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  • 1
    Article
    Article
    In:  Beyond the Pale; the Holocaust in the North Caucasus (2020) 1-24
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2020
    Titel der Quelle: Beyond the Pale; the Holocaust in the North Caucasus
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2020) 1-24
    Keywords: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) ; Caucasus, Northern (Russia) History 20th century ; Caucasus, Northern (Russia) Ethnic relations
    Abstract: By definition, the North Caucasus refers to the area lying north of the Caucasus Mountains and stretching from the Black Sea in the west to the Caspian Sea in the east. Today, this region of the Russian Federation encompasses Rostov oblast, the Krasnodar and Stavropol krais, and the republics of Adygea, Karachaevo-Cherkessia, Kabardino-Balkaria, North Ossetia, Ingushetia, Chechnya, and Dagestan. This volume covers only those areas that fell under World War II Nazi German occupation, which stopped short of Chechnya and lasted, with some local variation, for around five months, from summer 1942 until early 1943. We also touch on events in occupied Kalmykia, insofar as it was part of the same wave of German advance and killing operations.Here we address a topic—the Holocaust—that might at first glance seem foreign to the Caucasian mosaic. After all, with all the ethnic and religious heterogeneity of the Caucasian population, Jews have never figured prominently. Their destruction was carried out by a foreign power bent on realizing its ideas everywhere, irrespective of local circumstances. In fact, in terms of sheer numbers and the relatively condensed time and place, the Holocaust in the North Caucasus seems to pale in significance next to the many violent events that befell and continue to befall this region. Suffice it to remember the most prominent among them. In the eighteenth to nineteenth centuries, the long Russian-Caucasian war ended in Russian victory in 1864 and was followed by the mass expulsion of the Circassian people. The twentieth century saw the fighting between the Bolsheviks and their numerous adversaries during the Civil War, the Soviet de-Cossackization campaign of the 1920s and 1930s, famine and collectivization in the 1930s, and, after the German occupation, the deportations of several non-Russian ethnic groups (in particular, the Balkars, Chechens, Ingush, Kalmyks, and Karachais) from the region in 1943–44. More recently, the two Chechen wars began in the 1990s and continued into the early twenty-first century. In and of themselves, some of these events have been cited as examples of ethnic cleansing or genocide by both local and Western scholars, although this is not a position shared by most Russian scholarship.
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2020
    Titel der Quelle: Beyond the Pale; the Holocaust in the North Caucasus
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2020) 48-68
    Keywords: Jews History ; Jewish refugees ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) ; Mountain Jews ; Caucasus, Northern (Russia) Ethnic relations
    Abstract: This stage of the Holocaust could have been avoided. The destruction of Jews caught in the westernmost part of the North Caucasus around the city of Taganrog could be somehow explained by the aftershock of the Blitzkrieg, although the Wehrmacht reached the area almost four months after the invasion. But the Jews killed by the Germans and their accomplices in the North Caucasus in the second half of 1942 should have survived. This was my conviction before I started to explore the Holocaust in this region, and it only grew in the course of my work on it, which culminated in my book. Jews in the North Caucasus were not crammed within the borders of European states whose Jewish subjects could only hope and pray that their governments would not cave in to German pressure (Bulgaria, Romania) or that their respective countries would not be seized by Nazi Germany (Italy, Hungary). Those European Jews had almost nowhere to go: their countries had borders that were protected, and even if they somehow managed to cross them, almost all of Europe was dominated by a Nazi Germany bent on finding and killing Jews everywhere it found them.In contrast, by summer 1942, a considerable part of the Soviet Union remained under the control of the Soviet government. In the days immediately following the German invasion of June 22, 1941, it created and maintained an infrastructure for the large-scale movement of its population into the country's hinterland. By summer 1942, these facilities were still intact. Furthermore, from December 1941 to June 1942, the front line between Soviet and German forces at the southern sector of the Soviet-German front remained static, with Wehrmacht troops being deployed in the North Caucasus itself. Finally, up until summer 1942, Soviet Jews had numerous opportunities to learn from many different sources about the German mistreatment and extermination of their brethren. So if they knew why they should flee (Holocaust-related information and proximity of the Germans) and knew how to do it, why didn't all the Jews in the North Caucasus leave the region by summer 1942, preferring instead to “dwell at the foot of a volcano”?
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