Polish government-in-exile: national unity and weakness
TitelThe Polish government-in-exile: national unity and weakness
Verfasser
Call numberS940.5318/005
Inventarnummer05556hc
ErscheinungsortLondon, England
VerlagVallentine Mitchell
Erscheinungsjahr
2012
Formatpp95-118
MaterialArtikel
NotesArticle from the journal 'Holocaust Studies: a journal of culture and history' Vol.18 No.2-3 Autumn/Winter 2012 pp95-118
Article in the book 'Governments -in-exile and the Jews during the Second World War' pp151-174
Article in the book 'Governments -in-exile and the Jews during the Second World War' pp151-174
Beschreibung
The Polish government-in-exile was the legal representative of the largest group of Holocaust victims and of the land where most of the ghettoisation and killing took place. Its policies towards the Jews resulted from a combination of factors. It was unprepared for the horror of the Holocaust, as were all Allied governments, and its responses were either ineffective or reluctant and delayed