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Escaping Auschwitz - A Culture of Forgetting (Hardcover)
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Escaping Auschwitz - A Culture of Forgetting (Hardcover)
Series: Psychoanalysis and Social Theory
Expected to ship within 12 - 19 working days
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On 7 April 1944 a Slovakian Jew, Rudolf Vrba (born Walter
Rosenberg), and a fellow prisoner, Alfred Wetzler, succeeded in
escaping from Auschwitz-Birkenau. As block registrars both men had
been allowed relative (though always risky) freedom of movement in
the camp and thus had been able to observe the massive preparations
underway at Birkenau of the entire killing machine for the
eradication of Europe's last remaining Jewish community, the
800,000 Jews of Hungary. The two men somehow made their way back to
Slovakia where they sought out the Jewish Council (Judenrat) to
warn them of the impending disaster. The Vrba-Wetzler report was
the first document about the Auschwitz death camp to reach the free
world and to be accepted as credible. Its authenticity broke the
barrier of skepticism and apathy that had existed up to that point.
However, though their critical and alarming assessment was in the
hands of Hungarian Jewish leaders by April 28 or early May 1944, it
is doubtful that the information it contained reached more than
just a small part of the prospective victims during May and June
1944, about 437,000 Hungarian Jews boarded, in good faith, the
"resettlement" trains that were to carry them off to Auschwitz,
where most of them were gassed on arrival. Vrba, who emigrated to
Canada at war's end, published his autobiography in England nearly
forty years ago. Yet his and Wetzler's story has been carefully
kept from Israel's Hebrew-reading public and appears nowhere in any
of the history texts that are part of the official curriculum. As
Ruth Linn writes, "Israeli Holocaust historiography was to follow
the spirit of the court's policy at the Eichmann trial: silencing
and removing challenging survivors from the gallery, and muting
questions about the role of the Jewish Council in the
deportations." In 1998 Linn arranged for publication of the first
Hebrew edition of Vrba's memoirs. In Escaping Auschwitz she
establishes the chronology of Vrba's disappearance not only from
Auschwitz but also from the Israeli Holocaust narrative, skillfully
exposing how the official Israeli historiography of the Holocaust
has sought to suppress the story."
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