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  • Baden-Württemberg  (2)
  • Lower Saxony  (2)
  • 2020-2024  (4)
  • Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)
  • Jews History 1800-2000
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  • 1
    Language: English
    Pages: 24 cm
    Year of publication: 2018-
    DDC: 940.53/180943613
    Keywords: Murmelstein, Benjamin ; Jews History 20th century ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) ; Judaism 20th century ; Jewish philosophy ; Vienna (Austria) History ; Wien ; Juden ; Geschichte 1939-1945 ; Murmelstein, Benjamin 1905-1989
    Abstract: In 1973, Leonard and Edith Ehrlich chose to undertake a daunting task that would ultimately become their greatest work: conducting over thirty years of meticulous research to investigate and document Vienna's Jewish community and its leadership during the Holocaust. Inescapably, this path led them to the controversial figure of Benjamin Murmelstein, Viennese rabbi and later Judenrat council elder at Theresienstadt. As a youth in Vienna during the 1930s, Leonard Ehrlich grew up knowing Murmelstein, Ehrlich and his family would flee Vienna for the United States two months after the beginning of World War II; upon hearing postwar accounts of Murmelstein's involvement in Nazi atrocities, Ehrlich attempted to reconcile those accounts with his experience of Murmelstein as a thoughtful, devoted intellectual. Leonard and Edith Ehrlich thus began an intellectual magnum opus that would seek to interrogate a number of basic assumptions of Holocaust scholarship and critical thought. The Ehrlichs would conduct painstaking historical research not only in archives but also in interviews with subjects, not the least of whom was Murmelstein himself. This first volume focuses on the Jewish community of Vienna during the period from 1938 to 1942
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  • 2
    ISBN: 0814793568
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2001-
    DDC: 940/.04924
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    Keywords: Jews ; Europe ; History ; Jews ; Africa, North ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) ; Europe ; History, Local ; Africa, North ; History, Local ; Wörterbuch ; Juden ; Jüdische Gemeinde ; Geschichte
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  • 3
    Book
    Book
    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    ISBN: 9781108465281
    Language: English
    Pages: xv, 379 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Edition: First paperback edition
    Year of publication: 2020
    DDC: 940.53/1809495
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    Keywords: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) ; Jews Persecutions ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Greece ; Jews Persecutions ; Greece ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) ; Jews ; Greece ; Greece Ethnic relations ; Greece Ethnic relations ; Konferenzschrift 2014 ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Griechenland ; Judenverfolgung ; Judenvernichtung ; Geschichte 1939-1945
    Abstract: "The Holocaust in Greece involved multiple actors. The German invasion in spring 1941 established three occupations regimes: Germans in the strategic areas of central Macedonia, Athens, and Thessaloniki; Italians all over Greece apart from Crete; and Bulgarians in eastern Macedonia and Thrace. For the sizeable Jewish community, these occupations posed a mortal threat. Despite the lack of credible statistics, a generally acknowledged number on the prewar Greek Jewish population is between 72,000-77,000, the Jews from Dodecanese included, albeit as Italian citizens. Some 50,000 of them resided in Thessaloniki"--
    Abstract: Introduction: the Holocaust in Greece / Giorgos Antoniou and Adirk Moses -- Part I. Perpetrators, collaborators, and victims -- 1. German occupation and the Holocaust in Greece: a survey / Lason Chandrinos and Anna Maria Droumpouki -- 2. The Bulgarians were the worst! reconsidering the Holocaust in Salonika within a regional history of mass violence / Mark Levene -- 3. The deportation of the Jews of Rhodes, 1944: an integrated history / Anthony Mcelligott -- 4. Greek collaboration in the Holocaust and the course of the war / Andrew Apostolou -- 5. A city against its citizens? Thessaloniki and the Jews / Leon Saltiel -- 6. Bystanders, rescuers and collaborators: a microhistory of the Christian-Jewish relations, 1943-1944 / Giorgos Antoniou -- 7. We lived as Greeks and we died as Greeks: Salonican Jews at Auschwitz and the meanings of nationhood / Paris Papamichos Chronakis -- Part II. The question of property -- 8. The scale of Jewish property theft in Nazi-occupied Thessaloniki / Maria Kavala -- 9. The Jewish community of Thessaloniki and the Christian collaborators: those that are leaving and what they are leaving behind / Stratos Dordanas -- 10. Expropriating the space of the other: property spoliations of Thessalonikean Jews in the 1940s / Kostis Kornetis -- Part III. The aftermath: survival, restitution, memory -- 11. New men vs. old Jews: Greek Jewry in the wake of the Shoah (1945-47) / Philip Carabott and Maria Vassilikou -- 12. You are your brother's keeper: rebuilding the Jewish community of Salonica from afar / Devin Naar -- 13. Being a Holocaust survivor in Greece: narratives of the post-war period, 1944-1953 / Katerina Krlov -- 14. Bodies visible and invisible: the erasure of the Jewish cemetery in the life of modern Thessaloniki / Carla Hesse and Thomas Laqueur -- Epilogue: Grey zones
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 4
    ISBN: 9780817320713 , 9780817359843
    Language: English
    Pages: xv, 244 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2020
    Series Statement: Jews and Judaism: history and culture
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 940.53/18
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    Keywords: Geschichte 1939-1945 ; Judenvernichtung ; Sephardim ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) ; Sephardim / History / 20th century ; Sephardim ; Judenvernichtung ; Geschichte 1939-1945
    Abstract: "The Sephardim in the Holocaust: A Forgotten People embraces the Sephardim of all the countries shattered by the Holocaust and pays tribute to the memory of the more than 160,000 Sephardim who perished. Isaac Jack Lévy and Rosemary Lévy Zumwalt draw on a wealth of archival sources, family history (Isaac and his family were expelled from Rhodes in 1938), and more than one hundred fifty interviews conducted with survivors during research trips to Belgium, Canada, France, Greece, Israel, Mexico, the Netherlands, the former Yugoslavia, and the United States. Lévy follows the Sephardim from Athens, Corfu, Cos, Macedonia, Rhodes, Salonika, and the former Yugoslavia to Auschwitz. The authors chronicle the interminable cruelty of the camps, from the initial selections to the grisly work of the Sonderkommandos inside the crematoria, detailing the distinctive challenges the Sephardim faced, with their differences in language, physical appearance, and pronunciation of Hebrew, all of which set them apart from the Ashkenazim. They document courageous Sephardic revolts, especially those by Greek Jews, which involved intricate planning, sequestering of gunpowder, and complex coordination and communication between Ashkenazi and Sephardic inmates-all done in the strictest of secrecy. And they follow a number of Sephardic survivors who took refuge in Albania with the benevolent assistance of Muslims and Christians who opened their doors to give sanctuary, and traces the fate of the approximately 430,000 Jews from Morocco, Algiers, Tunisia, and Libya from 1939 through the end of the war. The author's intention is to include the Sephardim in the shared tragedy with the Ashkenazim and others. The result is a much needed, accessible, and viscerally moving account of the Sephardim's unique experience of the Holocaust"--
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