The Forgotten Holocaust: The Poles Under German Occupation, 1939-1944Emphasizes that the Polish people, like the Jews, were victims of a German war of annihilation which nearly succeeded. While some Poles helped Jews, others helped the Germans to hunt them down. However, these were condemned by the Polish underground. Ch. 5 (pp. 121-151) argues that Polish failure to save the Jews was due not to antisemitism but rather to preoccupation with their own survival and lack of mutual social contacts. Contends that Polish antisemitism was mainly an expression of resentment against Jewish economic domination, matched by Jewish discrimination against Poles. Poles resented the Jewish welcome of the Soviets in 1939. Up to 1942, they believed that the Jews were relatively safe in the ghettos. also denies "exaggerated" accusations of antisemitism in the Anders Army. Ch. 6 (pp. 152-181) describes actions of the government-in-exile on behalf of the Jews; denies that the Home Army failed to help the Warsaw ghetto fighters. |
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Page 119
110 The Council for Aid to Jews ( Rada Pomocy Żydom ) , which used the cryptonym Żegota , also appealed to underground authorities to do all they could to combat the problem and created a separate branch of its organization to ...
110 The Council for Aid to Jews ( Rada Pomocy Żydom ) , which used the cryptonym Żegota , also appealed to underground authorities to do all they could to combat the problem and created a separate branch of its organization to ...
Page 120
117 The problems that had to be overcome in investigating blackmailers and bringing them to justice were not easy ... а The problem of informing on and blackmailing Jews and the Poles who helped Jewish people was a serious one , but it ...
117 The problems that had to be overcome in investigating blackmailers and bringing them to justice were not easy ... а The problem of informing on and blackmailing Jews and the Poles who helped Jewish people was a serious one , but it ...
Page 222
There are serious methodological problems which have yet to be dealt with before convincing accounts of the Poles and Jews during the Holocaust can be produced . Some Jewish writers themselves have indicated part of the problem when ...
There are serious methodological problems which have yet to be dealt with before convincing accounts of the Poles and Jews during the Holocaust can be produced . Some Jewish writers themselves have indicated part of the problem when ...
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The forgotten Holocaust: the Poles under German occupation, 1939-1944
User Review - Not Available - Book VerdictThough many nations were forced to endure Nazi tyranny during World War II, nowhere was its fury more devastating than in Poland. Poland suffered more than six million casualities and witnessed the ... Read full review
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action activities AKWD Allied American anti-Semitic armed attacks August authorities became believed bombing Bór British camps Centrali civilians claimed commander Communists concerning considered continued critical death Depesza early eastern efforts enemy entire especially established Europe executions fact Fighting forced Foreign German Ghetto groups GSHI hand headed Home intelligence involved Jewish Jews July June killed Korboński land later leaders letter lived London major military murder Nazi occupation Office operations organization partisan Party Peasant percent Poland Poles Polish army Polish government Polish Jews Polish underground political population problem received Reich relations representatives resistance responsible result Rowecki Russians Secret sent September Sikorski soldiers Soviet Union streets tion told took units uprising wanted Warsaw western World ZWZIAK