Emigration from Germany after 1941 in Yad Vashem Studies, Volume XVIII

Ruth Zariz

NIS 13.00

Officially Approved Emigration from Germany after 1941: A Case Study

This research paper analyzes the cases of a number of Jews enabled to leave Germany legally after 1941. Many of them were foreign nationals protected by their governments, or the Germans were willing to exchange them in the hope of retrieving German citizens held abroad. An official working in the German Foreign Ministry protected Jews holding Turkish citizenship. Some Dutch, Belgian, and German Jews holding Palestinian immigration certificates were exchanged for Germans in Palestine and other parts of the British Empire. A small number of wealthy Jews obtained permission to emigrate thanks to connections with a previously Jewish-owned bank.

Officially Approved Emigration from Germany after 1941: A Case Study

This research paper analyzes the cases of a number of Jews enabled to leave Germany legally after 1941. Many of them were foreign nationals protected by their governments, or the Germans were willing to exchange them in the hope of retrieving German citizens held abroad. An official working in the German Foreign Ministry protected Jews holding Turkish citizenship. Some Dutch, Belgian, and German Jews holding Palestinian immigration certificates were exchanged for Germans in Palestine and other parts of the British Empire. A small number of wealthy Jews obtained permission to emigrate thanks to connections with a previously Jewish-owned bank.

מפרט המוצר
ISSN 0084-3296
Year 1987
Catalog No. 198709
No. of Pages 17 pp.
Format Electronic article in Yad Vashem Studies, Volume XVIII, pp. 275-291, Edited by Aharon Weiss
Publisher Yad Vashem
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