Germans and Jews Since The Holocaust
By (Author) Pl Dochartaigh
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Red Globe Press
24th November 2015
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Social groups: religious groups and communities
The Holocaust
Second World War
305.8924043
280
Width 136mm, Height 214mm, Spine 14mm
320g
From the very moment of the liberation of camps at Auschwitz, Belsen and Buchenwald, Germans have been held accountable for the crimes committed in the Holocaust. The Nazi regime unleashed the most systematic attempt in history to wipe out an entire people, murdering men, women and children for the simple 'crime' of being Jewish. After the war ended in 1945, the Jewish State of Israel was created and Jewish communities were re-established in a now divided Germany. Germans have engaged actively with their Nazi legacy and the Jewish communities have remained and grown stronger, but neo-Nazism has also persisted. Young Germans have learned the horrific deeds of the past at school, and throughout the world, people of all nations have tried to learn the lesson 'never again', while Germany has become 'Israel's best friend in Europe'. Pl Dochartaigh analyses the ways in which Germans and Jews alike have attempted to come to terms with the Holocaust and its terrible legacy. He also looks at efforts to remember and to forget the Holocaust, movement towards recompense and reparation, and the survival of anti-Semitism.
Pl Dochartaigh is Registrar and Deputy President of the National University of Ireland, Galway, and was previously Professor of German and Dean of Arts at the University of Ulster, Coleraine, Northern Ireland.