Kapitel
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Note on Translations, Transliterations, and Place Names vii
- Foreword viii
- Introduction xvii
-
Part One—History
- 1 Who, When, and Why? Escaping German Occupation in 1939 versus 1941 2
- 2 Children in Exile: Wartime Journeys of Polish Jewish Youth 30
- 3 Together and Apart: Poles and Polish Jews in the War-Torn Soviet Union 57
- 4 “I’m rushing with millions of others to the battlefield”—Jewish Soldiers in the Polish Army in the Soviet Union, 1943–1946 70
- 5 Repatriation of Polish Catholics and Jews from Distant Parts of the Soviet Union in Polish-Soviet Relations (1944–1947) 110
- 6 Polish Citizenship as a Way to Freedom: How Soviet Jews Escaped the USSR Using Polish Documents 130
- 7 “The Deepest Self Denies the Face”: Polish Jewish Intellectuals and the Birth of the “Soviet Marrano” 143
- 8 Hersh Smolar: A Polish Personage in the Soviet Jewish Cultural Scene, 1940s–1960s 175
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Part Two—Memory
- 9 Contested Memories: Soviet and Polish Jewish Refugees and Evacuees Recount Their Experience on the Soviet Home Front 200
- 10 Neither “Victims” nor “Survivors”: Polish Jews Reflect on Their Wartime Experiences in the Soviet Union During the Second World War 214
- 11 A Matzeva Amid Crosses: Jewish Exiles in the Polish Memory of Siberia 236
- 12 Before, During, and After: The Objects and Archival Material in the POLIN Museum 261
- EPILOGUE 279
- Selected Bibliography 290
- Acknowledgements 305
- Note on Contributors 307
- Index of Places 311
- Index of Names 315
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Note on Translations, Transliterations, and Place Names vii
- Foreword viii
- Introduction xvii
-
Part One—History
- 1 Who, When, and Why? Escaping German Occupation in 1939 versus 1941 2
- 2 Children in Exile: Wartime Journeys of Polish Jewish Youth 30
- 3 Together and Apart: Poles and Polish Jews in the War-Torn Soviet Union 57
- 4 “I’m rushing with millions of others to the battlefield”—Jewish Soldiers in the Polish Army in the Soviet Union, 1943–1946 70
- 5 Repatriation of Polish Catholics and Jews from Distant Parts of the Soviet Union in Polish-Soviet Relations (1944–1947) 110
- 6 Polish Citizenship as a Way to Freedom: How Soviet Jews Escaped the USSR Using Polish Documents 130
- 7 “The Deepest Self Denies the Face”: Polish Jewish Intellectuals and the Birth of the “Soviet Marrano” 143
- 8 Hersh Smolar: A Polish Personage in the Soviet Jewish Cultural Scene, 1940s–1960s 175
-
Part Two—Memory
- 9 Contested Memories: Soviet and Polish Jewish Refugees and Evacuees Recount Their Experience on the Soviet Home Front 200
- 10 Neither “Victims” nor “Survivors”: Polish Jews Reflect on Their Wartime Experiences in the Soviet Union During the Second World War 214
- 11 A Matzeva Amid Crosses: Jewish Exiles in the Polish Memory of Siberia 236
- 12 Before, During, and After: The Objects and Archival Material in the POLIN Museum 261
- EPILOGUE 279
- Selected Bibliography 290
- Acknowledgements 305
- Note on Contributors 307
- Index of Places 311
- Index of Names 315