Remembering survival : inside a Nazi slave-labor camp / Christopher R. Browning.

By: Browning, Christopher RMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: New York : W.W. Norton & Co., c2010Edition: 1st edDescription: xxii, 375 p., [8] p. of plates : ill., maps, ports. ; 25 cmISBN: 9780393070194 (hardcover); 0393070190 (hardcover)Subject(s): World War, 1939-1945 -- Concentration camps -- Poland -- Starachowice | Forced labor -- Poland -- Starachowice -- History -- 20th century | Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Poland -- Starachowice | Jews -- Poland -- Starachowice -- History -- 20th century | Nazis -- Poland -- Starachowice -- History -- 20th century | Wierzbnik (Starachowice, Poland) -- History -- 20th century | Starachowice (Poland) -- History -- 20th century | Holocaust survivors -- Poland -- Starachowice -- Biography | Wierzbnik (Starachowice, Poland) -- Biography | Starachowice (Poland) -- BiographyDDC classification: 940.53/1853845 LOC classification: D805.P7 | B76 2010
Contents:
pt. 1. The Jews of Wierzbnik -- The prewar Jewish community of Wierzbnik-Starachowice -- The outbreak of war -- The early months of German occupation -- The Judenrat -- The German occupiers in Wierzbnik-Starachowice -- Coping with adversity in Wierzbnik, 1940-1942 -- pt. 2. The destruction of the Wierzbnik ghetto -- Wierzbnik on the eve of destruction -- The Aktion, October 27, 1942 -- Into the camps -- pt. 3. Terror and typhus : fall 1942-spring 1943 -- Personalities and structures -- The typhus epidemic -- The Althoff massacres -- Tartak -- pt. 4. Stabilization -- The Kolditz era : summer-fall 1943 -- Jewish work -- Food, property, and the underground economy -- The Ukrainian guards -- Poles and Jews -- Children in the camps -- Childbirth, abortion, sex, and rape -- The Schroth era : winter-spring 1944 -- pt. 5. Consolidation, escape, evacuation -- Closing Majâowka and Tartak -- The final days -- From Starachowice to Birkenau -- The Starachowice women and children in Birkenau -- Escapees -- pt. 6. Aftermath -- Return to and flight from Wierzbnik -- Postwar investigations and trials in Germany -- Conclusion.
Review: "In 1972 the Hamburg State Court acquitted Walther Becker of war crimes committed against Jews. Thirty years before, Becker, the German chief of police in the Polish city of Starachowice, had been responsible for liquidating the nearby Jewish ghetto, sending nearly 4,000 Jews to their deaths at Treblinka and 1,600 to slave labor in the local munitions factories. The shocking acquittal, delivered despite the incriminating eyewitness testimony of almost sixty survivors, drives Christopher R. Browning's inquiry." "Employing the rich testimony of almost three hundred survivors of these slave-labor camps, Browning's history draws together the experiences of the Jewish prisoners, the Nazi authorities, and the neighboring Poles. For the Jews the camps, brutal and deadly as conditions were, represented their best chance for survival. There they lived under corrupt camp regimes and produced for the German war effort even as they sacrificed to protect children, spouses, parents, or neighbors." "For the Germans the camps, critical to munitions production, were anomalies in the systematic killing of Jews. Himmler's "harvest-festival" massacre of November 1943, when 42,000 Jewish workers in Poland's eastern camps were killed in two days, largely spared the western camps. But in a selection days later, some 160 Starachowice prisoners were taken to the forest, shot, and buried in a mass grave. Arbitrary killing was an ever-present threat even under the most pragmatic camp regime. For the Poles the factories provided a meager employment. Some actively aided Jewish neighbors in the camps. Others made this region a stronghold for anti-Semitic and extremist partisan forces, with the highest incidence of postwar killing of Jews in Poland."--BOOK JACKET.
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book University of Macedonia Library
Βιβλιοστάσιο Α (Stack Room A)
Main Collection D805.P7B76 2010 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) 1 Available 0013133156

Includes bibliographical references (p. 301-362) and index.

pt. 1. The Jews of Wierzbnik -- The prewar Jewish community of Wierzbnik-Starachowice -- The outbreak of war -- The early months of German occupation -- The Judenrat -- The German occupiers in Wierzbnik-Starachowice -- Coping with adversity in Wierzbnik, 1940-1942 -- pt. 2. The destruction of the Wierzbnik ghetto -- Wierzbnik on the eve of destruction -- The Aktion, October 27, 1942 -- Into the camps -- pt. 3. Terror and typhus : fall 1942-spring 1943 -- Personalities and structures -- The typhus epidemic -- The Althoff massacres -- Tartak -- pt. 4. Stabilization -- The Kolditz era : summer-fall 1943 -- Jewish work -- Food, property, and the underground economy -- The Ukrainian guards -- Poles and Jews -- Children in the camps -- Childbirth, abortion, sex, and rape -- The Schroth era : winter-spring 1944 -- pt. 5. Consolidation, escape, evacuation -- Closing Majâowka and Tartak -- The final days -- From Starachowice to Birkenau -- The Starachowice women and children in Birkenau -- Escapees -- pt. 6. Aftermath -- Return to and flight from Wierzbnik -- Postwar investigations and trials in Germany -- Conclusion.

"In 1972 the Hamburg State Court acquitted Walther Becker of war crimes committed against Jews. Thirty years before, Becker, the German chief of police in the Polish city of Starachowice, had been responsible for liquidating the nearby Jewish ghetto, sending nearly 4,000 Jews to their deaths at Treblinka and 1,600 to slave labor in the local munitions factories. The shocking acquittal, delivered despite the incriminating eyewitness testimony of almost sixty survivors, drives Christopher R. Browning's inquiry." "Employing the rich testimony of almost three hundred survivors of these slave-labor camps, Browning's history draws together the experiences of the Jewish prisoners, the Nazi authorities, and the neighboring Poles. For the Jews the camps, brutal and deadly as conditions were, represented their best chance for survival. There they lived under corrupt camp regimes and produced for the German war effort even as they sacrificed to protect children, spouses, parents, or neighbors." "For the Germans the camps, critical to munitions production, were anomalies in the systematic killing of Jews. Himmler's "harvest-festival" massacre of November 1943, when 42,000 Jewish workers in Poland's eastern camps were killed in two days, largely spared the western camps. But in a selection days later, some 160 Starachowice prisoners were taken to the forest, shot, and buried in a mass grave. Arbitrary killing was an ever-present threat even under the most pragmatic camp regime. For the Poles the factories provided a meager employment. Some actively aided Jewish neighbors in the camps. Others made this region a stronghold for anti-Semitic and extremist partisan forces, with the highest incidence of postwar killing of Jews in Poland."--BOOK JACKET.

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