A sociohistorical analysis of the construction of Jewish life and
national identity in post-Holocaust Germany.
New Beginnings offers an unprecedented historical inquiry into
how Jewish in Germany began to rebuild their social and cultural
networks immediately following World War II. Prompted by the recent
dynamic development of the Jewish community in Germany, social
analyses of the German Jewish experience have focused primarily on
current trends. But here Hagit Lavsky looks at the early history of
the postwar German Jewish community, while considering how German
Jews intermingled with Jews from other countries who, after the
war, ended up in Germany's Displaced Persons camps.
Lavsky concentrates on the British Zone of occupation in
northwest Germany where some of the most important Jewish
communities developed and laid the foundation for a central Jewish
communities developed and laid the foundation for a central Jewish
organization in the Federal German Republic. It was here that the
biggest DP camp -- Bergen-Belsen -- was located, with about 10,000
Jews and a flourishing DP community. And it was here, through a
unique cooperation of "camp and community, " that a new Jewish
post-Holocaust nationalism began to take shape.
As the first in-depth analysis of the combined development of
"camp and community, " New Beginnings examines the history of both
groups within the context of the Jewish world, the emergence of
Palestine-Israel, and the international arena. In so doing, it
reveals that the Jewish presence in Germany was not only an issue
to be tackled by external powers but also an active force shaping
the Jewish post-Holocaust stance worldwide.
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