Intended for a nonacademic audience but without oversimplifying, this analysis of the destruction of the Lithuanian Jewish community is presented in Q and A style, with German historian Dieckmann providing straightforward answers to direct questions posed by Lithuanian journalist Vanagaitė. The Holocaust occurred primarily outside Germany, and in Lithuania about 90 percent of the Jewish population was murdered. An examination of the path to destruction there facilitates an understanding of the origin and evolution of Nazi Germany’s Final Solution. The mass murder of Lithuanian Jews was a “centrally managed process” (p. 183) carried out over just a few months and thoroughly documented. Thus, a fairly complete picture exists of how and why it happened. Although instigated and coordinated by Germany, its implementation required the willing, and at times enthusiastic, cooperation of a large number of Lithuanian civilians and administrators. In 43 brief chapters and an epilogue, the authors explain the forces behind the Nazis' anti-Jewish policies. Effectively organized and quick-to-read, this volume is ideal for nonspecialists, though instructors will also find individual chapters helpful for addressing students' queries regarding specific aspects of the Holocaust. Recommended. General readers through faculty.
— Choice Reviews
Christoph Dieckmann is one of the foremost historians of the Holocaust. His extraordinary study of the German occupation of Lithuania is the most important book written about the Holocaust in the twenty-first century. This dialogue with Rūta Vanagaitė opens the door to his vast knowledge and to his measured and persuasive interpretations.
— Timothy Snyder, Yale University; author of On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century
What is this book about? It is about the main lesson of the Holocaust: the fact that each one of us has a choice—to be human or not to be. Even in hell we have this choice. Evil always needs executioners—big and small, more small than big. It is so simple to become a small executioner. Often only you would know about the betrayal you have committed, but this is even worse. Other people can forget about it, but you yourself will never be able to forget. The time will go by, you will be alone—on your way, in the night, before dying , and for sure you will remember it.
— Svetlana Alexievich, winner of the 2015 Nobel Prize in Literature
This book is a breakthrough. Authored by Christoph Dieckmann, a great authority on the history of Lithuania during World War Two, and a Lithuanian writer, Ruta Vanagaite, it tells the story of the annihilation of Lithuanian Jewry, in which there was massive participation by ethnic Lithuanians, under overall German command. Based on the vast store of Dr. Dieckmann’s archive-based and multilingual knowledge, the book unfolds in a dialogue that intelligent readers everywhere can easily absorb. Viewing the Lithuanian Jewish tragedy from an overall historical perspective that emphasizes local motivations and co-responsibility for genocide, the authors’ conversation makes academic historical knowledge accessible to the general public.
— Yehuda Bauer, honorary chairman of the International Holocaust Remembrance Association, and academic adviser to Yad Vashem
This book, even though it is written in the form of a journalistic dialogue, is a serious work. Christoph Dieckmann, a highly respected European historian, bases his assessments on indisputable sources, avoiding dilettantism or bias. He therefore successfully analyzes forms of extreme ethnic nationalism—the appearance of the Lithuanian Nazism of 1941–1944, remnants of which still exist today. Like Rūta Vanagaitė’s and Efraim Zuroff’s Our People, this book will anger Nazi apologists but undoubtedly will deepen our national self-awareness and understanding of history.
— Tomas Venclova, poet and essayist