Why Did the Heavens Not Darken?: The "final Solution" in HistoryThis major work presents a radically new view of the origins of the Nazi slaughter of the Jews. Mayer argues that though Hitler was always viciously anti-Semitic, the genocide was not part of his plan from the start. Instead, it was triggered when the Nazi's massive campaign against Russia began to founder. Mayer places what Hitler called "the Final Solution" in historical context, examining both the prewar political situation in Europe that made it possible, and some analogous, if much less horrific, events in the distant past. The result is an important and provocative new answer to one of the most pressing questions facing historians today: How could such an enormity have come to pass? |
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Page 14
... cities or in cities to which they were deported from near and far . At all times material conditions - provisions of food , fuel , and medicine - were incompa- rably worse inside these ghettos than in the cities in which they were ...
... cities or in cities to which they were deported from near and far . At all times material conditions - provisions of food , fuel , and medicine - were incompa- rably worse inside these ghettos than in the cities in which they were ...
Page 74
... cities , the traditional profile of the east - central European Jews remained essentially intact through the interwar years . Most spoke Yiddish , were religiously observant , and limited their contact with the outside world . They ...
... cities , the traditional profile of the east - central European Jews remained essentially intact through the interwar years . Most spoke Yiddish , were religiously observant , and limited their contact with the outside world . They ...
Page 380
... cities which had been captured before the first retreat were ravaged with fire and sword : Riga , Minsk , Kharkov , Simferopol , Kerch , and Pyatigorsk . Certainly in Riga but probably also in other cities the special or regular SS ...
... cities which had been captured before the first retreat were ravaged with fire and sword : Riga , Minsk , Kharkov , Simferopol , Kerch , and Pyatigorsk . Certainly in Riga but probably also in other cities the special or regular SS ...
Contents
THE GOLDEN AGE | 39 |
THE EAST EUROPEAN RIMLAND | 64 |
THE SYNCRETISM OF MEIN KAMPF | 90 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Allies anti-Jewish anti-Semitism Army Group Auschwitz Barbarossa became Bełżec Berlin Bolshevik bolshevism capture Chełmno chief cities civil civilians collaboration command commissars Communist concentration camps conquest conservative crusade cultural deported drive early east east-central eastern campaign eastern front economic Einsatzgruppen emigration enemy Europe's European extermination fascist fighting forced labor foreign France führer German ghetto Goebbels Göring Heydrich Himmler Hitler Horthy Hungarian Hungary ideological inmates Jewish communities Jewish population Jewry Judeobolshevism Judeocide Judeophobia July Kiev killed late leaders Lebensraum Łódź Lublin Majdanek major March mass murder massacre military million Moscow Nazi Germany Nazi Germany's Nazi regime number of Jews occupied officers Operation partisans party percent pogroms Pohl Poland police Polish political prisoners radical Red Army resettlement RSHA Rumania Sobibór social Socialists soldiers Soviet Russia Soviet Union Stalin territories Third Reich Thirty Years War tion troops Ukraine victims Waffen-SS Warsaw Warthegau Wehrmacht western workers