Surviving undetected: the "Bund," rescue and memory in Germany
TitreSurviving undetected: the "Bund," rescue and memory in Germany
Auteur
Call number364.151/0027
N° d'objet08463ab
Lieu de publicationNew York, New York, United States
EditeurColumbia University Press
Année de publication
2011
Paginationpp465-479
MatérielArticle
SérieThe CERI comparative politics and international studies series
ISBN9780231701723
NotesArticle from the book'Resisting genocide: the multiple forms of rescue' pp465-479
Description
Roseman analyzes the long history of the Bund, a socialist reform group established in the city of Essen that saved several Jews from death. The Bund did not describe itself as a religious organisation, but a bit like a religious sect with its own codes and rituals in the service of social change. It took many decades before the group obtained public recognition and almost 60 years before its members were honoured by Yad Vashem