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  • 1
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2012
    Titel der Quelle: Yad Vashem Studies
    Angaben zur Quelle: 40,1 (2012) 119-156
    Keywords: Szalasi, Ferenc, ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) ; Jews History 1933-1945
    Abstract: Based on new sources, examines the policy of Szálasi and his regime (October-November 1944) toward the Jews. Szálasi's conception was that Hungary was to become "free of Jews" after the war, but during the war Jews could be used as a workforce, as well as a trump card in his negotiations with neutral states. Therefore, Szálasi opposed the deportation of Jews from Hungary and only reluctantly agreed to "lend" 25,000 Jews to Eichmann (instead of the 50,000 demanded) for fortification works. Thus, breaking with the policy of concession pursued by the Horthy-Sztójay regime in 1944, the Szálasi regime stopped the death marches to Austria and set up ghettos in Budapest. Karsai dismisses the widespread view that it was the diplomats in the neutral embassies in Budapest who, using various protective passes misled the Arrow Cross and rescued thousands of Jews. Szálasi condoned using legally-doubtful diplomatic tools to protect Budapest's Jews (such as collective passports or protected houses) in the hope that the neutrals would recognize his Arrow Cross regime. Those papers, however, could not always save the Jews. Thousands of Jews were killed by Arrow Cross men, often in defiance of orders. Szálasi's policy toward Jews was opportunistic rather that humane; however, more than 100,000 Jews survived his regime.
    Note: In Hebrew: , "יד ושם; קובץ מחקרים" מ,1 (תשעב) 101-131
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2014
    Titel der Quelle: Antisemitism in an Era of Transition
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2014) 91-113
    Keywords: Horthy, Miklos, ; Antisemitism History 20th century ; Jews History 1918-1945 ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)
    Abstract: Contends that In the absence of an academic Hungarian biography of Horthy, apologetic literature on the Hungarian leader, in particular depicting him as a protector of Jews, is thriving. Argues that although Horthy’s anti-Jewish policies cannot be equated with those of Hitler, he did conduct policies which were deliberately anti-Jewish before and during World War II, and he bears responsibility for the deportation of Hungarian Jews in 1944. The exemptions he provided for some Jews were purely pragmatic.
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  • 3
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2020
    Titel der Quelle: Yad Vashem Studies
    Angaben zur Quelle: 48,1-2 (2020) 173-208
    Keywords: Deák, Pál, Diaries ; Holocaust survivors Diaries ; Holocaust survivors Biography
    Abstract: The diary of Dr. Pál Deák (1909-1965), written between May and July 1945, is a unique and moving document of a desperate husband’s quest for his wife Éva Gutmann (1912-1945), who was deported from Budapest in November 1944, and perished a few months later in a Nazi camp.Deák, unlike the overwhelming majority of survivors, did not wait passively at home for his wife’s return after the war, but “traveled” westward in order to search for her. The diary can be read as a long love-letter, a one-sided “dialogue” between a husband and the wife he so terribly missed. Deák’s diary is brutally honest; he writes it for himself and Éva, trying to convince himself that, by documenting his daily actions, he was doing everything possible to find her and take her home.The sole consolation for Deák was that during his some 4,000-kms.-long “journey” through war-ravaged Eastern and Central Europe, he received information in Vienna, Prague, Theresienstadt, Buchenwald, and other places, from survivors who had met Éva in different camps. They related that for a long time she had courageously tried to live and survive while helping others who suffered along with her. It is questionable if Deák can be considered to have survived the Holocaust in the true meaning of the word. He never remarried, and, without doubt, suffered survivor guilt, blaming himself because he had remained alive while his wife had perished.“I was left alone… Life goes on with tedious slowness… I linger helplessly, without a will, without a purpose.” He wrote these words in July 1945, and exactly twenty years later, he almost certainly committed suicide, although it cannot be proven for sure.
    Note: In English and Hebrew. , With the text of the diary (pp. 178-207).
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