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In the years before the Second World War, the Jews of Europe faced
unprecedented fear and anguish as the noose of antisemitism
gradually tightened around them. The murderous violence that would
eventually overtake them, later called the Holocaust, has been
impressively examined by historians, as has the steady persecution
of the pre-war Jewish community under the Third Reich. Yet the
spread of Jew-hatred across the Continent - and the alarming
picture that journalism and first-hand accounts brought to other
nations - has largely gone unexamined. Drawing on newspapers,
magazines, diaries, diplomatic correspondence, organizational
reports, and a wide variety of other sources, this history shines a
spotlight on the years between Adolf Hitler's emergence as
Chancellor of Germany and the advent of the Second World War. It
recounts the ways in which European Jews navigated their world as
darkness closed about, even as individuals and organizations tried
fervently to command the world's attention and mobilize others to
action.
The spread of anti-Semitism across Europe before World War II has
received strikingly little comprehensive study. Drawing on
newspapers, magazines, diaries, diplomatic correspondence,
organizational reports, and a variety of other sources, this
history reveals how imperiled European Jews navigated their world
as darkness closed about.
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