Ivan R. Dee
Pages: 380
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-56663-771-8 • Paperback • February 2008 • $24.95 • (£18.99)
978-1-4616-9490-8 • eBook • February 2008 • $23.50 • (£17.99)
Radu Ioanid was born and grew up in Bucharest, Romania. He was director of the Benjamin and Vladka Meed Registry of Jewish Holocaust Survivors at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and is now the ambassador of Romania to Israel. Mr. Ioanid’s other books include The Sword of the Archangel: Fascist Ideology in Romania and The Ransom of the Jews: The Story of the Extraordinary Secret Bargain between Romania and Israel.
Excellent...interesting and creative.
— Choice Reviews
Excellent...interesting and creative.
(Previous Edition Praise)— Choice Reviews
Careful and informative.
— New York Review of Books
Careful and informative.
(Previous Edition Praise)— New York Review of Books
Mr. Ioanid recounts in chilling detail the savage persecution of the Jews...an especially timely book.
— Tom Gross; The Wall Street Journal
Mr. Ioanid recounts in chilling detail the savage persecution of the Jews...an especially timely book.
(Previous Edition Praise)— Tom Gross; The Wall Street Journal
Radu Ioanid has capitalized on his unique, decades-long experience collecting archives worldwide on behalf of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and building the museum’s collections of survivor testimony to produce the most authoritative study of the Holocaust in Romania available today. The responsibility of Romania’s violently antisemitic Antonescu regime and the complicity or indifference of most Romanian elites and the broader public emerge with a clarity that is often absent in studies of the Holocaust elsewhere. The agony of the victims is powerfully presented, in their own words as well as in reports generated by military and civilian authorities seeking to document their contributions to a national priority. Ioanid’s attention to the victimization of Roma, minority religious sects, and other groups completes the frightful picture Romania’s Holocaust-era crimes and serves as warning that if we fail to learn from history, what happened to Jews during the Holocaust can happen to anyone.
— Paul A. Shapiro, author of The Kishinev Ghetto 1941–1942: A Documentary History of the Holocaust in Romania’s Contested Borderlands and member of the International Commission on the Holocaust in Romania (2003–2004)
An extraordinary account, impossible until now