Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / United States Holocaust Museum
Pages: 600
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-1-4422-3626-4 • Hardback • October 2014 • $74.00 • (£57.00)
978-1-4422-3627-1 • eBook • October 2014 • $70.00 • (£54.00)
Emil Kerenji is an applied research scholar at the Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
Introduction: The Peak of the Holocaust
Part I: Facing the “Final Solution” (Fall 1942–Spring 1943)
Chapter 1: The Impact of the Summer Deportations of 1942: From Warsaw to the West
Chapter 2: The Camp Universe
Chapter 3: Living and Working in the Remaining Ghettos
Part II: Responses in the Killing Zone (Fall 1942–Fall 1943)
Chapter 4: Hiding and Rescue
Chapter 5: Armed Resistance in Ghettos
Chapter 6: Fighting Outside Ghettos
Part III: The War Tide Turns (Spring 1943–Late 1943)
Chapter 7: Beyond Direct German Reach
Chapter 8: The Collapse of Fascist Italy
Chapter 9: Free Jewries: Outside Hitler’s Orbit
Part IV: The Varieties of Jewish Experience
Chapter 10: The Hungarian Holocaust
Chapter 11: Jewish Experiences in Extreme Times
Chapter 12: Religion and the Holocaust
This impressive series provides a sense of the depth and diversity of contemporary Jewish documents while embedding them in explanatory narratives. . . .Volume IV covers 1943, a crucial year in the chronology of genocide and also in terms of the Jewish responses to it. It was the year that genocide engulfed most of its victims, and a plethora of documents show just how suddenly and forcefully it did. . . . Even as it focuses on the darkest period of the Holocaust, Volume IV remains dedicated to exploring the diverse experiences of various Jewish populations.
— Yad Vashem Studies
Similar to the preceding volumes in the Jewish Responses to Persecution-series, this book offers not only a wide-ranging panorama of Jewish experiences and responses, but also a unique link between historical narrative and documentation. . . .The book comprises an extraordinarily broad spectrum of sources – from letters to diary entries, photographs, and newspaper entries to publications by Jewish councils – that was produced for the most part during the war, in some instances in the early post-war period. Drawing primarily from the rich archival collections of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, the editor’s careful translations open up to American readers documents written in a variety of languages. Kerenji integrates his well-edited and contextualized sources into a broader story that makes for a compelling read. But the volume’s clear structure also facilitates a targeted search for documents on specific topics or time periods while individual sources can be located via a document list. With its valuable bibliographic leads, the book provides guidance to a field of research not even specialists on the Holocaust can fully fathom any more. A glossary, several maps, a chronology, and a detailed index round out this extremely thorough edition.
-Translated from German
— Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaft
Through sheer diversity of perspectives, this rich collection of sources challenges the way we tell the history of the Holocaust and of the Jewish responses to it. There was no ‘typical’ experience, nor was there one single timeline of events. The great achievement of this volume is to introduce an astonishing array of individuals, extraordinary precisely because they were so ‘ordinary,’ who struggled to anticipate what was still—for them—an unknown and open-ended future. The remarkable range of sources are moving in their emotional power. The brilliant narrative in which they are embedded is illuminating and consistently alive to the complexities of historical circumstance. Scholars, teachers, and students of the Holocaust will find this book to be essential reading and an invaluable resource.
— Paul Hanebrink, Rutgers University
Through sheer diversity of perspectives, this rich collection of sources challenges the way we tell the history of the Holocaust and of the Jewish responses to it. There was no ‘typical’ experience, nor was there one single timeline of events. The great achievement of this volume is to introduce an astonishing array of individuals, extraordinary precisely because they were so ‘ordinary,’ who struggled to anticipate what was still—for them—an unknown and open-ended future. The remarkable range of sources are moving in their emotional power. The brilliant narrative in which they are embedded is illuminating and consistently alive to the complexities of historical circumstance. Scholars, teachers, and students of the Holocaust will find this book to be essential reading and an invaluable resource.
— Paul Hanebrink, Rutgers University
This important volume contains judiciously selected, riveting documents that illustrate the complexity of Jewish responses to persecution, partly because the timing and nature of Nazi-directed mass murder varied significantly from one place to another. The author shows that in September 1942 a Jew in Warsaw was likely to be deported to a death camp, but a Jew in Paris could attend High Holiday services, and one in Budapest might have gone to the cinema. All were ultimately doomed, but Nazi policies kept them uncertain of their fate. The book is pitched exactly right for a wide range of readers, including college students, an attentive general audience, and scholars.
— Zvi Y. Gitelman, University of Michigan