Europe in the Eyes of Survivors of the Holocaust

Editors: Zeev Mankowitz, David Weinberg, Sharon Kangisser Cohen

 

In what sense was the European heritage responsible for Jewish cultural and intellectual development? How could one describe the events of the Holocaust? Was there a future for Jews in a reconstructed Europe? A group of scholars suggests a more nuanced view by examining the perspectives of ten survivors – philosophers, activists, and memoirists – whose attitudes towards the European past were characterized by conflicting feelings of alienation and attraction.

NIS 169.00
NIS 45.00
מפרט המוצר
Year 2014
ISBN 978-965-308-465-0
Catalog No. 860
No. of Pages 256 pp.
Size 16X23 cm.
Format Hard Cover
Publisher Yad Vashem
Translator
סעיף תקציבי מאגד 000189
קוד מחלקה 41
קוד אגף 17
קוד תת פעילות אלמוג 086
קוד פעילות אלמוג 112
חשבון הכנסות 71200101
מפרט המוצר
Year 2014
ISBN 978-965-308-465-0
Catalog No. 860
No. of Pages 256 pp.
Size 16X23 cm.
Format Hard Cover
Publisher Yad Vashem
Translator
סעיף תקציבי מאגד 000189
קוד מחלקה 41
קוד אגף 17
קוד תת פעילות אלמוג 086
קוד פעילות אלמוג 112
חשבון הכנסות 71200101
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Sharon Kangisser Cohen

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Hiding, Sheltering and Borrowing Identities: Avenues of Rescue During the Holocaust

Edited by Dan Michman

During the immediate aftermath of the Holocaust, the focus of research was directed at the actions of the murderers and at resistance. That situation changed gradually during the 1960s and 1970s. The rescue of Jews, a major aspect of Holocaust history, started to attract the attention of scholars. Still, the focus was mostly on governments and organizations. The initiation of Yad Vashem’s recognition program for the Righteous Among the Nations also drew public attention to the acts of individual rescuers in areas under Nazi control. Over the course of the last three decades, important studies have been published that investigated the rescuers and their acts. Yet even today, many aspects of the rescue activities require further research. Moreover, the aspect of Jewish initiatives and individual experiences deserves more attention. Yad Vashem’s eighteenth biannual conference, titled “Hiding, Sheltering and Borrowing Identities as Avenues of Rescue during the Holocaust,” brought together a large number of international scholars to discuss new approaches and the current state of research on the topic. This volume, based on a selection of papers that were presented at the conference, aims to provide an overview of the multi-faceted landscape of academic studies on the rescuers and the rescued.

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