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Americans call the Second World War "the Good War." But before it
even began, America's ally Stalin had killed millions of his own
citizens-and kept killing them during and after the war. Before
Hitler was defeated, he had murdered six million Jews and nearly as
many other Europeans. At war's end, German and Soviet killing sites
fell behind the Iron Curtain, leaving the history of mass killing
in darkness. ? Assiduously researched, deeply humane, and utterly
definitive, Bloodlands is a new kind of European history,
presenting the mass murders committed by the Nazi and Stalinist
regimes as two aspects of a single story. With a new afterword
addressing the relevance of these events to the contemporary
decline of democracy, Bloodlands is required reading for anyone
seeking to understand the central tragedy of modern history and its
meaning today.
Timothy Snyder opens a new path in the understanding of modern
nationalism and twentieth-century socialism by presenting the often
overlooked life of Kazimierz Kelles-Krauz, an important Polish
thinker at the beginning of the twentieth century. During his brief
life in Poland, Paris, and Vienna, Kelles-Krauz influenced or
infuriated most of the leaders of the various socialist movements
of Central Europe and France. His central ideas ultimately were not
accepted by the socialist mainstream at the time of his death.
However, a century later, we see that they anticipated late
twentieth-century understanding on the importance of nationalism as
a social force and the parameters of socialism in political theory
and praxis. Kelles-Krauz was one of the only theoreticians of his
age to advocate Jewish national rights as being equivalent to, for
example, Polish national rights, and he correctly saw the struggle
for national sovereignty as being central to future events in
Europe. This was the first major monograph in English devoted to
Kelles-Krauz, and it includes maps and personal photographs of
Kelles-Krauz, his colleagues, and his family.
Remembering the lessons of Jan Karski, who risked his life to share
the truth with the world Richly illustrated with stills from the
black-and-white film adaptation of the acclaimed stage play,
Remember This: The Lesson of Jan Karski tells the story of World
War II hero, Holocaust witness, and Georgetown University professor
Jan Karski. A messenger of truth, Karski risked his life to carry
his harrowing reports of the Holocaust from war-torn Poland to the
Allied nations and, ultimately, the Oval Office, only to be ignored
and disbelieved. Despite the West's unwillingness to act, Karski
continued to tell others about the atrocities he saw, and, after a
period of silence, would do so for the remainder of his life. This
play carries forward his legacy of bearing witness so that future
generations might be inspired to follow his example and "shake the
conscience of the world." Accompanying the text of the stage play
in this volume are essays and conversations from leading diplomats,
thinkers, artists, and writers who reckon with Karski's legacy,
including Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, Ambassador Stuart
Eizenstat, award-winning author Aminatta Forna, best-selling author
Azar Nafisi, President Emeritus of Georgetown Leo J. O'Donovan, SJ,
Ambassador Samantha Power, Ambassador Cynthia P. Schneider,
historian Timothy Snyder, Academy Award (TM) nominated actor David
Strathairn, and best-selling author Deborah Tannen.
Ukrainian dissident Myroslav Marynovych recounts his involvement in
the Brezhnev-era human rights movement in the Soviet Union and his
resulting years as a political prisoner in Siberia and in internal
exile. This memoir by a prominent Ukrainian dissident, now in
English translation, offers a unique account that spans the entire
postwar period, from the author's childhood in newly Soviet western
Ukraine and coming of age within the Communist system to the
collapse of the Soviet Union, concluding with his reflections on
culpability and justice in the post-Soviet context. Marynovych's
description of the varied landscape of Ukrainian dissent in the
1960s and 1970s focuses on the emerging human rights movement,
especially the creation of the Ukrainian Helsinki Group, of which
he was a founding member. He vividly recounts his encounters with
the Soviet repressive apparatus, including his arrest and trial,
and offers a rich picture of daily life in a Siberian prison camp
and his internal exile in Kazakhstan. Imbued with the author's deep
Christian convictions, this memoir sheds light on the key role
faith played for some participants in the Soviet human rights
movement, a movement that has most often been seen as having a
secular inflection. It also provides a fresh look at the complex
place of Ukrainian dissidents within the broader Soviet human
rights movement, as well as the interplay between human rights
advocates and other dissident groups in Soviet Ukraine.
Essays by a founder of the Borderland Foundation in East-Central
Europe explore the meanings of community in a fractured world. How
do we build civil society? How does a society repair itself after
violence? How do we live in a world with others different from
ourselves? These questions lie at the heart of Krzysztof
Czyzewski's writing and his work with Fundacja Pogranicze, the
Borderland Foundation, at the border of Lithuania, Poland, and
Belarus. Writing from the heartland of Europe's violence and
creativity, Czyzewski seeks to explain how we can relate better to
each other and to our diverse communities. Building on examples of
places and people in East-Central Europe, Czyzewski's essays offer
readers concepts such as the invisible bridge, the nejmar (the
bridge-builder), and the xenopolis (the city of others), which
create community throughout the world. The three sections of the
book-concepts, places, and practices-show how this cultural work
bridges the divide between concepts and practices and offers a new
map of Europe. Ultimately, Czyzewski hopes we can all move toward
xenopolis, toward the understanding that others are, in fact,
ourselves. This book offers an introduction to Czyzewski's work,
with framing essays by specialists in Central and East European
history.
Ukrainian dissident Myroslav Marynovych recounts his involvement in
the Brezhnev-era human rights movement in the Soviet Union and his
resulting years as a political prisoner in Siberia and in internal
exile. This memoir by a prominent Ukrainian dissident, now in
English translation, offers a unique account that spans the entire
postwar period, from the author's childhood in newly Soviet western
Ukraine and coming of age within the Communist system to the
collapse of the Soviet Union, concluding with his reflections on
culpability and justice in the post-Soviet context. Marynovych's
description of the varied landscape of Ukrainian dissent in the
1960s and 1970s focuses on the emerging human rights movement,
especially the creation of the Ukrainian Helsinki Group, of which
he was a founding member. He vividly recounts his encounters with
the Soviet repressive apparatus, including his arrest and trial,
and offers a rich picture of daily life in a Siberian prison camp
and his internal exile in Kazakhstan. Imbued with the author's deep
Christian convictions, this memoir sheds light on the key role
faith played for some participants in the Soviet human rights
movement, a movement that has most often been seen as having a
secular inflection. It also provides a fresh look at the complex
place of Ukrainian dissidents within the broader Soviet human
rights movement, as well as the interplay between human rights
advocates and other dissident groups in Soviet Ukraine.
The Soviet Union was the largest state in the twentieth-century
world, but its repressive power and terrible ambition were most
clearly on display in Europe. Under the leadership of Joseph
Stalin, the Soviet Union transformed itself and then all of the
European countries with which it came into contact. This book
considers each aspect of the encounter of Stalin with Europe: the
attempt to create a kind of European state by accelerating the
European model of industrial development; mass murder in
anticipation of a war against European powers; the actual contact
with Europe's greatest power, Nazi Germany, during four years of
war fought chiefly on Soviet territory and bringing untold millions
of deaths, including much of the Holocaust; and finally the
reestablishment of the Soviet system, not just in the reestablished
Soviet system, but in the Baltic States, Poland, Czechoslovakia,
Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria, and East Germany. The contributors take
up not just high politics but also the experiences of the
populations that were affected by them. Divided into four parts,
the book deals with Soviet politics and actions mainly in the
1930s; the Soviet invasion and occupation of Poland; German
aggression against the Soviet Union as well as plans for occupation
and their improvised implementation; and Soviet wartime plans for
the postwar period. This volume brings together the best work from
a multi-year project sponsored by the Institute for Human Sciences
in Vienna, including scholars who have worked with archival
materials in numerous countries and whose research is often
published in other languages.
Under the Soviet regime, millions of zeks (prisoners) were
incarcerated in the forced labor camps, the Gulag. There many died
of starvation, disease, and exhaustion, and some were killed by
criminals and camp guards. In 1939, as the Nazis and Soviets
invaded Poland, many Polish citizens found themselves swept up by
the Soviet occupation and sent into the Gulag. One such victim was
Julius Margolin, a Pinsk-born Jewish philosopher and writer living
in Palestine who was in Poland on family matters. Margolin's
Journey into the Land of the Zeks and Back offers a powerful,
first-person account of one of the most shocking chapters of the
violent twentieth century. Opening with the outbreak of World War
II in Poland, Margolin relates its devastating impact on the Jews
and his arrest and imprisonment in the Gulag system. During his
incarceration from 1940 to 1945, he nearly died from starvation and
overwork but was able to return to Western Europe and rejoin his
family in Palestine. With a philosopher's astute analysis of man
and society, as well as with humor, his memoir of flight,
entrapment, and survival details the choices and dilemmas faced by
an individual under extreme duress. Margolin's moving account
illuminates universal issues of human rights under a totalitarian
regime and ultimately the triumph of human dignity and decency.
This translation by Stefani Hoffman is the first English-language
edition of this classic work, originally written in Russian in 1947
and published in an abridged French version in 1949. Circulated in
a Russian samizdat version in the USSR, it exerted considerable
influence on the formation of the genre of Gulag memoirs and was
eagerly read by Soviet dissidents. Timothy Snyder's foreword and
Katherine Jolluck's introduction contextualize the creation of this
remarkable account of a Jewish world ravaged in the Stalinist
empire—and the life of the man who was determined to reveal the
horrors of the gulag camps and the plight of the zeks to the world.
Jan Karski's Story of a Secret State stands as one of the most
poignant and inspiring memoirs of World War II and the Holocaust.
With elements of a spy thriller, documenting his experiences in the
Polish Underground, and as one of the first accounts of the
systematic slaughter of the Jews by the German Nazis, this volume
is a remarkable testimony of one man's courage and a nation's
struggle for resistance against overwhelming oppression. Karski was
a brilliant young diplomat when war broke out in 1939 with Hitler's
invasion of Poland. Taken prisoner by the Soviet Red Army, which
had simultaneously invaded from the East, Karski narrowly escaped
the subsequent Katyn Forest Massacre. He became a member of the
Polish Underground, the most significant resistance movement in
occupied Europe, acting as a liaison and courier between the
Underground and the Polish government-in-exile. He was twice
smuggled into the Warsaw Ghetto, and entered the Nazi's Izbica
transit camp disguised as a guard, witnessing first-hand the
horrors of the Holocaust. Karski's courage and testimony, conveyed
in a breathtaking manner in Story of a Secret State, offer the
narrative of one of the world's greatest eyewitnesses and an
inspiration for all of humanity, emboldening each of us to rise to
the challenge of standing up against evil and for human rights.
This definitive edition-which includes a foreword by Madeleine
Albright, a biographical essay by Yale historian Timothy Snyder, an
afterword by Zbigniew Brzezinski, previously unpublished photos,
notes, further reading, and a glossary-is an apt legacy for this
hero of conscience during the most fraught and fragile moment in
modern history.
A powerful and revelatory history book about the bloodlands - the
lands that lie between Stalin's Russia and Hitler's Germany - where
14 million people were killed during the years 1933 - 1944. In the
middle of Europe, in the middle of the twentieth century, the Nazi
and Soviet regimes murdered fourteen million people in the
bloodlands between Berlin and Moscow. In a twelve-year-period, in
these killing fields - today's Ukraine, Belarus, Poland, Western
Russia and the eastern Baltic coast - an average of more than one
million citizens were slaughtered every year, as a result of
deliberate policies unrelated to combat. In this book Timothy
Snyder offers a ground-breaking investigation into the motives and
methods of Stalin and Hitler and, using scholarly literature and
primary sources, pays special attention to the testimony of the
victims, including the letters home, the notes flung from trains,
the diaries on corpses. The result is a brilliantly researched,
profoundly humane, authoritative and original book that forces us
to re-examine one of the greatest tragedies in European history and
re-think our past.
Even as economic and military walls have come down in the post-Cold
War era, states have rapidly built new barriers to prevent a
perceived invasion of 'undesirables.' Nowhere is this more
dramatically evident than along the geographic fault lines dividing
rich from poor countries: especially the southern border of the
United States, and the southern and eastern borders of the European
Union. This volume examines the practice, politics, and
consequences of building these new walls in North America and
Europe. At the same time, it challenges dominant accounts of
globalization, in which state borders will be irrelevant to the
human experience. In short, the volume brings borders back in to
the study of international politics.
Even as economic and military walls have come down in the post-Cold
War era, states have rapidly built new barriers to prevent a
perceived invasion of 'undesirables.' Nowhere is this more
dramatically evident than along the geographic fault lines dividing
rich from poor countries: especially the southern border of the
United States, and the southern and eastern borders of the European
Union. This volume examines the practice, politics, and
consequences of building these new walls in North America and
Europe. At the same time, it challenges dominant accounts of
globalization, in which state borders will be irrelevant to the
human experience. In short, the volume brings borders back in to
the study of international politics.
**NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER** 'A sort of survival book, a sort of
symptom-diagnosis manual in terms of losing your democracy and what
tyranny and authoritarianism look like up close' Rachel Maddow
'These 128 pages are a brief primer in every important thing we
might have learned from the history of the last century, and all
that we appear to have forgotten' Observer History does not repeat,
but it does instruct. In the twentieth century, European
democracies collapsed into fascism, Nazism and communism. These
were movements in which a leader or a party claimed to give voice
to the people, promised to protect them from global existential
threats, and rejected reason in favour of myth. European history
shows us that societies can break, democracies can fall, ethics can
collapse, and ordinary people can find themselves in unimaginable
circumstances. History can familiarise, and it can warn. Today, we
are no wiser than the Europeans who saw democracy yield to
totalitarianism in the twentieth century. But when the political
order seems imperilled, our advantage is that we can learn from
their experience to resist the advance of tyranny. Now is a good
time to do so.
The most complete English-language collection of the prose of
Tadeusz Borowski, the most challenging chronicler of Auschwitz,
with a foreword by Timothy Snyder, author of On Tyranny "Borowski's
sharp-edged descriptions of life in Nazi concentration camps
shatter the limits of even Kafka's most surreal
imaginings."-Benjamin Balint, Wall Street Journal "The most
important work of the most challenging chronicler of
Auschwitz."-Timothy Snyder, from the foreword In 1943, the
twenty-year-old Polish poet Tadeusz Borowski was arrested and
deported to Auschwitz as a political prisoner. What he experienced
in the camp left him convinced that no one who survived Auschwitz
was innocent. All were complicit; the camp regime depended on this.
Borowski's tales present the horrors of the camp as reflections of
basic human nature and impulse, stripped of the artificial
boundaries of culture and custom. Inside the camp, the strongest of
the prisoners form uneasy alliances with their captors and one
another, watching unflinchingly as the weak scrabble and struggle
against their inevitable fate. In the last analysis, suffering is
never ennobling and goodness is tantamount to suicide. Bringing
together for the first time in English Borowski's major writings
and many previously uncollected works, this is the most complete
collection of stories in a new, authoritative translation, with a
substantial foreword by Timothy Snyder that speaks to its enduring
relevance.
This book is long listed for the 2015 Samuel Johnson Prize. We have
come to see the Holocaust as a factory of death, organised by
bureaucrats. Yet by the time the gas chambers became operation more
than a million European Jews were already dead: shot at close range
over pits and ravines. They had been murdered in the lawless
killing zones created by the German colonial war in the East, many
on the fertile black earth that the Nazis believed would feed the
German people. It comforts us to believe that the Holocaust was a
unique event. But as Timothy Snyder shows, we have missed basic
lessons of the history of the Holocaust, and some of our beliefs
are frighteningly close to the ecological panic that Hitler
expressed in the 1920s. As ideological and environmental challenges
to the world order mount, our societies might be more vulnerable
than we would like to think. Timothy Snyder's Bloodlands was an
acclaimed exploration of what happened in eastern Europe between
1933 and 1945, when Nazi and Soviet policy brought death to some 14
million people. Black Earth is a deep exploration of the ideas and
politics that enabled the worst of these policies, the Nazi
extermination of the Jews. Its pioneering treatment of this
unprecedented crime makes the Holocaust intelligible, and thus all
the more terrifying.
Timothy Snyder opens a new path in the understanding of modern
nationalism and twentieth-century socialism by presenting the often
overlooked life of Kazimierz Kelles-Krauz, an important Polish
thinker at the beginning of the twentieth century. During his brief
life in Poland, Paris, and Vienna, Kelles-Krauz influenced or
infuriated most of the leaders of the various socialist movements
of Central Europe and France. His central ideas ultimately were not
accepted by the socialist mainstream at the time of his death.
However, a century later, we see that they anticipated late
twentieth-century understanding on the importance of nationalism as
a social force and the parameters of socialism in political theory
and praxis. Kelles-Krauz was one of the only theoreticians of his
age to advocate Jewish national rights as being equivalent to, for
example, Polish national rights, and he correctly saw the struggle
for national sovereignty as being central to future events in
Europe. This was the first major monograph in English devoted to
Kelles-Krauz, and it includes maps and personal photographs of
Kelles-Krauz, his colleagues, and his family.
From the author of international bestseller On Tyranny, this
prescient analysis of Russia's ongoing interference in the West is
now more relevant than ever. 'One of the best...brisk, conceptually
convincing account of democracy's retreat in the early years of
21st century' Guardian The past is another country, the old saying
goes. The same might be said of the future. But which country? For
Europeans and Americans today, the answer is Russia. In this
visionary work of contemporary history, Timothy Snyder shows how
Russia works within the West to destroy the West; by supporting the
far right in Europe, invading Ukraine in 2014, and waging a
cyberwar during the 2016 presidential campaign and the EU
referendum. Nowhere is this more obvious than in the creation of
Donald Trump, an American failure deployed as a Russian weapon. But
this threat presents an opportunity to better understand the
pillars of our freedoms and face the choices that will determine
the future: equality or oligarchy, individualism or
totalitarianism, truth or lies. 'A brilliant and disturbing
analysis, which should be read by anyone wishing to understand the
political crisis currently engulfing the world' Yuval Noah Harari,
bestselling author of Sapiens
Vaclav Havel's remarkable and rousing essay on the tyranny of
apathy, with a new introduction by Timothy Snyder Cowed by life
under Communist Party rule, a greengrocer hangs a placard in their
shop window: Workers of the world, unite! Is it a sign of the
grocer's unerring ideology? Or a symbol of the lies we perform to
protect ourselves? Written in 1978, Vaclav Havel's meditation on
political dissent - the rituals of its suppression, and the sparks
that re-ignite it - would prove the guiding manifesto for uniting
Solidarity movements across the Soviet Union. A portrait of
activism in the face of falsehood and intimidation, The Power of
the Powerless remains a rousing call against the allure of apathy.
'Havel's diagnosis of political pathologies has a special resonance
in the age of Trump' Pankaj Mishra
Focusing on state formation and the identity-geopolitics
relationship, makes the case that the Balkans were at the forefront
of European history in the century before World War I This
collection of essays places the Balkans at the center of European
developments, not as a conflict-ridden problem zone, but rather as
a full-fledged European region. Contrary to the commonly held
perception, contributors to the volume argue, the Balkans did not
lag behind the rest of European history, but rather anticipated
many (West) European developments in the decades before and after
1900. In the second half of the nineteenth century,the Balkan
states became fully independent nation-states. As they worked to
consolidate their sovereignty, these countries looked beyond
traditional state formation strategies to alternative visions
rooted in militarism or national political economy, and not only
succeeded on their own terms but changed Europe and the world
beginning in 1912-14. As the Ottoman Empire weakened and ever more
kinds of informal diplomacy were practiced on its territory by
morepowerful states, relationships between identity and geopolitics
were also transformed. The result, as the contributors demonstrate,
was a phenomenon that would come to pervade the whole of Europe by
the 1920s and 1930s: the creeping substitution of ideas of religion
and ethnicity for the idea of state belonging or subjecthood.
CONTRIBUTORS: Ulf Brunnbauer, Holly Case, Dessislava Lilova, John
Paul Newman, Roumiana Preshlenova, Dominique KirchnerReill, Timothy
Snyder Timothy Snyder is Richard C. Levin Professor of History at
Yale University. Katherine Younger is a research associate at the
Institute for Human Sciences (IWM) in Vienna, Austria.
Wilhelm von Habsburg wore the uniform of an Austrian officer, the
court regalia of a Habsburg archduke, the simple suit of a Parisian
exile, the decorations of the Order of the Golden Fleece and, every
so often, a dress. He spoke the Italian of his archduke mother, the
German of his archduke father, the English of his British royal
friends, the Polish of the country his father wished to rule and
the Ukrainian of the land Wilhelm wished to rule himself. Timothy
Snyder's masterful biography is not only a reconstruction of the
life of this extraordinary man - a man who remained loyal to his
Ukrainian dreams even after the country's dissolution in 1921- but
also charts the final collapse of the ancien regime in Europe and
the rise of a new world order.
The Soviet Union was the largest state in the twentieth-century
world, but its repressive power and terrible ambition were most
clearly on display in Europe. Under the leadership of Joseph
Stalin, the Soviet Union transformed itself and then all of the
European countries with which it came into contact. This book
considers each aspect of the encounter of Stalin with Europe: the
attempt to create a kind of European state by accelerating the
European model of industrial development; mass murder in
anticipation of a war against European powers; the actual contact
with Europe's greatest power, Nazi Germany, during four years of
war fought chiefly on Soviet territory and bringing untold millions
of deaths, including much of the Holocaust; and finally the
reestablishment of the Soviet system, not just in the reestablished
Soviet system, but in the Baltic States, Poland, Czechoslovakia,
Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria, and East Germany. The contributors take
up not just high politics but also the experiences of the
populations that were affected by them. Divided into four parts,
the book deals with Soviet politics and actions mainly in the
1930s; the Soviet invasion and occupation of Poland; German
aggression against the Soviet Union as well as plans for occupation
and their improvised implementation; and Soviet wartime plans for
the postwar period. This volume brings together the best work from
a multi-year project sponsored by the Institute for Human Sciences
in Vienna, including scholars who have worked with archival
materials in numerous countries and whose research is often
published in other languages.
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