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Hardcover Jews for Sale?: Nazi-Jewish Negotiations, 1933-1945 Book

ISBN: 0300059132

ISBN13: 9780300059137

Jews for Sale?: Nazi-Jewish Negotiations, 1933-1945

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

The world has recently learned of Oskar Schindler's efforts to save the lives of Jewish workers in his factory in Poland by bribing Nazi officials. Not as well known, however, are many other equally... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Europe Germany History World

Customer Reviews

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The best book on this sensitive subject

There are several books on the negotiations the Nazis forced the Jewish people into. This racket for hypothetic survival had to be analyzed through time and this is what the author does to perfection.The progressive superposition of the Nazi emigration policy and their attempt to replace, in the secret negotiations with the allies for a separate peace with the west, Hitler's head by the Jewish lives they were cynically harvesting is clearly shown here. As a Christian reviewer, I think that the author has duly treated with dignity the debate over Kasztner's negotiations and money aspects in Jewish survival matters. It was taking crazy politics of post-war periods to blame the ones who had saved whoever they could by every means they could find.How can someone blame another human beings for having first taken care of his foes and family. The father of the reviewer resisted the anti-semitic nazi madness in France and for that shared for several years the Jewish fate in Buchenwald, Flossenburg and Mauthausen. It was an "unnecessary experience" (to quote an Auschwitz survivor) but as Yeshuda Bauer rightfully states in his final words: these people should not be juged by their success or failure in resisting criminal authorities, but by the answer to a basic moral question: did they try? And try they did.People dying in the concentration camps begged survivors letting them sware they would withness their suffering to the world: some of their voices have joined in Yeshuda Bauer's lines. The testimony should be read, and the respect for the victim extended to the author who testified for them.
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