Why didn't they mow us down right away? The death march experience in survivor's testimonies and memoirs
TítuloWhy didn't they mow us down right away? The death march experience in survivor's testimonies and memoirs
Autor
Call number940.5318/0436
Número del objeto09083h
Lugar de publicaciónNew York, New York, United States
EditorialBerghahn
Año de publicación
2014
Paginaciónpp152-169
MaterialArticle
SerieMaking sense of history ; Volume 19
ISBN9781782384410
NotesArticle from the book 'Jewish histories of the Holocaust : new transnational approaches' pp152-169
Descripción
The author's account of the death marches in 1945 show the value of postwar testimony, without which we would know little to nothing of these episodes, which altogether comprise the final phase of the Holocaust itself. Blatman discusses what evacuated Jews themselves understood, namely, the marches meant an end to the terrible, but at least knowable routines of Auschwitz.