Buch, Englisch, 454 Seiten, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm, Gewicht: 653 g
The Dilemma of the Reich Association of Jews in Germany, 1939-1945
Buch, Englisch, 454 Seiten, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm, Gewicht: 653 g
ISBN: 978-1-78533-214-2
Verlag: Berghahn Books
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
- Geisteswissenschaften Geschichtswissenschaft Geschichtliche Themen Antisemitismus
- Geisteswissenschaften Jüdische Studien Geschichte des Judentums Antisemitismus, Pogrome, Shoah
- Geisteswissenschaften Geschichtswissenschaft Weltgeschichte & Geschichte einzelner Länder und Gebietsräume Deutsche Geschichte Deutsche Geschichte: Holocaust
- Geisteswissenschaften Jüdische Studien Geschichte des Judentums Geschichte des Judentums außerhalb Israels/Palästinas
- Geisteswissenschaften Geschichtswissenschaft Weltgeschichte & Geschichte einzelner Länder und Gebietsräume Geschichte des Judentums (Diaspora)
Weitere Infos & Material
Abbreviations in the Text and Notes
List of Tables
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part I: From “Forced Emigration” to Assisting with the Deportations
Chapter 1. Created in Chaos
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Pogrom as Prelude: November 1938
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Looking Back at the History of the Reich Representation of German Jews, 1932-1938
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Between Reich Representation and Reich Association: Adaptation Under Duress
Chapter 2. “Forced Emigration”
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Orderly Emigration or Flight at Any Cost? Legal or Illegal? Emigration to Palestine (Aliyah)
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To Emigrate or Stay On? Functionaries Between Duty, Responsibility and Self-Overestimation
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”Losing sight of the big picture for the sake of something smaller” The Conflict over Rescuing the Polish Jews 1939/40
Chapter 3. The “Territorial Solution”: “Reservations for Jews” and Early Deportations
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“Jewish Reservation Lublin”
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The Madagascar Plan
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The Deportation of the Jews from Baden and Saarpfalz
Chapter 4. Welfare
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Interim Summary
Part II: Walking on a Thin Line – The Participation of the Reichsvereinigung and the Berlin Jewish Community in the Time of the Deportations
Chapter 1. Decision on a Basic Principle: Avoid Hardship, Participate in “Partial Operations”
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Clinging to a Lost Life World
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Straying from the path or “legal work in the underground”32(Baeck)? Preparatory Tasks Executed by the RV
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Changes in Tasks and Structures (1941-1943)
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New Task: Compilation of Personal Data and Card File Systems
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A New Imposed Challenge: Setting Up and Maintaining Assembly Camps for Deportations
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Another New Task: “Collecting Deportees”
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Other Supplementary Assistance – Postal Services
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Social Work as Exemplified in Care for Children
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The Limited Possibilities of the Reichsvereinigung to Influence the Deportations
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The Reichsvereinigung as Employer and a Protective Space for Functionaries and Staff
Chapter 2. “Every Day More Terrifying News” – The Year 1942
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Repercussions of the Arson Attack on the Nazi Propaganda Exhibition ”The Soviet Paradise”
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Socially Acceptable Deportations? Destination Theresienstadt
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The Daily Round of Work under Threat of Arrest
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The ‘Community Operation’ in October 1942
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The “Time of Brunner”
Chapter 3. The Stepwise Liquidation of the Reichsvereinigung (1943)
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Deportation of the Leading Functionaries
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The “great inferno.” The Factory Action
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(Temporary) Closure of the Business Offices
Chapter 4. Theresienstadt as a New Field of Activity of the German-Jewish Functionaries
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A Veritable Army of Officials
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The Bitter End of Activity by Functionaries in Theresienstadt
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Knowledge among the German-Jewish Functionaries about the Murder of the Jews
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Interim Summary
Part III: The “Psychological Environment” (Hilberg) in the Countryside. Latitude forAction by Jewish Functionaries in the District Branches
Chapter 1. The District Branches
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Structure and Motivation of the Jewish Functionaries
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The Tasks
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Mitigating the Plight, Dissemination of Prohibitions and Social Disciplining
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“Judenhäuser” and Barracks Settlements
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Preparatory Arrangements for the Deportations
Chapter 2. A Troubled Relationship: The District Branches and the RV Central Office
Chapter 3. The District Branches and the Deportations
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Brief Digression: Preparations for Deportation by the Gestapo
Chapter 4. A Comparative Look at District Branches
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Frankfurt am Main. The System of Organized Arbitrary Action
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Munich. Hatred of Jews in the Gau of Nazi Tradition
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Nuremberg. Uninhibited Hordes
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Mainz. “Reliable” Relations?
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Hamburg. “Easier Going” than Elsewhere?
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Final Thoughts
Chapter 5.Strategies for Dealing with the Authorities.
Chapter 6.The Fate of the District Branch Directors
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Liquidation of the District Branches
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Interim Summary
Part IV: The Residual Reichsvereinigung
Chapter 1. The Last Compulsory Members: Jews in Mixed Marriages
Chapter 2. Structure and Tasks of the Residual Reichsvereinigung
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Director Dr. Dr. Walter Lustig
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Origin and Motivation of the Intermediaries
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Work under the Conditions of the Bombing Raids
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Intermediaries in Conflict with the Central Office
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Lethal Office
Chapter 3. Vertrauensmänner, Gestapo and Jews in the Final Phase of the War
Chapter 4. The War is Over – Liberation and/or a Horrible End?
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Interim Summary
Part V: A Look at Later Developments: The “Strategy of Cooperation” as anIncriminating Legacy for a New Start
Chapter 1.Proceedings Before a Court of Honor and Employment Bans in Berlin
Chapter 2.Under Suspicion: Former Jewish Functionaries in the Western Occupation Zones and the Fledgling Federal Republic
Chapter 3. “Gestapo Collaborators”: Former Jewish Functionaries in the Soviet Occupation Zone and the GDR
Chapter 4. Aftermath
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The Conflict Surrounding Recha Freier’s Let The Children Come
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Surviving Functionaries in Jewish Organizations
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Summary
Bibliography
Archival materials cited
Literature and printed sources
Index