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Between Community and Collaboration
'Jewish Councils' in Western Europe under Nazi Occupation
A comparative study of the organisations forced upon the Jewish communities in the Netherlands, Belgium and France during Nazi rule.
Laurien Vastenhout (Author)
9781316511688, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 22 September 2022
280 pages
23.5 x 16 x 2.2 cm, 0.61 kg
'Laurien Vastenhout has written the first major comparative study of the 'Jewish Councils' of Nazi-occupied Western Europe. Deeply researched and nuanced in its judgements of the councils' room for manoeuvre, Between Community and Collaboration is a significant contribution to scholarship which helps us understand the Holocaust as such.' Dan Stone, Royal Holloway, University of London
The first comprehensive, comparative study of the 'Jewish Councils' in the Netherlands, Belgium and France during Nazi rule. In the postwar period, there was extensive focus on these organisations' controversial role as facilitators of the Holocaust. They were seen as instruments of Nazi oppression, aiding the process of isolating and deporting the Jews they were ostensibly representing. As a result, they have chiefly been remembered as forms of collaboration. Using a wide range of sources including personal testimonies, diaries, administrative documents and trial records, Laurien Vastenhout demonstrates that the nature of the Nazi regime, and its outlook on these bodies, was far more complex. She sets the conduct of the Councils' leaders in their prewar and wartime social and situational contexts and provides a thorough understanding of their personal contacts with the Germans and clandestine organisations. Between Community and Collaboration reveals what German intentions with these organisations were during the course of the occupation, and allows for a deeper understanding of the different ways in which the Holocaust unfolded in each of these countries.
Preface
Introduction
1. Disrupted communities? Jewish leadership and communal representation until 1941
2. Institutional rivalry and improvisation: The establishment of 'Jewish Councils' in 1941
3. Continuation or discontinuation? The nature of the Councils' leadership, 1941–1944
4. Optimism and frustration: German perspectives
5. Between legality and illegality: Cloaking and resistance
Epilogue.
Subject Areas: European history [HBJD]