic and one of the most celebrated
luxury liners in the world. When the Nazis seized control in
Germany, she was stripped down for use as a floating barracks and
troop transport. Later, during the war, Hitler's minister, Joseph
Goebbels, cast her as the "star" in his epic propaganda film about
the sinking of the legendary Titanic. Following the film's enormous
failure, the German navy used the Cap Arcona to transport German
soldiers and civilians across the Baltic, away from the Red Army's
advance. In the Third Reich's final days, the ill-fated ship was
packed with thousands of concentration camp prisoners. Without
adequate water, food, or sanitary facilities, the prisoners
suffered as they waited for the end of the war. Just days before
Germany surrendered, the Cap Arconawas mistakenly bombed by the
British Royal Air Force, and nearly all of the prisoners were
killed in the last major tragedy of the Holocaust and one of
history's worst maritime disasters. Although the British government
sealed many documents pertaining to the ship's sinking, Robert P.
Watson has unearthed forgotten records, conducted many interviews,
and used over 100 sources, including diaries and oral histories, to
expose this story. As a result, The Nazi Titanic is a riveting and
astonishing account of an enigmatic ship that played a devastating
role in World War II and the Holocaust.
This book analyzes the role and function of an Italian deportation
camp during and immediately after World War Two within the context
of Italian, European, and Holocaust history. Drawing upon archival
documents, trial proceedings, memoirs, and testimonies, Herr
investigates the uses of Fossoli as an Italian prisoner-of-war camp
for Allied soldiers captured in North Africa (1942-43), a Nazi
deportation camp for Jews and political prisoners (1943-44), a
postwar Italian prison for Fascists, German soldiers, and displaced
persons (1945-47), and a Catholic orphanage (1947-52). This case
study shines a spotlight on victims, perpetrators, Resistance
fighters, and local collaborators to depict how the Holocaust
unfolded in a small town and how postwar conditions supported a
story of national innocence. This book trains a powerful lens on
the multi-layered history of Italy during the Holocaust and
illuminates key elements of local involvement largely ignored by
Italian wartime and postwar narratives, particularly compensated
compliance (compliance for financial gain), the normalization of
mass murder, and the industrialization of the Judeocide in Italy.
The vast majority of studies of Hannah Arendt's thought are
concerned with her as a political theorist. This book offers a
contribution to rectifying this imbalance by providing a critical
engagement with Arendtian ethics. Arendt asserts that the crimes of
the Holocaust revealed a shift in ethics and the need for new
responses to a new kind of evil. In this new treatment of her work,
Arendt's best-known ethical concepts - the notion of the banality
of evil and the link she posits between thoughtlessness and evil,
both inspired by her study of Adolf Eichmann - are disassembled and
appraised. The concept of the banality of evil captures something
tangible about modern evil, yet requires further evaluation in
order to assess its implications for understanding contemporary
evil, and what it means for traditional, moral philosophical issues
such as responsibility, blame and punishment. In addition, this
account of Arendt's ethics reveals two strands of her thought not
previously considered: her idea that the condition of 'living with
oneself' can represent a barrier to evil and her account of the
'nonparticipants' who refused to be complicit in the crimes of the
Nazi period and their defining moral features. This exploration
draws out the most salient aspects of Hannah Arendt's ethics,
provides a critical review of the more philosophically problematic
elements, and places Arendt's work in this area in a broader moral
philosophy context, examining the issues in moral philosophy which
are raised in her work such as the relevance of intention for moral
responsibility and of thinking for good moral conduct, and
questions of character, integrity and moral incapacity.
For the sizeable Jewish community living in Greece during the
1940s, German occupation of Greece posed a distinct threat. The
Nazis and their collaborators murdered around ninety percent of the
Jewish population through the course of the war. This new account
presents cutting edge research on four elements of the Holocaust in
Greece: the level of antisemitism and question of collaboration;
the fate of Jewish property before, during, and after their
deportation; how the few surviving Jews were treated following
their return to Greece, especially in terms of justice and
restitution; and the ways in which Jewish communities rebuilt
themselves both in Greece and abroad. Taken together, these
elements point to who was to blame for the disaster that befell
Jewish communities in Greece, and show that the occupation
authorities alone could not have carried out these actions to such
magnitude without the active participation of Greek Christians.
'An extraordinary book . . . vivid and heart-breaking' The Jewish
Chronicle Through the discovery of a precious friendship album
which belonged to 12-year-old Alie, a Jewish schoolgirl in
Amsterdam, Claudia Carli has traced and preserved the lives of an
entire class of girls, most of whom did not survive the War. Alie
and her friends are brought touchingly and vividly to life, along
with their writings, in this extraordinary book. Their everyday
hopes, pleasures and longings are offset by the constant fear of a
knock on the door, a missing friend from class, a family member
taken away. Alie and her mother were to die in Sobibor in 1943.
Alie's sister Gretha survived Auschwitz and kept her promise to her
sister to preserve the friendship album so long as she hoped to
live. This book will sit alongside Anne Frank's diary and The
Cutout Girl as a unique window into occupied Amsterdam and the
girls who will now never be forgotten.
This is a truly unique account of Nazi Germany at war and of one
man's struggle against totalitarianism. A mid-level official in a
provincial town, Friedrich Kellner kept a secret diary from 1939 to
1945, risking his life to record Germany's path to dictatorship and
genocide, and to protest his countrymen's complicity in the
regime's brutalities. Just one month into the war he notes how
soldiers on leave spoke openly about the extermination of the Jews
and the murder of POWs, while he also documents the Gestapo's
merciless rule at home from euthanasia campaigns against the
handicapped and mentally ill to the execution of anyone found
listening to foreign broadcasts. This essential testimony of
everyday life under the Third Reich is accompanied by a foreword by
Alan Steinweis and the remarkable story of how the diary was
brought to light by Robert Scott Kellner, Friedrich's grandson.
Out of the Holocaust recounts the plight of two Jewish-born orphans in Latvia and
Germany during WWII. It is a tribute to the many brave individuals who cared for a
large group of orphans on their journey through the war-torn land. It is also a
testimony of God's love. May it be a spiritual igniter for you, especially during times
of hardship.
Stephen E. Ambrose draws from more than 1,400 interviews with American, British, Canadian, French, and German veterans to create the preeminent chronicle of the most important day in the twentieth century. Ambrose reveals how the original plans for the invasion were abandoned, and how ordinary soldiers and officers acted on their own initiative. D-Day is above all the epic story of men at the most demanding moment of their existence, when the horrors, complexities, and triumphs of life are laid bare. Ambrose portrays the faces of courage and heroism, fear and determination -- what Eisenhower called "the fury of an aroused democracy" -- that shaped the victory of the citizen soldiers whom Hitler had disparaged.
In Hitler's Foreign Executioners, Heinrich Himmler's secret master
plan for Europe is revealed: an SS empire that would have no place
for either the Nazi Party or Adolf Hitler. His astonishingly
ambitious plan depended on the recruitment of tens of thousands of
'Germanic' peoples from every corner of Europe, and even parts of
Asia, to build an 'SS Europa'. This revised and fully updated book,
researched in archives all over Europe and using first-hand
testimony, exposes Europe's dirty secret: nearly half a million
Europeans and more than a million Soviet citizens enlisted in the
armed forces of the Third Reich to fight a deadly crusade against a
mythic foe, Jewish Bolshevism. Even today, some apologists claim
that these foreign SS volunteers were merely soldiers 'like any
other' and fought a decent war against Stalin's Red Army. Historian
Christopher Hale demonstrates conclusively that these surprisingly
common views are mistaken. By taking part in Himmler's murderous
master plan, these foreign executioners hoped to prove that they
were worthy of joining his future 'SS Europa'. But as the Reich
collapsed in 1944, Himmler's monstrous scheme led to bitter
confrontations with Hitler - and to the downfall of the man once
known as 'loyal Heinrich'.
The study of genocide and mass atrocity abounds with references to
emotions: fear, anger, horror, shame and hatred. Yet we don't
understand enough about how 'ordinary' emotions behave in such
extreme contexts. Emotions are not merely subjective and
interpersonal phenomena; they are also powerful social and
political forces, deeply involved in the history of mass violence.
Drawing on recent insights from philosophy, psychology, history,
and the social sciences, this volume examines the emotions of
perpetrators, victims, and bystanders. Editors Thomas Brudholm and
Johannes Lang have brought together an interdisciplinary group of
prominent scholars to provide an in-depth analysis of the nature,
value, and role of emotions as they relate to the causes and
dynamics of mass atrocities. The result is a new perspective on the
social, political, and moral dimensions of emotions in the history
of collective violence and its aftermath.
Despite the massive literature on the Holocaust, our understanding
of it has traditionally been influenced by rather unsophisticated
early perspectives and silences. This book summarises and
criticises the existing scholarship on the subject and suggests new
ways by which we can approach its study. It addresses the use of
victim testimony and asks important questions: What function does
recording the past serve for the victim? What do historians want
from it? Are these two perspectives incompatible? The perpetrators
of the Holocaust and the development of the murder process are
closely examined. The book also compares the mentalities of the
killers and the contexts of the killing with those in other acts of
genocide and ethnic cleansing in the first half of the twentieth
century, searching for an explanation within these comparisons. In
addition, it looks at the bystanders to the Holocaust - considering
the complexity and ambiguity at the heart of contemporary
responses, especially within the western liberal democracies.
Ultimately, this text highlights the essential need to place the
Holocaust in the broadest possible context, emphasising the
importance of producing high quality but sensitive scholarship in
its study. -- .
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Anti-Semitism and the Holocaust This title covers the origins of
anti-Semitism from the nineteenth century, and traces the events
that took place in Germany from 1933 to 1945. The anti-Semitic
views of Hitler are analysed as is the means by which these views
shaped the racial state in the Third Reich. The impact of the
Second World War and the events which led ultimately to the Final
Solution are then assessed. All of these events are also considered
within the wider historiographical debates which have surrounded
this period of history, from questions on who should ultimately
bear the blame, to issues of Holocaust denial.
Born in the Netherlands at a time when girls are to be housewives
and mothers and nothing else, Hendrika de Vries is a "daddy's girl"
until her father is deported from Nazi-occupied Amsterdam to a POW
camp in Germany and her mother joins the Resistance. In the
aftermath of her father's departure, Hendrika watches as freedoms
formerly taken for granted are eroded with escalating brutality by
men with swastika armbands who aim to exterminate those they deem
"inferior" and those who do not obey. As time goes on, Hendrika
absorbs her mother's strength and faith, and learns about moral
choice and forced silence. She sees her hidden Jewish "stepsister"
betrayed, and her mother interrogated at gunpoint. She and her
mother suffer near starvation, and they narrowly escape death on
the day of liberation. But they survive it all-and through these
harrowing experiences, Hendrika discovers the woman she wants to
become.
This book is an original and comparative study of reactions in West
and East Africa to the persecution and attempted annihilation of
Jews in Europe and in former German colonies in sub-Saharan Africa
during the Second World War. An intellectual and diplomatic history
of World War II and the Holocaust, Africans and the Holocaust looks
at the period from the perspectives of the colonized subjects of
the Gold Coast, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Kenya, Tanganyika, and
Uganda, as well as the sovereign peoples of Liberia and Ethiopia,
who wrestled with the social and moral questions that the war and
the Holocaust raised. The five main chapters of the book explore
the pre-Holocaust history of relations between Jews and Africans in
West and East Africa, perceptions of Nazism in both regions,
opinions of World War II, interpretations of the Holocaust, and
responses of the colonized and sovereign peoples of West and East
Africa to efforts by Great Britain to resettle certain categories
of Jewish refugees from Europe in the two regions before and during
the Holocaust. This book will be of use to students and scholars of
African history, Holocaust and Jewish studies, and international or
global history.
This extraordinary wartime diary provides a rare glimpse into the
daily life of French and foreign-born Jewish refugees under the
Vichy regime during World War II. Long hidden, the diary was
written by Lucien Dreyfus, a native of Alsacewho was a teacher at
the most prestigious high school in Strasbourg, an editor of the
leading Jewish newspaper of Alsace and Lorraine, the devoted father
of an only daughter, and the doting grandfather of an only
granddaughter. In 1939, after the French declaration of war on
Hitler's Germany, Lucien and his wife, Marthe, were forced by the
French state to leave Strasbourg along with thousands of other
Jewish and non-Jewish residents of the city. The couple found
refuge in Nice, on the Mediterranean coast in the south of France.
Anti-Jewish laws prevented Lucien from resuming his teaching career
and his work as a newspaper editor. But he continued to write,
recording his trenchant reflections on the situation of France and
French Jews under the Vichy regime. American visas allowed his
daughter, son-in-law, and granddaughter to escape France in the
spring of 1942 and establish new lives in the United States, but
Lucien and Marthe were not so lucky. Rounded up during an SS raid
in September 1943, they were deported and murdered in
Auschwitz-Birkenau two months later. As the only diary by an
observant Jew raised bi-culturally in French and German, Dreyfus's
writing offers a unique philosophical and moral reflection on the
Holocaust as it was unfolding in France.
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