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Yehuda Bauer (1926–2024)

Author of A History of the Holocaust

38+ Works 911 Members 5 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Yehuda Bauer is the former director of the International Institute for Holocaust Research, Yad Vashem, Jerusalem, and now serves as its academic advisor

Includes the names: yehuda bauer, Yehûdā Bauer

Image credit: Yehuda Bauer

Works by Yehuda Bauer

A History of the Holocaust (1982) 287 copies
Rethinking the Holocaust (2001) 187 copies, 3 reviews
The Death of the Shtetl (2010) 32 copies
Flight and rescue: Brichah (1970) 29 copies, 1 review
Present-Day Antisemitism (1988) 4 copies

Associated Works

Women in the Holocaust (1998) — Contributor — 81 copies, 1 review
Die Yad Vashem Enzyklopädie der Ghettos während des Holocaust (2014) — Foreword, some editions — 9 copies
Tunnel of Hope: Escape from the Novogrudok Forced Labor Camp (2024) — Foreword, some editions — 3 copies

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Members

Reviews

History of organized escape of 300,000 survivors of the Holocaust between 1944 to 1948
 
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Folkshul | Jan 15, 2011 |
The title of this latest contribution from Bauer is slightly misleading; as valuable as it is, the volume is not really a rethinking of the Holocaust but rather a revisiting of the major problems and interpretations in Holocaust studies. Bauer, director of the International Institute for Holocaust Research at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem, begins with a short discussion of what exactly historians do. He quite rightly departs from standard practice when he asks such moral and "what if" questions as what could have been done? and what should have been done? Contrary to what he calls Elie Wiesel's "mystification" of the Holocaust, he insists that the catastrophe was a human invention and therefore historically and "rationally" explicable. Separate chapters deal with Jewish armed and unarmed resistance, and with rescue attempts--he examines, for instance, the case of Gisi Fleischmann, a Zionist leader who worked to get as many Jews out of Slovakia as possible, which Bauer uses to discuss issues of gender, arguing that women did not fight for the status of women separately but for collective and individual survival and for honor. Most fascinating for non-Jewish readers are the chapter on Jewish theological attempts to explain the Holocaust and Bauer's valuable synthesis and reexamination of some of the major interpretations of the Holocaust. Bauer ends by looking at how the Holocaust is related to the creation of the state of Israel in 1948 (he rejects, for instance, the notion that "a guilt complex" on the part of Western countries led them to vote for partition of British Palestine). (Jan.)Forecast: This book will become a staple of Holocaust literature and should enjoy a long, if quiet, life in print.

Paul Breines, Washington Post Book World
"Bauer's book . . . reaches beyond issues of rescue, offering a strong introduction to many of the analytic debates on Nazi genocide."

One of the world's premier historians of the Holocaust evaluates accepted views of its history and meaning in this thoughtful book. Yehuda Bauer offers his own interpretation of why the Holocaust occurred and how another could be prevented. He offers fresh opinions on topics ranging from how Jews reacted to the murder campaign against them to the relationship between the Holocaust and the establishment of Israel.
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1 vote
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antimuzak | 2 other reviews | Oct 18, 2005 |

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Statistics

Works
38
Also by
3
Members
911
Popularity
#28,149
Rating
3.9
Reviews
5
ISBNs
60
Languages
6
Favorited
1

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