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9781793646026 Add to Cart Academic Inspection Copy

German Jews and Migration to the United States, 1933-1945

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This collection of mostly unpublished first-person accounts documents the flight and exile of German Jews from Nazi Germany to the USA. The thematic and biographical introductions by the editors, clear geographic framework, and well-defined time frame make this volume helpful to those new to the subject.
The German Jews who had to flee from Nazi Germany left a deep imprint on American society. This important book collects exemplary voices of Jewish refugees from Munich, the capital of Hitler's movement, as they are looking back on their lives in Germany and assessing their new situation in exile. An essential resource for anyone interested in the personal side of the greatest tragedy in the 20th century. This compelling book shares the stories of multiple Jewish families from Munich and their struggle to respond to persecution within Third Reich and emigration to the US. Through memoirs and family letters, this searing compilation unflinchingly evidences what emigres left behind, including physical spaces and possessions, their sense of self, and often family members. These powerful recollections lay bare the daily life they endured within Germany and their search for safe haven, constrained by antisemitism and a tangled bureaucracy of emigration. It restores humanity to these events, relating how people thought and felt during incredibly demanding and dangerous times. This expertly edited collection brings fresh insights to the remarkable story of German-Jewish displacement in the heart of the 20th century. Sinn and Heusler have assembled a first-rate collection of testimonies and woven them together to provide a portrait of an uprooted community. Highly recommended for classroom teachers, researchers, and anyone who wants to know more about Jewish migration to the United States. This important collection of memoirs and letters puts a human face on the refugee crisis created by Nazi Germany. From gut-wrenching decisions to leave children behind to the exploitation of immigrant labor in the US, these documents shine a light on the obstacles and dangers that underly the experience of uprooting oneself from home and country. The editors have written clear and insightful introductions to frame the significance of these documents. Through these documents, students will gain a fuller understanding of how Nazi persecution tore apart families and robbed Jewish Germans of their homes and of their sense of security and belonging.
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