The Holocaust in HistoryDid Europe's Jews go passively to their deaths? How did Nazi anti-Semitism evolve into mass murder? How important was Hitler's own hatred of the Jews in creating the Final Solution? Why didn't the Allies aggressively try to save Jews before the war's end? Michael R. Marrus, in the first comprehensive assessment of the vast historical literature on the Holocaust, tackles explosive issues and tortured memories, handling them with judiciousness and sensitivity. Drawing on the entire range of historical literature on this subject, he comments upon the questions that have troubled observers over the years. By applying the tools of historical, sociological, and political analysis, he presents a balanced but eye-opening treatment of many highly charged topics on the Holocaust, including the role of collaborationist governments, the Roman Catholic Church, the local populations, Jewish ghetto leadership, and the Jews themselves. Book jacket. |
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Page 43
... campaign , but also because it promised to bring hundreds of thousands more Jews within the hegemony of the Reich . What were the Germans to do with them ? During the early course of the campaign Hitler tipped the scales for mass murder ...
... campaign , but also because it promised to bring hundreds of thousands more Jews within the hegemony of the Reich . What were the Germans to do with them ? During the early course of the campaign Hitler tipped the scales for mass murder ...
Page 45
... campaign , and not a few months later . He draws upon postwar evidence from Rudolf Höss , the commandant of Auschwitz , and Adolf Eichmann , from the start a key official in the bureaucracy of the Final Solution , to the effect that the ...
... campaign , and not a few months later . He draws upon postwar evidence from Rudolf Höss , the commandant of Auschwitz , and Adolf Eichmann , from the start a key official in the bureaucracy of the Final Solution , to the effect that the ...
Page 52
... campaign , partly because many doctors and institutions were allowed to proceed on their own after the campaign was officially stopped ; it is generally believed , however , that the total killed was between 80,000 and 100,000 people ...
... campaign , partly because many doctors and institutions were allowed to proceed on their own after the campaign was officially stopped ; it is generally believed , however , that the total killed was between 80,000 and 100,000 people ...
Contents
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
THE HOLOCAUST IN PERSPECTIVE | 8 |
THE FINAL SOLUTION | 31 |
Copyright | |
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Allies American anti-Jewish antisemitism Arendt Auschwitz Berlin Braham campaign Concentration Camps Czerniakow Dawidowicz death camps deportations destruction east eastern Europe Eberhard Jäckel Eichmann Einsatzgruppen European Jews extermination Final Solution France Führer Genocide German groups Himmler historians History Hitler Hitlerian Holocaust Hungarian Hungary idem ideology important inmates issue Jäckel Jerusalem Jewish community Jewish councils Jewish leaders Jewish Leadership Jewish policy Jewish Question Jewish resistance Jewish responses Jewry Jews of Europe Juden Judenrat killing Laqueur Lodz London Lucy Dawidowicz Marrus Martin Broszat mass murder massacres ment million National Nazi occupation Nazi policy Nazism negotiations occupied officials persecution Poland Polish political population Raul Hilberg regime Rescue Ringelblum Rumanian seems Social Soviet Union suggests Third Reich thousand tion trans underground Vatican Vichy Vichy France victims Vierteljahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte Vilna Wasserstein Wehrmacht western World Yad Vashem Yad Vashem Studies Yehuda Bauer Yisrael Gutman Yitzhak Arad York Zionist