Pioneers and Partisans: An Oral History of Nazi Genocide in Belorussia

Pioneers and Partisans: An Oral History of Nazi Genocide in Belorussia

by Anika Walke
Pioneers and Partisans: An Oral History of Nazi Genocide in Belorussia

Pioneers and Partisans: An Oral History of Nazi Genocide in Belorussia

by Anika Walke

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Overview

The Nazi regime and local collaborators killed 800,000 Belorussian Jews, many of them parents or relatives of young Jews who survived the war. Thousands of young girls and boys were thus orphaned and struggled for survival on their own. This book is the first systematic account of young Soviet Jews' lives under conditions of Nazi occupation and genocide. These orphans' experiences and memories are rooted in the 1930s, when Soviet policies promoted and sometimes actually created interethnic solidarity and social equality. This experience of interethnic solidarity provided a powerful framework for the ways in which young Jews survived and, several decades after the war, represented their experience of violence and displacement. Through oral histories with several survivors, video testimonies, and memoirs, Anika Walke reveals the crucial roles of age and gender in the ways young Jews survived and remembered the Nazi genocide, and shows how shared experiences of trauma facilitated community building within and beyond national groups. Pioneers and Partisans uncovers the repeated transformations of identity that Soviet Jewish children and adolescents experienced, from Soviet citizens in the prewar years, to a target of genocidal violence during the war, to a barely accepted national minority in the postwar Soviet Union.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780190463588
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 08/13/2015
Series: Oxford Oral History Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Anika Walke is an Assistant Professor in the Department of History at Washington University in St. Louis.

Table of Contents

Preface Note on transliteration Maps Introduction Chapter 1: On Methodology: Oral History and the Nazi Genocide Chapter 2: Between Tradition and Transformation: Soviet Jews in the 1930s Chapter 3: The End of Childhood: Young Soviet Jews in the Minsk Ghetto Chapter 4: Suffering and Survival: The Destruction of Jewish Communities in Eastern Belorussia Chapter 5: Fighting for Life and Victory: Refugees from the Ghettos and the Soviet Partisan Movement Chapter 6: Of Refuge and Resistance: Labor for Survival in the "Zorin Family Unit" Conclusion: Soviet Internationalism, Judaism, and the Nazi Genocide in Oral Histories Sources
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