War, Pacification, and Mass Murder, 1939: The Einsatzgruppen in Poland
By (Author) Jrgen Matthus
By (author) Jochen Bhler
By (author) Klaus-Michael Mallmann
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
1st November 2017
United States
General
Non Fiction
European history
Social and cultural history
Regional / International studies
940.53180943
Paperback
206
Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 16mm
313g
Published in association with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
This invaluable work traces the role of the Einsatzgruppen of the Security Police and SD, the core group of Himmlers murder units involved in the Final Solution of the Jewish Question, during and immediately after the German campaign in Poland in 1939. In addition to relevant Einsatzgruppen reports, the book includes key documents from other sources, especially eyewitness accounts from victims or onlookers. Such accounts provide an alternative, often much more realistic, perspective on the nature and consequences of the actions previously known only through documentation generated by the perpetrators. With carefully selected primary sources contextualized by the authors clear narrative, this work fills an important gap in our understanding of a crucial period in the evolution of policies directed against Jews, Poles, and others deemed dangerous or inferior by the Third Reich. Supplemented by maps and photographs, this book will be an essential reference and research tool.
This impressive series provides a sense of the depth and diversity of contemporary Jewish documents while embedding them in explanatory narratives. . . .Underscoring this point [how unprecedented the nature of Nazi actions in Poland was even prior to the launching of comprehensive genocide] is one of the chief purposes of War, Pacification, and Mass Murder, 1939, one of the stand-alone volumes in the series, the first comprehensive English-language edition documenting and annotating Einsatzgruppen activities against the background of war and Nazi racial policy in Poland in 1939. * Yad Vashem Studies *
This important history explains and documents an often-neglected phase of Nazi Germany's war in the east. Anyone who needs a nuanced understanding of the first phase of the Holocaust and Operation Barbarossa should first study Operation Tannenberg, which is fully explored for the first time in this fine work. -- Richard Breitman, Distinguished Professor Emeritus, American University
For too long, histories of the Einsatzgruppen have neglected the territories bordering the German Reich. The editors of this essential collection have made available to students and scholars of the Holocaust and the Second World War a stunning array of German documents culled from U.S., German, Polish, and former Soviet archives. Carefully translated into English and usefully annotated, the reports and testimonies in this compact volume reveal that unscrupulous Nazi leaders and their subordinates in Poland were determined to wage war, pacify the region, and initiate a program of mass murder as of the fall of 1939. -- Wendy Lower, Claremont McKenna College
Jrgen Matthus is director of the Applied Research Division at the Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Jochen Bhler is a research fellow at the Imre Kertsz Kolleg at Jena University, Germany. Klaus-Michael Mallmann is director of the Forschungsstelle Ludwigsburg at the Universitt Stuttgart, Germany.