Victims as perpetrators: German Zionism and collaboration in recent historical controversy
TitoloVictims as perpetrators: German Zionism and collaboration in recent historical controversy
Call number940.5318/0149
Numero oggetto05247CN
Luogo di pubblicazioneOxford, England
EditorePergamon Press
Anno di pubblicazione
1989
PaginazioneVol.2 pp2134-2148
MaterialeArticle
ISBN80367542
NotesPapers from "Remembering for the Future:papers and addenda" pp2134-2148
Descrizione
The German Zionist movement changed radically following the Nazis' assumption of power in January 1933. Throughout the Weimar Republic (1918-1933), the movement exploited German anti-Semitism as a means for persuading German Jews to emigrate to Palestine. At this time Jews could be simultaneously Jews, Zionists and loyal Germans, a condition no longer possible under the Nazis. Initially, German Zionists sought to achieve a rapprochement with the Nazis based on their common desire to have Jews emigrate. And in fact 50,000 German Jews did emigrate to Palestine during the 1930s.