Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 432
Trim: 6½ x 9
978-1-5381-4073-4 • Hardback • June 2021 • $128.00 • (£98.00)
978-1-5381-4074-1 • Paperback • June 2021 • $44.00 • (£35.00)
978-1-5381-4075-8 • eBook • June 2021 • $41.50 • (£35.00)
Radu Ioanid was born and grew up in Bucharest. He studied at the University of Bucharest; at the University of Cluj, where he received a PhD; and at the Ecole des hautes etudes en sciences sociales in Paris, where he received a doctorate in history. He was vice president of the International Commission on the Holocaust in Romania headed by Elie Wiesel from 2003 to 2004. He has been a Starkoff Fellow at the American Jewish Archives and director of the International Archival Program at the Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. He is now Romania’s ambassador to Israel. His books include The Holocaust in Romania and Le Pogrom de Jassy.
Acknowledgments
Foreword by Elie Wiesel
Preface to the Second Edition
Introduction Lost and Found
1 “The Jews Are Our Misfortune”
2 Voting with Their Feet
3 The Zionist Enemy
4 Barter
5 An Uneasy Relationship
6 The Money Trail
7 The Washington Equation
8 “Why Did You Drain My Soul?”
Primary Documents
Appendix
Notes
Index
About the Author
This extraordinary book blew the cover off the secret of a shameful deal that ended up, perversely, in freedom for Jews in Romania, including myself. In 1965, my mother and I were bought by the state of Israel from Ceausescu’s Romania for about $3,000 each. In other words, Israel bought our freedom from the misery of his dictatorship. When the ransom was paid, ethnic Romanian Jews were robbed by the state of all their possessions and allowed to leave the country. The details of this affair are carefully and deeply researched in Radu Ioanid’s splendidly written account of that spectacular Cold War drama. I learned from this book how my fate was decided early in the 1960s in one of the few countries under Soviet control and am both grateful and saddened for those who had to fight decades longer, in the USSR and elsewhere, for the right to travel freely. This book reads like a thriller, but it is journalism at its best.
— Andrei Codrescu, author of The Hole in the Flag: A Romanian Exile’s Story of Return and Revolution
The suffering of the Jewish people throughout history is no secret to anyone. From persecution and exile to progroms, from forced conversion to genocide, the Jews have experienced it all. Radu Ioanid takes us on a journey into the most unbelievable: The selling of the Jews by the communists in Romania. Pigs, dogs, sheep, money—everything Romania needed—was offered in order to get the Jews to Israel. Ioanid has excavated one of the most incredible stories of the twentieth century from the archives of the Securitate: that after the Holocaust, the worst atrocity humanity had seen, there were people who were willing to buy and sell entire families with a clear price tag on their heads. Only a master of research could accomplish what Radu Ioanid did with this incredible story.
— Attila Somfalvi, journalist and senior political commentator