Book Description
A very readable and comprehensive overview that examines the realities of Jewish life while setting them in their political, economic, and social contexts.
Author : Antony Polonsky
Publisher : Liverpool University Press
Page : 711 pages
File Size : 36,95 MB
Release : 2013-09-26
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 1789624835
A very readable and comprehensive overview that examines the realities of Jewish life while setting them in their political, economic, and social contexts.
Author : Israel Friedlaender
Publisher : New York : G.P. Putnam's Sons
Page : 246 pages
File Size : 13,99 MB
Release : 1915
Category : Jews
ISBN :
Author : Simon Dubnow
Publisher :
Page : 424 pages
File Size : 26,55 MB
Release : 1916
Category : Jews
ISBN :
Author : Antony Polonsky
Publisher :
Page : 534 pages
File Size : 15,18 MB
Release : 2009
Category : Jews
ISBN : 9781874774648
In his three-volume history, Antony Polonsky provides a comprehensive survey-socio-political, economic, and religious-of the Jewish communities of eastern Europe from 1350 to the present. Until the Second World War, this was the heartland of the Jewish world: nearly three and a half million Jews lived in Poland alone, while nearly three million more lived in the Soviet Union. Although the majority of the Jews of Europe and the United States, and many of the Jews of Israel, originate from these lands, their history there is not well known. Rather, it is the subject of mythologizing and stereotypes that fail both to bring out the specific features of the Jewish civilization which emerged there and to illustrate what was lost. Jewish life, though often poor materially, was marked by a high degree of spiritual and ideological intensity and creativity.
Author : Eliyana R. Adler
Publisher : Harvard University Press
Page : 457 pages
File Size : 44,45 MB
Release : 2020-11-17
Category : History
ISBN : 0674988027
The forgotten story of 200,000 Polish Jews who escaped the Holocaust as refugees stranded in remote corners of the USSR. Between 1940 and 1946, about 200,000 Jewish refugees from Poland lived and toiled in the harsh Soviet interior. They endured hard labor, bitter cold, and extreme deprivation. But out of reach of the Nazis, they escaped the fate of millions of their coreligionists in the Holocaust. Survival on the Margins is the first comprehensive account in English of their experiences. The refugees fled Poland after the German invasion in 1939 and settled in the Soviet territories newly annexed under the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact. Facing hardship, and trusting little in Stalin, most spurned the offer of Soviet citizenship and were deported to labor camps in unoccupied areas of the east. They were on their own, in a forbidding wilderness thousands of miles from home. But they inadvertently escaped Hitler’s 1941 advance into the Soviet Union. While war raged and Europe’s Jews faced genocide, the refugees were permitted to leave their settlements after the Soviet government agreed to an amnesty. Most spent the remainder of the war coping with hunger and disease in Soviet Central Asia. When they were finally allowed to return to Poland in 1946, they encountered the devastation of the Holocaust, and many stopped talking about their own ordeals, their stories eventually subsumed within the central Holocaust narrative. Drawing on untapped memoirs and testimonies of the survivors, Eliyana Adler rescues these important stories of determination and suffering on behalf of new generations.
Author : Gershon David Hundert
Publisher : Univ of California Press
Page : 307 pages
File Size : 33,6 MB
Release : 2004
Category : Business & Economics
ISBN : 0520249941
Annotation A history of Jews in Poland-Lithuania in the eighteenth century which argues that this largest Jewish community in the world at that time must be at the center of consideration of modernity in Jewish history.
Author : Antony Polonsky
Publisher :
Page : 492 pages
File Size : 42,76 MB
Release : 2021
Category : Jews
ISBN : 9781800341067
Each of the three volumes of this work provides a comprehensive picture of the realities of Jewish life in the Polish lands in the period it covers, while also considering the contemporary political, economic, and social context. This volume, from 1881 to 1914, explores the factors that had a negative impact on Jewish life as well as the political and cultural movements that developed in consequence: Zionism, socialism, autonomism, the emergence of modern Hebrew and Yiddish literature, Jewish urbanization, and the rise of popular Jewish culture.
Author : Norman Davies
Publisher : Springer
Page : 440 pages
File Size : 18,21 MB
Release : 1991-12-02
Category : History
ISBN : 1349217891
This book is the first to deal with the impact on the Jews of the area of the sovietization of Eastern Poland. Polish resentment at alleged Jewish collaboration with the Soviets between 1939 and 1941 affected the development of Polish-Jewish relations under Nazi rule and in the USSR. The role of these conflicts both in the Anders army and in the Communist-led Kosciuszko division and 1st Polish Army is investigated, as well as the part played by Jews in the communist-dominated regime in Poland after 1944.
Author : Antony Polonsky
Publisher :
Page : 648 pages
File Size : 16,4 MB
Release : 2021
Category : Jews
ISBN : 9781800340763
For many centuries Poland and Russia formed the heartland of the Jewish world: right up to the Second World War, the area was home to over 40 per cent of the world's Jews. Yet the history of their Jewish communities is not well known. This book recreates this lost world, beginning with Jewish economic, cultural and religious life, including the emergence of hasidism.
Author : Simon Dubnow
Publisher : Litres
Page : 491 pages
File Size : 14,9 MB
Release : 2021-01-18
Category : History
ISBN : 5040546688