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Hardcover The MacMillan Atlas of the Holocaust Book

ISBN: 0025433806

ISBN13: 9780025433809

The MacMillan Atlas of the Holocaust

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Book Overview

The graphic history of the Nazi attempt to destroy the Jews of Europe during the Second World War is illustrated in this series of 333 detailed maps. The maps, and the text and photographs that... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Well-researched Work That Leaves You Heavy-hearted

With the horrors of the Holocaust so well documented in words, film-footage and pictures, it is hard to believe that a book of maps could hit so hard and add so much more depth to the tragedy ... I was simply astounded by this book. First and formost, the impressive research that Martin Gilbert put forth in creating this incredible work must be acknowledged. I purchased this book based on a suggestion from my history-teaching wife, who once possessed a copy, loaned it out and never got it back. She simply stated that the book was one of the most significant books she possessed on the Holocaust ... I immediately ordered it. An initial thumbing of the pages had me wondering what a book of maps could reveal that I already didn't know, so i started from the beginning and could not put the book down until I had reached the end. "Atlas of the Holocaust" is basically a book of maps that illustrate the intricate details of the transportation, deportation and extermination of Jews within the reaches of the Nazi empire. From the end of World War I all the way to the end of World War II. Each map traces the route of people extracted from their homes to final destinations. Whether those destinations were Auschwitz, Dachau or an unmarked ditch. Gilbert appears to leave no stone unturned as even the journey of the smallest bands of people from remote villages in Yugoslavia or Greece are documented. The details of the maps include the random executions, the forced "death marches" to various camps, as well as the sites of uprisings against the Nazis, even listing the names of those leading the revolts. The author has carefully inserted special inset maps that serve to "zoom in" on particular locations to detail individuals, such as the names and ages of particular groups of children or elderly. These special inset maps illustrate the depressing scope of the Holocaust more than anything. What is most evident, though, is the magnitude of the Nazi plan to eradicate the Jews of Europe as well as the extraordinary and extensive effort made to thoroughly carry out the plan. When even the most remote villages are shown being cleared of Jewish inhabitants, it leaves you wondering if there was ANY place in German-occupied Europe that was safe from detection. Martin Gilbert opens up a wound that history has cleanly sealed shut with the oft-referred, horrifying simple statement: "six-million Jews". The book breaks down that figure into the multitude of smaller tragedies that comprise that six-million figure ... i have yet to see any other work that has effectively presented the Holocaust in such a manner.

Well-researched Work That Leaves You Heavy-hearted

With the horrors of the Holocaust so well documented in words, film-footage and pictures, it is hard to believe that a book of maps could hit so hard and add so much more depth to the tragedy ... I was simply astounded by this book. First and foremost, the impressive research that Martin Gilbert put forth in creating this incredible work must be acknowledged. I purchased this book based on a suggestion from my history-teaching wife, who once possessed a copy, loaned it out and never got it back. She simply stated that the book was one of the most significant books she possessed on the Holocaust ... I immediately ordered it. An initial thumbing of the pages had me wondering what a book of maps could reveal that I already didn't know, so i started from the beginning and could not put the book down until I had reached the end. "Atlas of the Holocaust" is basically a book of maps that illustrate the intricate details of the transportation, deportation and extermination of Jews within the reaches of the Nazi empire. From the end of World War I all the way to the end of World War II. Each map traces the route of people extracted from their homes to final destinations. Whether those destinations were Auschwitz, Dachau or an unmarked ditch. Gilbert appears to leave no stone unturned as even the journey of the smallest bands of people from remote villages in Yugoslavia or Greece are documented. The details of the maps include the random executions, the forced "death marches" to various camps, as well as the sites of uprisings against the Nazis, even listing the names of those leading the revolts. The author has carefully inserted special inset maps that serve to "zoom in" on particular locations to detail individuals, such as the names and ages of particular groups of children or elderly. These special inset maps illustrate the depressing scope of the Holocaust more than anything. What is most evident, though, is the magnitude of the Nazi plan to eradicate the Jews of Europe as well as the extraordinary and extensive effort made to thoroughly carry out the plan. When even the most remote villages are shown being cleared of Jewish inhabitants, it leaves you wondering if there was ANY place in German-occupied Europe that was safe from detection. Martin Gilbert opens up a wound that history has cleanly sealed shut with the oft-referred, horrifying simple statement: "six-million Jews". The book breaks down that figure into the multitude of smaller tragedies that comprise that six-million figure ... i have yet to see any other work that has effectively presented the Holocaust in such a manner.

Tracing the murder of 6 million through maps

Martin Gilbert is possibly the most prolific historian on the history of the holocaust. In this volume gilbert has compiled 316 maps, together with a commentary t o illustrate the scope of the horror that took place between 1941 and 1945. He begins by tracing the history of anti-Semitic violence in Europe, with maps and history of anti-Jewish violence before the First World War, and anti-Jewish violence in Europe between 1918 and 1932. One fascinating map details the two thousand year history of Jewish life in Europe by 1933, explaining how long Jews had lived in each country in Europe covered. Gilbert painstakingly covers each region of Europe and North Africa, where Jews were targeted, interend and murdered. He details the greater massacres and the lesser known killings. He also outlines the countries to which German Jewish refugees were recieved. From Germany between 1933 and 1938, 500 000 Jews emigrated or fled abroad, including more than 33 000 to the then 'Palestine', where they joined tens of thousands of recent Jewish immigrants from Poland. After the war, 200 000 survivors of the camps emigrated to "Palestine". Hence descendants of refugees from Nazism and holocaust survivors make up a substantial part of Israel's population today. Gilbert does not spare the horror when he describes the random killing and anti-Jewish pogroms, the anti-Jewish measures taken in different countries, the forcing of Jews into ghettos, the deliberate starvation of Jews in these ghettos, the deportations and death camps, the slave labout systems and the mass killings. This is a very comprehensive digest, and although there were so many whose names have not been recorded, Gilbert does record the names, ages and places of birth of some holocaust victims whose cases he examines. He also details lesser known locations of the Nazi persecution, such as the fate of Jews in Morocco, LIbya and Tunisia under Nazi/Axis occupation during this period. Ever period is intensely covered, as is every geographic region where Jews suffered and died. Several maps detail the cases of some of the children deported to from various places in Europe, and from various countries, such as maps showing the names, ages and places from which several children were deported from France. We wonder about the lives and cruel deaths of the precious children whose ages and names we see, but whom we know little else about. The atlas is supplemented about 40 , sometimes very graphic photographs, and two important maps are placed at the end of the book estimated how many Jews from each country were murdered during the holocaust, and how many Jews returned to their countries of birth after the war. Always keeping the human touch and concern for each individual victim and survivor, Gilbert provides the stories of three of several children who survived and were taken to the children's home at Ulm: Idel Levitan, Renja Fraum and Zlata Tauber-with their photographs. Gilbert succeeds as always with combini

More knowledge about History's greatest Evil

One of the way the human mind learns is through ordering complex realities into diagrams and pictures and illustrations and maps. These somehow give us a sense of really comprehending what we understand only vaguely. So these maps which tell the story of the Holocaust , from the time of initial German violence against the Jews through the time of the destruction itself, and then for the remainder, the aftermath. In collecting this material Martin Gilbert one of the great modern historians , and one of the major historians of the Holocaust provides the reader with still more information, more means for knowing about, if not completely understanding, what is arguably the greatest act of collective Evil in human history.

Very informative

To read this book is a mitzvah. I showed this book to a survivor whos village no longer exists. She started to cry when her village was mentioned and she said "someone does remember us". This was very touching and I think that all survivors should know that there are many who still remember. The thing that I felt that was lacking, is that there was very little detail of when of Jews of Italy and Greece were deported to the camps.
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