Faith and Doubt of Holocaust Survivors

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A01=Reeve Robert Brenner
Author_Reeve Robert Brenner
Category=GTM
Character Refinement
Chosen People
Concentration Camp Experience
Concentration Camp Survivors
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eq_isMigrated=2
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European Jewish Communities
faith reconstruction
Genuine Atheist
Holocaust Experiences
Holocaust survivor religious transformation
Holocaust Survivors
Holocaust Years
Impersonal God
Israeli Holocaust Survivor
Jewish theology
Judaism's Truth
Judaism’s Truth
Michiko Kakutani
National Building
Nonobservant Jew
Observant Jews
Observant Survivor
post-Holocaust World
postwar trauma studies
Rabbi Soloveitchik
Rabbinic Authorities
Reeve Robert Brenner
Religious Behavior
religious identity crisis
Religious Observances
Survivor Population
survivor psychology
theological responses to genocide
Yad Vashem
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781412852975
  • Weight: 408g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jan 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The Faith and Doubt of Holocaust Survivors reveals the victims' frank and thought-provoking answers to searching questions about their experiences: Was the Holocaust God's will? Was there any meaning or purpose in the Holocaust? Was Israel worth the price six million had to pay? Did the experience in the death camps bring about an avowal of faith? A denial of God? A reaffirmation of religious belief? Did the Holocaust change beliefs about the coming of the Messiah, the Torah, the Jews as the chosen people, and the nature of God?

Drawing on the responses of seven hundred survivors, Reeve Robert Brenner reveals the changes, rejections, reaffirmations, doubts, and despairs that have so profoundly affected the faith, practices, ideas, and attitudes of survivors, and, by extension, the entire Jewish people.

Many survivors carried their deepest secrets and innermost beliefs silently, from internment to interment. But Brenner's quest provided the impetus for many survivors to end their silence about the past and come forth with their feelings. In poignant vignettes scattered throughout the book, their answers to these profound questions are offered, disclosing ardent, overpowering passions and sensibilities.

Reeve Robert Brenner is the tenured rabbi of the Bethesda Jewish congregation and has taught in universities, including St. Vincent's College, where he was its first rabbi. Brenner's American Jewry and the Rise of Nazism received a YIVO Jewish Scholarship Prize.

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