Contested memory: a story of a 'kapo' in Auschwitz - history, memory and politics
TitleContested memory: a story of a 'kapo' in Auschwitz - history, memory and politics
Author
Call number940.5318/0436
Object number09083m
Place of publicationNew York, New York, United States
PublisherBerghahn
Year of publication
2014
Physical descriptionpp241-249
MaterialArticle
Series titleMaking sense of history ; Volume 19
ISBN9781782384410
NotesArticle from the book 'Jewish histories of the Holocaust : new transnational approaches' pp241-249
Description
This essay confronts the controversial life and death of Eliezer Gruenbaum, a Jewish-communist turned Auschwitz kapo, whose father, Yitzak Gruenbaum, was a leading Zionist and Israeli minister. The 1948 killing of Eliezer during Israel's War of Independence, probably by Israeli forces was based on the assumption of early survivor memory whereby the grey zones simply did not exist. The effort of the father to rehabilitate the son, even posthumously, revealed the fissures in Jewish society that reached back to the prewar period.