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The murder of six million Jews during the Holocaust is a crime that
has had a lasting and massive impact on our time. Despite the
immense, ever-increasing body of Holocaust literature and
representation, no single interpretation can provide definitive
answers. Shaped by different historical experiences, political and
national interests, our approximations of the Holocaust remain
elusive. Holocaust responses-past, present, and future-reflect our
changing understanding of history and the shifting landscapes of
memory. This book takes stock of the attempts within and across
nations to come to terms with the murders. Volume editors establish
the thematic and conceptual framework within which the various
Holocaust responses are being analyzed. Specific chapters cover
responses in Germany and in Eastern Europe; the Holocaust industry;
Jewish ultra-Orthodox reflections; and the Jewish intellectuals'
search for a new Jewish identity. Experts comment upon the changes
in Christian-Jewish relations since the Holocaust; the issue of
restitution; and post-1945 responses to genocide. Other topics
include Holocaust education, Holocaust films, and the national
memorial landscapes in Germany, Poland, Israel, and the United
States.
This invaluable work traces the role of the Einsatzgruppen of the
Security Police and SD, the core group of Himmler's murder units
involved in the "Final Solution of the Jewish Question," during and
immediately after the German campaign in Poland in 1939. In
addition to relevant Einsatzgruppen reports, the book includes key
documents from other sources, especially eyewitness accounts from
victims or onlookers. Such accounts provide an alternative, often
much more realistic, perspective on the nature and consequences of
the actions previously known only through documentation generated
by the perpetrators. With carefully selected primary sources
contextualized by the authors' clear narrative, this work fills an
important gap in our understanding of a crucial period in the
evolution of policies directed against Jews, Poles, and others
deemed dangerous or inferior by the Third Reich. Supplemented by
maps and photographs, this book will be an essential reference and
research tool.
In December 2013, after years of exhaustive search, the U.S.
Holocaust Memorial Museum received more than four hundred pages of
diary notes written by one of the most prominent Nazis, the Party's
chief ideologue and Reich minister for the occupied Soviet
territories Alfred Rosenberg. By combining Rosenberg's diary notes
with additional key documents and in-depth analysis, this book
shows Rosenberg's crucial role in the Nazi regime's anti-Jewish
policy. In the second half of 1941 the territory administered by
Rosenberg became the region where the mass murder of Jewish men,
women, and children first became a systematic pattern. Indeed,
months before the emergence of German death camps in Poland, Nazi
leaders perceived the occupied Soviet Union as the area where the
"final solution of the Jewish question" could be executed on a
European scale. Covering almost the entire duration of the Third
Reich, these previously inaccessible sources throw new light on the
thoughts and actions of the leading men around Hitler during
critical junctures that led to war, genocide, and Nazi Germany's
final defeat.
Combining rich documentation selected from the five-volume series
on Jewish Responses to Persecution, this text combines a carefully
curated selection of primary sources together with basic background
information to illuminate key aspects of Jewish life during the
Holocaust. Many available for the first time in English
translation, these letters, reports, and testimonies, as well as
photographs and other visual documents, provide an array of
first-hand contemporaneous accounts by victims. With its focus on
highlighting the diversity of Jewish experiences, perceptions and
actions, the book calls into question prevailing perceptions of
Jews as a homogenous, faceless, or passive group and helps
complicate students' understanding of the Holocaust. While no
source reader can comprehensively cover this vast subject, this
volume addresses key aspects of victim experiences in terms of
gender, age, location, chronology, and social and political
background. Selected from vast archival collections by a team of
expert scholars, this book provides a wealth of material for
discussion, reflection, and further study on issues of mass
atrocities in their historical and current manifestations. The
book's cover photograph depicts the 1942 wedding of Salomon
Schrijver and Flora Mendels in the Jewish quarter of Amsterdam.
Salomon and Flora Schrijver were deported via Westerbork to Sobibor
where they were murdered on July 9, 1943. USHMMPA (courtesy of
Samuel Schryver).
Combining rich documentation selected from the five-volume series
on Jewish Responses to Persecution, this text combines a carefully
curated selection of primary sources together with basic background
information to illuminate key aspects of Jewish life during the
Holocaust. Many available for the first time in English
translation, these letters, reports, and testimonies, as well as
photographs and other visual documents, provide an array of
first-hand contemporaneous accounts by victims. With its focus on
highlighting the diversity of Jewish experiences, perceptions and
actions, the book calls into question prevailing perceptions of
Jews as a homogenous, faceless, or passive group and helps
complicate students' understanding of the Holocaust. While no
source reader can comprehensively cover this vast subject, this
volume addresses key aspects of victim experiences in terms of
gender, age, location, chronology, and social and political
background. Selected from vast archival collections by a team of
expert scholars, this book provides a wealth of material for
discussion, reflection, and further study on issues of mass
atrocities in their historical and current manifestations. The
book's cover photograph depicts the 1942 wedding of Salomon
Schrijver and Flora Mendels in the Jewish quarter of Amsterdam.
Salomon and Flora Schrijver were deported via Westerbork to Sobibor
where they were murdered on July 9, 1943. USHMMPA (courtesy of
Samuel Schryver).
In December 2013, after years of exhaustive search, the U.S.
Holocaust Memorial Museum received more than four hundred pages of
diary notes written by one of the most prominent Nazis, the Party's
chief ideologue and Reich minister for the occupied Soviet
territories Alfred Rosenberg. By combining Rosenberg's diary notes
with additional key documents and in-depth analysis, this book
shows Rosenberg's crucial role in the Nazi regime's anti-Jewish
policy. In the second half of 1941 the territory administered by
Rosenberg became the region where the mass murder of Jewish men,
women, and children first became a systematic pattern. Indeed,
months before the emergence of German death camps in Poland, Nazi
leaders perceived the occupied Soviet Union as the area where the
"final solution of the Jewish question" could be executed on a
European scale. Covering almost the entire duration of the Third
Reich, these previously inaccessible sources throw new light on the
thoughts and actions of the leading men around Hitler during
critical junctures that led to war, genocide, and Nazi Germany's
final defeat.
Jewish Responses to Persecution: 1941-1942 is the third volume in a
five-volume set published in association with the United States
Holocaust Memorial Museum that offers a new perspective on
Holocaust history. Incorporating historical documents and
accessible narrative, this volume sheds light on the personal and
public lives of Jews during a period when Hitler's triumph in
Europe seemed assured, and the mass murder of millions had begun in
earnest. The primary source material presented here, including
letters, diary entries, photographs, transcripts of speeches,
newspaper articles, and official memos and reports, makes this
volume an essential research tool and curriculum companion.
Jewish Responses to Persecution, 1933 1946 offers a new perspective
on Holocaust history by presenting documentation that describes the
manifestations and meanings of Nazi Germany's "final solution" from
the Jewish perspective. This first volume, taking us from Hitler's
rise to power through the aftermath of Kristallnacht, vividly
reveals the increasing devastation and confusion wrought in Jewish
communities in and beyond Germany at the time. Numerous period
photos, documents, and annotations make this unique series an
invaluable research and teaching tool. Co-published with the United
States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
This invaluable work traces the role of the Einsatzgruppen of the
Security Police and SD, the core group of Himmler's murder units
involved in the "Final Solution of the Jewish Question," during and
immediately after the German campaign in Poland in 1939. In
addition to relevant Einsatzgruppen reports, the book includes key
documents from other sources, especially eyewitness accounts from
victims or onlookers. Such accounts provide an alternative, often
much more realistic, perspective on the nature and consequences of
the actions previously known only through documentation generated
by the perpetrators. With carefully selected primary sources
contextualized by the authors' clear narrative, this work fills an
important gap in our understanding of a crucial period in the
evolution of policies directed against Jews, Poles, and others
deemed dangerous or inferior by the Third Reich. Supplemented by
maps and photographs, this book will be an essential reference and
research tool.
Historians long have analyzed the emergence of the "final solution
of the Jewish question" primarily on the basis of German
documentation, devoting much less attention to wartime Jewish
perceptions of the growing threat. Jurgen Matthaus fills this
critical gap by showcasing the highly insightful reports compiled
during the first half of World War II by two Geneva-based offices:
those of Richard Lichtheim representing the Jewish Agency for
Palestine and of Gerhart Riegner's World Jewish Congress office.
Since the first days of war, Lichtheim's predictions of Jewish dead
ran in the millions and increased progressively with the rising
tide of Nazi rule over Europe. His and Riegner's perceptions of
German anti-Jewish policy resulted from shared goals and personal
experiences as well as from their bureaus' range of functions and
the massive problems that impacted the gathering and communicating
of information on the unfolding Holocaust in German-controlled
Europe. Beyond the specifics of the wartime Geneva setting, these
sources show how human cognition works in times of extreme crisis
and contribute to a better understanding of the potential inherent
in Jewish sources for gauging perpetrator actions. The reports and
contextual information featured here reflect the first narratives
on the Holocaust, their emergence, evolution, and importance for
post-war historiography.
The mass murder of the European Jews by Nazi Germany went hand in
hand with the destruction of evidence attesting to this genocide.
As Holocaust survivor Jules Schelvis puts it, "[v]ery few documents
relating to Sobibor and the other death camps" remain. With its
rich photographic imagery, the collection featured in From
"Euthanasia" to Sobibor: An SS Officer's Photo Collection sheds new
light on the Holocaust and other key aspects of Nazi extermination
policy. The materials were compiled by Johann Niemann, an SS
officer whose earlier participation in the Nazi "euthanasia"
murders made him second-in-command at Sobibor and the first to get
killed in the prisoner uprising of October 13, 1943. These
documents allow crucial insights into the making of mass murderers,
the evolution of the "final solution," and its consequences for the
victims. As prevalent as the perpetrator perspective is in
Niemann's collection, From "Euthanasia" to Sobibor offers a welcome
corrective by complementing his images and documents with
testimonies of Sobibor survivors, many of which also available in
the US Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM) archives. With its
compilation of unique primary sources and skillful explication,
From "Euthanasia" to Sobibor addresses under-researched aspects of
Nazi mass violence beyond the Holocaust and offers a rich resource
for researching and teaching.
Among sources on the Holocaust, survivor testimonies are the least
replaceable and most complex, reflecting both the personality of
the narrator and the conditions and perceptions prevailing at the
time of narration. Scholarship aims to challenge memory and fill
its gaps. At the same time, scholars often use testimonies
uncritically or selectively-mining them to support generalizations.
This book is a departure, bringing several scholars together to
analyze the testimony of one Holocaust survivor. Helen "Zippi"
Spitzer Tichauer was sent to Auschwitz in 1942. One of the few
early arrivals to survive the camp and the death marches, she met
her future husband in a DP camp. They moved to New York in the
1960s. Since the end of the war, Zippi devoted many hours to
talking with a small group of scholars about her life. Zippi's
testimony covers a wide range of human experiences in extremis and
spans fifty-odd years. It is thus uniquely suited to raise
questions on the meaning and use of survivor testimony. What do we
know, sixty years after the Nazi era, about the workings of a death
camp? How willing are we to learn from the experiences of a
survivor, and how much is our perception preconditioned by
standardized images? What are the mechanisms, aims and pitfalls of
story-telling? Can survivor testimonies be understood properly
without guidance from those who experienced the events? This book,
written by established Holocaust scholars who have known Helen
Tichauer for years, attempts to approximate survivor testimony and
probe the limits of its representation and understanding.
Contributors include Atina Grossmann (author, Jews, Germans, and
Allies: Close Encounters in Occupied Germany, Princeton, 2007),
Konrad Kwiet (co-ed., Contemporary Responses to the Holocaust,
2005), Wendy Lower (author, Shoah in Ukraine: History, Testimony,
Memory, Indiana UP, 2007), Nehama Tec (author, Resilience and
Courage: Women, Men, and the Holocaust, Yale, 2003, and Defiance:
The Bielski Partisans, OUP, 1993). The book will be of interest to
both Holocaust scholars and oral historians.
Among sources on the Holocaust, survivor testimonies are the least
replaceable and most complex, reflecting both the personality of
the narrator and the conditions and perceptions prevailing at the
time of narration. Scholars, despite their aim to challenge memory
and fill its gaps, often use testimonies uncritically or
selectively-mining them to support generalizations. This book
represents a departure, bringing Holocaust experts Atina Grossmann,
Konrad Kwiet, Wendy Lower, Jurgen Matthaus, and Nechama Tec
together to analyze the testimony of one Holocaust survivor. Born
in Bratislava at the end of World War I, Helen "Zippi" Spitzer
Tichauer was sent to Auschwitz in 1942. One of the few early
arrivals to survive the camp and the death marches, she met her
future husband in a DP camp, and they moved to New York in the
1960s. Beginning in 1946, Zippi devoted many hours to talking with
a small group of scholars about her life. Her wide-ranging
interviews are uniquely suited to raise questions on the meaning
and use of survivor testimony. What do we know today about the
workings of a death camp? How willing are we to learn from the
experiences of a survivor, and how much is our perception
preconditioned by standardized images? What are the mechanisms,
aims, and pitfalls of storytelling? Can survivor testimonies be
understood properly without guidance from those who experienced the
events? This book's new, multifaceted approach toward Zippi's
unique story combined with the authors' analysis of key aspects of
Holocaust memory, its forms and its functions, makes it a rewarding
and fascinating read."
Since the Nuremberg trials following World War II, there has been
considerable debate about the nature and effects of war crimes with
regard both to the Nazis and to modern-day perpetrators. What
constitutes a “war crime,” and how has the concept changed over
time? How do victors and vanquished deal with crimes that have
universal as well as national dimensions? How is the historical
reality of war crimes related to their judicial treatment? How are
perpetrators portrayed during investigations and
trials? These timely and provocative essays make use of newly
available archival sources and a wide range of case studies to
provide in-depth analyses of war crimes within a broad historical
framework. The essays are organized into four sections: the history
of war-crime trials from Weimar Germany to just after World War II;
the sometimes diverging Allied efforts to come to terms with the
Nazi concentration camp system; the ability of postwar society to
confront war crimes of the past; and the legacy of war-crime trials
in the twenty-first century. Atrocities on Trial illuminates a dark
and timely subject and helps us to understand the ongoing struggle
to hold accountable those who perpetrate crimes against humanity.
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