Who Will Write Our History?
Title | Who Will Write Our History? PDF eBook |
Author | Samuel D. Kassow |
Publisher | Indiana University Press |
Pages | 603 |
Release | 2018-08-01 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0253041058 |
In 1940, the historian Emanuel Ringelblum established a clandestine organization, code named Oyneg Shabes, in Nazi-occupied Warsaw to study and document all facets of Jewish life in wartime Poland and to compile an archive that would preserve this history for posterity. As the Final Solution unfolded, although decimated by murders and deportations, the group persevered in its work until the spring of 1943. Of its more than 60 members, only three survived. Ringelblum and his family perished in March 1944. But before he died, he managed to hide thousands of documents in milk cans and tin boxes. Searchers found two of these buried caches in 1946 and 1950. Who Will Write Our History tells the gripping story of Ringelblum and his determination to use historical scholarship and the collection of documents to resist Nazi oppression.
The Warsaw Ghetto Oyneg Shabes-Ringelblum Archive
Title | The Warsaw Ghetto Oyneg Shabes-Ringelblum Archive PDF eBook |
Author | Ringelblum-Archiv |
Publisher | |
Pages | 539 |
Release | 2009 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9780253353276 |
Guide to a once-buried archive from the Warsaw ghetto
Who Will Write Our History?
Title | Who Will Write Our History? PDF eBook |
Author | Samuel D. Kassow |
Publisher | Vintage |
Pages | 578 |
Release | 2011-05-18 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0307793753 |
In 1940, in the Jewish ghetto of Nazi-occupied Warsaw, the Polish historian Emanuel Ringelblum established a clandestine scholarly organization called the Oyneg Shabes to record the experiences of the ghetto's inhabitants. For three years, members of the Oyneb Shabes worked in secret to chronicle the lives of hundereds of thousands as they suffered starvation, disease, and deportation by the Nazis. Shortly before the Warsaw ghetto was emptied and razed in 1943, the Oyneg Shabes buried thousands of documents from this massive archive in milk cans and tin boxes, ensuring that the voice and culture of a doomed people would outlast the efforts of their enemies to silence them. Impeccably researched and thoroughly compelling, Samuel D. Kassow's Who Will Write Our History? tells the tragic story of Ringelblum and his heroic determination to use historical scholarship to preserve the memory of a threatened people.
Voices from the Warsaw Ghetto
Title | Voices from the Warsaw Ghetto PDF eBook |
Author | David G. Roskies |
Publisher | Yale University Press |
Pages | 276 |
Release | 2019-04-23 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0300245351 |
The powerful writings and art of Jews living in the Warsaw Ghetto Hidden in metal containers and buried underground during World War II, these works from the Warsaw Ghetto record the Holocaust from the perspective of its first interpreters, the victims themselves. Gathered clandestinely by an underground ghetto collective called Oyneg Shabes, the collection of reportage, diaries, prose, artwork, poems, jokes, and sermons captures the heroism, tragedy, humor, and social dynamics of the ghetto. Miraculously surviving the devastation of war, this extraordinary archive encompasses a vast range of voices—young and old, men and women, the pious and the secular, optimists and pessimists—and chronicles different perspectives on the topics of the day while also preserving rapidly endangered cultural traditions. Described by David G. Roskies as “a civilization responding to its own destruction,” these texts tell the story of the Warsaw Ghetto in real time, against time, and for all time.
Notes from the Warsaw Ghetto
Title | Notes from the Warsaw Ghetto PDF eBook |
Author | Emanuel Ringelblum |
Publisher | Milk & Cookies |
Pages | 0 |
Release | 2006 |
Genre | Getto warszawskie (Warsaw, Poland) |
ISBN | 9781596873315 |
Through anecdotes, stories and notations, which Emanuel Ringelblum intended to expand after the liberation of Warsaw, there emerges the agonising, eyewitness accounts of human beings caught in senseless, unrelenting brutality. It is a terrifying account, bitter, compelling and often unbelievable.
Polish-Jewish Relations During the Second World War
Title | Polish-Jewish Relations During the Second World War PDF eBook |
Author | Emanuel Ringelblum |
Publisher | Northwestern University Press |
Pages | 382 |
Release | 1992 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9780810109636 |
A man of towering intellectual accomplishment and extraordinary tenacity, Emmanuel Ringelblum devoted his life to recording the fate of his people at the hands of the Germans. Convinced that he must remain in the Warsaw Ghetto to complete his work, and rejecting an invitation to flee to refuge on the Aryan side, Ringelbaum, his wife, and their son were eventually betrayed to the Germans and killed. This book represents Ringelbaum's attempt to answer the questions he knew history would ask about the Polish people: what did the Poles do while millions of Jews were being led to the stake? What did the Polish underground do? What did the Government-in-Exile do? Was it inevitable that the Jews, looking their last on this world, should have to see indifference or even gladness on the faces of their neighbors? These questions have haunted Polish-Jewish relations for the last fifty years. Behind them are forces that have haunted Polish-Jewish relations for a thousand years.
Łódź Ghetto
Title | Łódź Ghetto PDF eBook |
Author | Isaiah Trunk |
Publisher | Indiana University Press |
Pages | 568 |
Release | 2006 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9780253347558 |
In his comprehensive examination of the Lódz Ghetto, originally published in Yiddish in 1962, historian Isaiah Trunk sought to describe and explain the tragedy that befell the Jews imprisoned in the first major ghetto imposed by the Germans after they invaded Poland in 1939. Lódz had been home to nearly a quarter million Jews. When the Soviet military arrived in January 1945, they found 877 living Jews and the remains of a vast industrial enterprise that had employed masses of enslaved Jewish laborers. Based on an exhaustive study of primary sources in Yiddish, Hebrew, Polish, German, and Russian, Isaiah Trunk, a former resident of Lódz, reconstructs the organization of the ghetto and discusses its provisioning; forced labor; diseases and mortality; crime and deportations; living conditions; political, social, and cultural life; and resistance. Included are translations of the 141 documents that Trunk reproduced in his volume.