NEJS 132b. Against the Apocalypse: Jewish Responses to the Holocaust

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NEJS 132b Against the Apocalypse: Jewish Responses to the Holocaust Professor: Dr. Laura Jockusch Semester: Fall 2017 Class Meetings: M, W, Th 11-11:50am Room: Lown 302 Office: Lown 310 Email: jockusch@brandeis.edu Hours: W and Th 3-4pm Phone: 62959 Teaching Assistant: Maham Ayaz Email: mayaz@brandeis.edu Course Description For decades, historians and the wider public ignored the vibrant activity of Jewish individuals and organizations during and immediately after World War II to confront, comprehend, and publicize the Nazi crimes, later known as the Holocaust. However, considering the Jewish perspectives on the Holocaust changes the chronology of Holocaust awareness in the postwar era and leads to a re-evaluation of the first two decades after the war. In contrast to its alleged hermetic silence and paralysis, we find a host of crucial and distinctive activities that the Jewish world initiated immediately after 1945 to publicize the unprecedented dimensions of Nazi crimes. Jews in Europe, Palestine/Israel, and the Americas were by no means silent after the war, but tried on different levels to come to terms with the European Jewish cataclysm. On the part of the Jews, there was neither lack of knowledge and understanding nor was there unwillingness to confront the traumatic events in discourse, writing, and commemoration; rather, they encountered an all-encompassing refusal on the part of the non-jewish world to listen to and act on what Jews had to tell. This course provides an overview on the breadth of Jewish activities in the Diaspora and Israel to understand and commemorate the destruction of European Jews in the 1940s and 1950s and to create Holocaust consciousness. After surveying the history of the Holocaust and discussing the possibilities and constraints of Jewish responses to Nazi persecution and mass murder while the events were unfolding, the course s main emphasis is on the years 1945-1961. Exploring the hardship of liberation and rebuilding and the promise and potential of the postwar moment, it highlights five realms of responses: history writing and documentation; the search for justice and the shaping of legal frameworks after genocide; cultural, political and religious responses to the Holocaust; and modes of commemoration. The concluding part of the course seeks to reevaluate the myth of a postwar Jewish silence. Learning Goals Identify the major events, persons, problems, concepts and ideas in the history of Jewish responses to Nazi persecution and mass murder Read historical texts and primary sources critically and contextualize their significance to relevant problems Write short interpretive essays that speak critically about events and ideas. 1

Recommended Books David Cesarani and Eric Sundquist, eds., After the Holocaust: Challenging the Myth of Silence (London: Routledge, 2012). David Engel, The Holocaust: The Third Reich and the Jews, Harlow, England: Pearson Education, 2000. Margarete Myers Feinstein, Holocaust Survivors in Postwar Germany, 1945 1957, New York: Cambridge University Press, 2010. Atina Grossmann, Jews, Germans, and Allies: Close Encounters in Occupied Germany, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2007. Laura Jockusch, Collect and Record! Jewish Holocaust Documentation in Early Postwar Europe (New York: Oxford University Press, 2015 paperback). Laura Jockusch and Gabriel N. Finder eds., Jewish Honor Courts: Revenge, Retribution, and Reconciliation in Europe and Israel after the Holocaust (Detroit: Wayne State University Press and United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, 2015). Jack Kugelmass and Jonathan Boyarin eds., From a Ruined Garden: The Memorial Books of Polish Jewry (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2 1998). David G. Roskies and Naomi Diamant, Holocaust Literature: A History and Guide, Waltham: Brandeis University Press, 2012. Dan Stone, The Liberation of the Camps: The End of the Holocaust and Its Aftermath, New Haven: Yale University Press, 2015. Annette Wieviorka, The Era of the Witness. Translated by Jared Stark. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2006. Leah Wolfsohn, Jewish Responses to Persecution: 1944-1946 (London: Rowman and Littlefield, 2015). Ronald Zweig, German Reparations and the Jewish World: A History of the Claims Conference. 2d ed. London: Frank Cass, 2001. Learning Goals Identify the major events, persons, problems, concepts and ideas in the history Jewish responses to the Holocaust 2

Read historical texts and primary sources critically and contextualize their significance to relevant problems Write short interpretive essays that speak critically about events and ideas Course Requirements 1. Serious and consistent class participation (this means attendance is essential because your participation is part of your grade) 2. Regular introductions of the homework readings 3. Two written assignments of 4-5 pages 4. A midterm exam 5. A final exam Grading Class participation Essays Midterm Final exam 10 percent 30 percent 30 percent 30 percent Late work policy Unless there are legitimate reasons (e.g., serious illness or personal circumstances), work will not be accepted more than one week past the due date. Work turned in late will be docked 5 percent per day. Preparation Time Success in this 4 credit hour course is based on the expectation that students will spend a minimum of 9 hours of study time per week in preparation for class (readings, papers, discussion sections, preparation for exams, etc.). Academic Honesty You must complete all assignments alone. In your writing, you must follow rules of attribution, meaning that you must cite all sources consulted in preparing your papers. As stated in the Student Handbook, Every member of the University community is expected to maintain the highest standards of academic honesty. A student shall not receive credit for work that is not the product of the student s own effort. Examples of penalties for a student found responsible for an infringement of academic honesty are no credit for the work in question, failure in the course, and the traditional range of conduct sanctions from disciplinary warning through permanent dismissal from the University. 3

Students with Documented Disabilities Students with disabilities certified by the Coordinator of Academic Accommodations for Students with Disabilities in the Office of Undergraduate Academic Affairs and First Year Services will be given reasonable accommodations to complete required assignments. Disabilities that are not documented and approved by the Office of Academic Affairs will not be given accommodations. Weekly Topics and Reading Assignments 1. INTRODUCTION August 30, 2017 Introduction: Why study Jewish Responses to the Holocaust? 2. UNDERSTANDING THE HISTORICAL EVENT: THE THIRD REICH S DESTRUCTION OF EUROPEAN JEWS August 31, 2017 David Engel The Holocaust: The Third Reich and the Jews (Harlow, England: Pearson Education, 2000, 14-37), 50-61. September 4, 2017 Labor Day -- No Class 3. SCOPE AND LIMITS OF WARTIME JEWISH RESPONSES TO NAZI PERSECUTION September 6, 2017 Evgeny Finkel Perceiving the Threat: Between Information and Knowledge Ordinary Jews: Choice and Survival during the Holocaust (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2017), 51-68. September 7, 2017 Jewish Responses inside the Nazi Orbit: Cooperation and Collaboration Evgeny Finkel Ordinary Jews, 69-97. 4

September 11, 2017 Jewish Responses inside the Nazi Orbit: Coping and Compliance Evgeny Finkel Ordinary Jews, 98-125. September 13, 2017 Jewish Responses inside the Nazi Orbit: Evasion and Resistance Evgeny Finkel Ordinary Jews, 126-158, 159-190. September 14, 2017 Guest lecture by Dr. Miriam Offer Jewish responses to the Holocaust: The Response Patterns of Physicians and Medical Staff during and after the Holocaust September 18, 2017 Patterns of Jewish Responses in the Free World David Wyman The American Jewish Leadership and the Holocaust, in Rudolph L. Braham, ed., Jewish Leadership during the Nazi Era: Patterns of Behavior in the Free World, New York: Social Science monographs 1985, 1-27. 4. ON THE THREASHOLD TO THE POSTWAR ERA September 20, 2017 The Ambiguities of Liberation Dan Stone The Liberation of the Camps: The End of the Holocaust and Its Aftermath (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2015), 1-29. September 21, 2017 Rosh Hashanah No Class September 25, 2017 The Ambiguities of Liberation (Historical Sources) Leah Wolfsohn Jewish Responses to Persecution: 1944-1946 (London: Rowman and Littlefield, 2015), 53-80. September 27, 2017 Liberated but Not Free / Rehabilitation 5

Dan Stone The Liberation of the Camps, 105-138 September 28, 2017 The Jewish Displaced Persons Atina Grossmann Jews, Germans, and Allies: Close Encounters in Occupied Germany (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2007), 131-183. October 2, 2017 David Weinberg Rebuilding the Postwar Jewish World Between America and Israel: the quest for a distinct European Jewish identity in the post-war era, Jewish Culture and History 5,1 (2002) 91-120. October 3, 2017 Review for Mid-Term Exam October 4, 2017 Mid-Term Exam October 5, 2017 Sukkot No Class 5. DOCUMENTING NAZI CRIMES: HISTORICAL JEWISH RESPONSES October 9, 2017 Laura Jockusch Historical Commissions and Documentation Centers Historiography in Transit: Survivor Historians and the Writing of Holocaust History in the late 1940s, in: Leo Baeck Institute Yearbook LVIII (2013): 75-94. October 11, 2017 Laura Jockusch Historical Models for Documenting Catastrophe Collect and Record! Jewish Holocaust Documentation in Early Postwar Europe (New York: Oxford University Press, 2015 paperback), 18-45. October 12, 2017 David Boder s Testimony Project 6

Rachel Deblinger Alan Rosen David P. Boder: Holocaust Memory in Displaced Persons Camps, in After the Holocaust: Challenging the Myth of Silence, edited by David Cesarani and Eric Sundquist, London: Routledge, 2012, 115-126. We Know very little in America David Boder and Un-Belated Testimony, in After the Holocaust: Challenging the Myth of Silence, 102-114. October 16, 2017 Boaz Cohen Children s Testimony The Children s Voice: Postwar Collection of Testimonies from Child Survivors of the Holocaust. Holocaust and Genocide Studies 21, no. 1 (2007): 73 95. 6. SEEKING JUSTICE: JEWISH LEGAL RESPONSES TO THE HOLOCAUST October 18, 2017 Mark Roseman Revenge or Retribution? No, Herr Fuehrer! Jewish Revenge after the Holocaust: Between Fantasy and Reality, in Revenge, Retribution, Reconciliation: Justice and Emotions between Conflict and Mediation, ed. Laura Jockusch, Andreas Kraft, Kim Wünschmann (Jerusalem: The Hebrew University Magnes Press, 2016), 69-90. October 19, 2017 Laura Jockusch Courtroom Justice Justice at Nuremberg? Jewish Responses to Nazi War-Crime Trials in Allied-Occupied Germany, in: Jewish Social Studies 19, 1 (Fall 2012): 107 147. October 23, 2017 Jewish Honor Courts Laura Jockusch and Gabriel N. Finder eds., Jewish Honor Courts: Revenge, Retribution, and Reconciliation in Europe and Israel after the Holocaust (Detroit: Wayne State University Press and United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, 2015), 1-27. 7

October 25, 2017 Jewish Collaborator Trials in Israeli Courts Michael J. Bazyler and Frank M. Tuerkheimer Forgotten Trials of the Holocaust, New York: New York University Press, 2014, 195-227. October 26, 2017 Mark A. Lewis Criminalizing and Outlawing Genocide The Birth of New Justice: The Internationalization of Crime and Punishment 1919-1950 (Oxford University Press, 2014), 181-228. October 30, 2017 Elisabeth Gallas Restitution Locating the Jewish future: the restoration of looted cultural property in early postwar Europe, in: Naharaim 9,1-2 (2015) 25-47. November 1, 2017 Elazar Barkan Reparation and Compensation The Guilt of Nations: Restitution and Negotiating Historical Injustices (New York: Norton, 2000), 3-29. 7. CONTINUING A GOLDEN CHAIN: JEWISH CULTURAL RESPONSES November 2, 2017 Holocaust Literature David G. Roskies and Naomi Diamant Holocaust Literature: A History and Guide (Waltham: Brandeis University Press, 2012), 75-124. November 6, 2017 Shirli Gilbert Folklore and Music Buried Monuments: Yiddish Songs and Holocaust Memory, in: History Workshop Journal 66,1 (2008) 107-128. November 8, 2017 Theatre Margarete Myers Feinstein Holocaust Survivors in Postwar Germany, 1945 1957 8

(New York: Cambridge University Press, 2010), 226-238. Ella Florsheim Yiddish theater in the DP camps, in: Yad Vashem Studies 40,2 (2012) 107-135. November 9, 2017 Film View Sections from Undzere Kinder (Poland, 1948) Lawrence L. Langer Ira Konigsberg Undzere Kinder : A Yiddish Film from Poland, in idem, Preempting the Holocaust (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1998), 157-165. Our Children and the Limits of Cinema, in: Film Quarterly 52,1 (1998) 7-19. November 13, 2017 Lawrence L. Langer Early Memoirs The survivor as author: Primo Levi s literary vision of Auschwitz, in Risa Sodi and Milicent Marcus, New Reflections on Primo Levi (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011), 133-147. 8. CREATING SPACES OF MEMORY: JEWISH COMMEMORATVE RESPONSES TO THE HOLOCAUST November 15, 2017 Memorials Margarete Myers Feinstein Holocaust Survivors, 64-107. November 16, 2017 Rosemary Horowitz, ed. Yisker Books Memorial Books of Eastern European Jewry: Essays on the History and Meanings of Yizker Volumes (Jefferson: McFarland Press, 2011), 7-27. 9. BETWEEN NATIONAL SOVREIGNTY AND MINORITY STATUS: JEWISH POLITICS IN THE SHADOW OF THE HOLOCAUST 9

November 20, 2017 Avinoam J. Patt Zionism and Statehood Living in Landsberg, dreaming of Deganiah: Jewish Displaced Youths and Zionism after the Holocaust, in idem and Michael Berkowitz eds., We Are Here : New Approaches to Jewish Displaced Persons in Postwar Germany (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 2010), 98-135. November 22-23, 2017 Thanksgiving No Class November 27, 2017 Bundism and Human Rights David Slucki James Loeffler Bundists and minority rights after the Holocaust, East European Jewish Affairs 43,3 (2013) 282-296. The particularist pursuit of American universalism: The American Jewish Committee s 1944 Declaration on Human Rights, in: Journal of Contemporary History 50,2 (2015), 274-295. 10. RECKONING WITH GOD: JEWISH RELIGIOUS RESPONSES TO THE HOLOCAUST November 30, 2017 Margarete Feinstein Holocaust Survivors in Postwar Germany, 202-220. 11. REASSESSING JEWISH RESPONSES AND THEIR SIGNIFICANCE December 4, 2017 Annette Wieviorka The 1961 Eichmann Trial and After The Era of the Witness, translated by Jared Stark (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2006), 56-144. December 6, 2017 Hasia Diner Construing the Myth of Silence Origins and Meanings of the Myth of Silence, in After the Holocaust: Challenging the Myth of Silence, 192-201. 10

Eric J. Sundquist December 7, 2017 Silence Reconsidered, in After the Holocaust: Challenging the Myth of Silence, 202-216.. Summary and Preparation for Final Exam 11