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Nazi Laws and Jewish Lives
11th Decree
A01=Edith Kurzweil
anti-Jewish Decrees
antisemitism history
Author_Edith Kurzweil
Category=JBSR
Category=NHD
Category=NHTZ1
Category=NHWL
Category=NHWR7
Country's Jewish Population
Country’s Jewish Population
Darn Stockings
Dearest Children
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Final Solution
Frau Doktor
Grandmother's Letter
Grandmother’s Letter
Holocaust primary sources
Holocaust studies
Home Work
Honey Cake
impact of Nazi decrees on daily life
Jewish Assets
Jewish Cultural Associations
Jewish Cultural Organizations
Jewish family correspondence
Jewish Star
Mother's Youngest Brother
Mother’s Youngest Brother
Nazi legal restrictions
Public Transportation
Reichs Chamber
Reichs Citizen Law
Send Food Packages
Ship Tickets
Unoccupied France
Upcoming Birthday
Viennese Jews
Washington Irving High School
World War II Austria
Product details
- ISBN 9780765802460
- Weight: 294g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 31 May 2004
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
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Although the period leading up to the Nazi genocide of Europe's Jews has been well recorded, few sources convey the incremental effect of specific decrees aimed to dehumanize the Jews who were caught in Hitler's net, and how their everyday lives were transformed. These letters, written by Malvina Fischer to her daughter Mimi Weisz, have been translated and edited by her granddaughter Edith Kurzweil. They convey with vivid immediacy the fears and premonitions, the ghettoization and escape attempts that were the common experience of Viennese and German Jews in the years preceding the implementation of the "Final Solution."In the first section of the volume, Kurzweil establishes the personal and political contexts of the letters (written between April 6, 1940 and December 1941, when Malvina Fischer and her family were deported) and links them to the then emerging "Jewish laws." The second section contains the letters themselves and documents the throttling grip in which the authorities held every Viennese Jew who had not managed to escape. The third section consists of translations of official summaries of the relevant laws, ordinances, and edicts--many of them marked "secret"--which inexorably determined that Kurzweil's family become part of the "final solution." From these letters and documents we become aware, also, of the profusion of legal entities dealing with Jews, the rivalries among them, and the free-floating dimensions of victims' fear and dread.Because the letters are full of allusions rather than straightforward information, and characterized by self-censorship, Edith Kurzweil has annotated them and inserted the relevant numbers of the specific laws as these were being applied.
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