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Chinese responses to the Holocaust: Chinese attitudes toward Jewish refugees in the late 1930s and early 1940s
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Xu Xin
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations vii
- Preface ix
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Introduction
- How Many Shanghai Jews Were There? 3
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Shanghai before the War
- Shanghai Remembered: Recollections of Shanghai’s Baghdadi Jews 29
- The Burak Family: The Migration of a Russian Jewish Family Through the First Half of the Twentieth Century 73
- Russian Jews in Shanghai 1920–1950: New Life as Shanghailanders 85
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Shanghai and the Holocaust
- Desperate Hopes, Shattered Dreams: The 1937 Shanghai–Manila Voyage of the “Gneisenau” and the Fate of European Jewry 99
- Diplomatic Rescue: Shanghai as a Means of Escape and Refuge 116
- 305/13 Kungping Road 127
- Survival in Shanghai 1939–1947 137
- What I Learned from Shanghai Refugees 143
- Chinese responses to the Holocaust: Chinese attitudes toward Jewish refugees in the late 1930s and early 1940s 158
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Looking Back at Shanghai
- Imagined Geographies, Imagined Identities, Imagined Glocal Histories 179
- Ephemeral Memories, Eternal Traumas and Evolving Classifications: Shanghai Jewish Refugees and Debates about Defining a Holocaust Survivor 203
- Bibliography 232
- Index 236
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations vii
- Preface ix
-
Introduction
- How Many Shanghai Jews Were There? 3
-
Shanghai before the War
- Shanghai Remembered: Recollections of Shanghai’s Baghdadi Jews 29
- The Burak Family: The Migration of a Russian Jewish Family Through the First Half of the Twentieth Century 73
- Russian Jews in Shanghai 1920–1950: New Life as Shanghailanders 85
-
Shanghai and the Holocaust
- Desperate Hopes, Shattered Dreams: The 1937 Shanghai–Manila Voyage of the “Gneisenau” and the Fate of European Jewry 99
- Diplomatic Rescue: Shanghai as a Means of Escape and Refuge 116
- 305/13 Kungping Road 127
- Survival in Shanghai 1939–1947 137
- What I Learned from Shanghai Refugees 143
- Chinese responses to the Holocaust: Chinese attitudes toward Jewish refugees in the late 1930s and early 1940s 158
-
Looking Back at Shanghai
- Imagined Geographies, Imagined Identities, Imagined Glocal Histories 179
- Ephemeral Memories, Eternal Traumas and Evolving Classifications: Shanghai Jewish Refugees and Debates about Defining a Holocaust Survivor 203
- Bibliography 232
- Index 236