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During the early 1940s some 5,000 Christians of Jewish origin lived
in the Warsaw Ghetto. In this remarkable book, which combines both
memoir and historical analysis, Peter F. Dembowski describes their
fate. He also brings to light the little known fact that within the
Warsaw Ghetto were fully functioning Christian churches, including
at first three and later two Roman Catholic parishes. Dembowski
contends that Nazi ideology, particularly the Nuremberg Laws,
destroyed the distinction between anti-Judaism and anti-Semitism.
Jews were defined by, and persecuted because of, their race rather
than their religious beliefs. As a member of a family of
Christianized Jews with many friends who lived in the Warsaw
Ghetto, Dembowski offers a rich portrait of Jewish Christians and
their fate in the Ghetto. An interesting aspect of his account is
his description of Jewish views toward Christian converts.
Dembowski stresses the historical importance of counting baptized,
practicing Christians among Jews in the Ghetto, as well as their
difficult social situation within the Ghetto. At the same time, he
is sensitive to the pain that Christian conversion caused both
secular and religious Jews. important dimension to Holocaust
studies. It will be welcomed by general readers and scholars alike.
During the early 1940s some 5,000 Christians of Jewish origin lived
in the Warsaw Ghetto. In this remarkable book, which combines both
memoir and historical analysis, Peter F. Dembowski describes their
fate. He also brings to light the little known fact that within the
Warsaw Ghetto were fully functioning Christian churches, including
at first three and later two Roman Catholic parishes. Dembowski
contends that Nazi ideology, particularly the Nuremberg Laws,
destroyed the distinction between anti-Judaism and anti-Semitism.
Jews were defined by, and persecuted because of, their race rather
than their religious beliefs. As a member of a family of
Christianized Jews with many friends who lived in the Warsaw
Ghetto, Dembowski offers a rich portrait of Jewish Christians and
their fate in the Ghetto. An interesting aspect of his account is
his description of Jewish views toward Christian converts.
Dembowski stresses the historical importance of counting baptized,
practicing Christians among Jews in the Ghetto, as well as their
difficult social situation within the Ghetto. At the same time, he
is sensitive to the pain that Christian conversion caused both
secular and religious Jews. important dimension to Holocaust
studies. It will be welcomed by general readers and scholars alike.
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