Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
38. Repudiating the Teaching of Contempt for Jews and Ending a Catholic Mission to Convert Jews: Nostra Aetate and the Jubilee Statement on Conversion
-
Noam E. Marans
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter xi
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments xv
- Preface: Blessing an Illustrious Student: The Scholarship of Michael Berenbaum xviii
- Foreword: Giving Thanks for an Amazing Colleague: Michael Berenbaum as an Educator, Museum Builder, and Filmmaker xix
- Introduction: Creating a Multi-Focused Festschrift: Michael Berenbaum as a Multi-Talented Bridge-Builder xxii
-
Part One: Expressing Deep Thanks: Personal Tributes from Old Friends
- 1. Expanding Horizons of Jewish Thought and Modeling Integrity: The Lifelong Impact of a Campus Rabbi on a College Freshman 1
- 2. Grasping and Expressing Foundational Insights: An Anchor and a Pillar in Holocaust Studies 3
- 3. Creating Living Memorials after the Catastrophe: Michael Berenbaum’s Contribution to Holocaust Education 5
- 4. Befriending Our Family, Loving Books, and Building Museums: A Capacious Mind and a Generous Soul 8
- 5. Learning Most from One’s Students: The Highest Standard of Teaching Excellence 10
- 6. Learning from a Patient Teacher: My Steady Friend Michael Berenbaum 12
- 7. Teaching Teachers of the Shoah: The Recurring Impact of a Mentor and Friend 13
- 8. Opening Doors of Opportunity for Other Filmmakers: A Better Understanding of Hollywood 18
-
Part Two: Searching for Meaning in Ancient Texts: Biblical, Talmudic, and Midrashic Narratives and Theology
- 9. Wrestling with God and Contending with Fire: Jacob at the Jabbok and Moses at the Burning Bush 21
- 10. Harvesting the Berry Tree: A Midrash for Michael Berenbaum (on Pirke Rabbi Eliezer 30–31) 26
- 11. Marking Jewish Identity in a Famous Memoir: Page One of Elie Wiesel’s Night 30
- 12. Seeing through the Prism of the Shoah: Biblical, Talmudic, and Hasidic Characters of Elie Wiesel 35
- 13. Honoring Father and Mother: An Impossible Possibility? 41
- 14. Searching for Wisdom: Ethical Guidance in Proverbs, Psalms, Prophets, and Midrash 46
- 15. Probing Deeply for Common Ground: Jewish Scholarship on Jesus the Jew 51
- 16. Transforming a Symbol: The Scandal of the Cross 55
- 17. Rereading “His Blood Be Upon Us”: The Blessing of the Blood of Life in Matthew’s Gospel 61
- 18. Arranging Readings in the Lectionary: The Problem of “Troublesome Readings” in the Liturgy 66
-
Part Three: Rebuilding a Culture after a Catastrophe: Rabbinic Thought and Action
- 19. Restoring Credibility and Revelation in a World Still Full of Atrocities: Religion, Ethics, and Culture after the Shoah 73
- 20. Rethinking Theology after the Shoah: God as a Universal Force of Transformation and Healing 82
- 21. Understanding Jewish Law: Fundamental Purposes, Modern Approaches to Its Observance, and Three Psalms in Its Praise 87
- 22. Acting Justly and Pursuing Peace: The Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism 94
- 23. Agonizing and Preaching Boldly in the Pulpit: Rabbi Isaac Herzog in Dublin and Jerusalem 101
- 24. Discerning a Role for God’s Law and Popular Governance: Rabbi Hayyim David Halevi on the State of Israel and Democracy 108
- 25. Searching Our Souls and Confessing Our Sins: Small and Large Confessions for Yom Kippur 112
-
Part Four: Promoting Growth in Understanding: Jewish Commitment to Education
- 26. Building Edifices of Jewish Knowledge: Michael Berenbaum and the Third Encyclopaedia Judaica 133
- 27. Introducing College Students to Jewish Customs and Beliefs: The Importance of Jewish Studies Programs 149
- 28. Searching for Holocaust Insights: Museums as Living Memorials and Dual Narratives in Holocaust Education 155
- 29. Trusting and Contending in Jewish Education: Curricular Integration and Interaction 161
- 30. Sustaining Jewish Commitment to Education as a Central Value: Holocaust Education and Museum Building 169
- 31. Celebrating Freedom in the Cradle of Liberty: The National Museum of American Jewish History 173
- 32. Illuminating Inclusive Freedom and Equipping Modern Abolitionists: The National Underground Railroad Freedom Center 179
- 33. Helping Teachers to Teach and Students to Learn: Facing History and Ourselves 192
-
Part Five: Reconnecting Abrahamic Collegiality and Building Beautiful Bridges: Interreligious Encounters
- 34. Abandoning Ancient Enmity and Seeking Covenantal Partnership: The Relationship between Judaism and Christianity 197
- 35. Learning through Dialogue: The Work of the ICCJ from Seelisberg to the Present 212
- 36. Replacing the Teaching of Contempt for Jews: Jules Isaac and Historical Truths about Jesus and the Jewish People of His Time 220
- 37. Repenting for Sins against Jews and Harvesting Fruits of Mutual Respect: International Dialogue between Jews and Catholics after Vatican II 231
- 38. Repudiating the Teaching of Contempt for Jews and Ending a Catholic Mission to Convert Jews: Nostra Aetate and the Jubilee Statement on Conversion 240
- 39. Sustaining a Quiet Revolution: Popes and Jews since the Shoah 249
- 40. Confronting Racial Antisemitism and Rejecting Contempt for Jews: Reform of Catholic Preaching and Teaching about Jews 256
- 41. Establishing an Enduring Friendship: Rabbi Marc Tanenbaum and Cardinal Johannes Willebrands 262
- 42. Doing the Will of Our Father in Heaven: Orthodox Jewish Statements on Jewish-Christian Relations 269
- 43. Rereading Dabru Emet and Its Successors: Jewish Statements on Christians and Christianity 275
- 44. Gathering the Fruits of a Half-Century of Reflection on the Shoah: The Annual Scholars’ Conference on the Holocaust and the Churches 282
- 45. Attending to Complicity, Identity, and the Integrity of “And”: The Annual Scholars’ Conference on the Holocaust and the Churches 290
- 46. Repairing a Damaged Relationship: A Half-Century of Jewish-Lutheran Dialogue 294
- 47. Rethinking the Current Goal of Jewish-Christian Relations: Reconsideration Rather Than Reconciliation 303
- 48. Moving beyond “Holy Wars”: Interreligious Dialogue as a Tool for Forging Sustainable Peace 307
- 49. Creating Spiritual Remedies for Our Social Pathologies: Reflections of a Religious Peacebuilder 312
- 50. Rejecting Revenge and Preserving Our Humanity: My Journey from the Parents’ Circle to a Treatise on Peace 317
- 51. Healing a Mother’s Broken Heart: Letters to My Son and the Family of His Assassin 324
- 52. Expanding Dialogue among Jews, Christians, and Muslims: A Step Closer to Human Fraternity, World Peace, and Living Together 329
- 53. Evaluating Jewish-Muslim Relations in the Middle Ages: Golden or Ghastly? 335
- 54. Outing White Supremacy as a Threat to Jews and Muslims: Strategies for Confronting a Common Enemy 340
- 55. Challenging Group Bias: Benefits of Contact and Dialogue among Jews, Christians, and Muslims 343
- 56. Educating Muslims about the Shoah: Memory and Meaning in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam 351
- 57. Knowing a Person by Her Actions to Help Others: The Discovery of the Prophet in His People 357
- 58. Striving for Justice and Protecting Human Life: The Universality of People-Centered Human Rights 360
-
Part Six: Remembering for Our Future: The Shoah
- 59. Seeing within and beyond Shadows: A Memoir of a Personal Journey 381
- 60. Seeing Darkness and Light through a Camera Lens: Judy Glickman Lauder’s Images of the Shoah 395
-
A. Historical and Scientific Research
- 61. Studying the Holocaust: Why It Still Matters 400
- 62. Committing Makeshift Murder: The Disorganized Holocaust 407
- 63. Heeding Warnings from Holocaust History: The Perils of Fake News and Statelessness 413
- 64. Resisting Forced Labor in Warthegau and Galicia: A Tale of Two Cemeteries 418
- 65. Opposing and Protesting: Forgotten Individual Jewish Resistance in Nazi Germany 423
- 66. Meeting Himmler: Norbert Masur’s Negotiation of the Release of Jewish Women from Ravensbrück 429
- 67. Confronting Evil: Ilya Ehrenburg and the Holocaust 435
- 68. Navigating Broad Seas and Difficult Straits: Michael Berenbaum’s Passage from Tikkun Olam to Grey Zones 442
- 69. Honoring the Righteous Among the Nations: Yad Vashem’s Department of the Righteous 446
- 70. Searching for Goodness and Supporting Courage: The Jewish Foundation for the Righteous 452
- 71. Saving Jewish Lives with Schutzpasses and Protected Houses: Rescue of Jews in Budapest by Giorgio Perlasca and Carl Lutz 458
- 72. Honoring Heroic Courage to Care: Lessons to Learn from Raoul Wallenberg 464
- 73. Granting Visas for Life: Courageous and Righteous Diplomats 470
- 74. Confronting a Mixed Record: The Italians and the Holocaust 477
- 75. Heeding Dangers of Holocaust Distortion in Eastern Europe: The Case of Lithuania 483
- 76. Collaborating with Germany in the Final Solution: The Shoah in Bulgarian-Occupied Greece 487
- 77. Remembering an Orphan of Holocaust Studies: The Romaniote Jews of Ioannina 493
- 78. Listening to Sounds from Silence: Healing the Trauma of Child Holocaust Survivors 497
- 79. Hoping that “A Remnant Shall Return”: Survival of “Displaced Persons” 502
- 80. Discovering Memories My Parents Never Spoke Of: Silence, Nachas, and Resilience in the Life of a Second-Generation Survivor 508
- 81. Healing an On-Going Trauma: The Task of the Second Generation 514
- 82. Opening a New Frontier in Holocaust Studies: New Approaches to Geoscience and Archaeology 520
- 83. Finding the Mass Graves of Jews Killed by Bullets: The Work of Yahad—In Unum 528
-
B. Ethical, Philosophical, and Theological Reflections
- 84. Clarifying Shoah Historiography: Jewish Religious and Theological Reflections 534
- 85. Comparing Genocides: An Opportunity to Learn to Care about Humanity 541
- 86. Defining Genocide and Preventing Future Genocides: Never Again for Any Ethnic Group 545
- 87. Holding Important Issues in Tension: Uniqueness, Integration, and Historical Context 550
- 88. Paying Attention to Antisemitism Today: Are Twenty-Nine Million Reasons Enough? 554
- 89. Taking Alarm at American Nazis in a Virginia College Town: Racist and Antisemitic Ideology, Rhetoric, and Symbols at the Charlottesville Rally 557
- 90. Coming to Terms with the Holocaust: Appearances and Truths in Germany 563
-
C. Diplomatic, Legal and Political Issues
- 91. Abandoning Jewish Refugees from Nazi Germany: Evian, Kristallnacht, and the SS St. Louis 569
- 92. Recalling Nuremberg at Seventy-Five: The Greatest Criminal Trial in Modern History 577
- 93. Remembering an Elided Ally: Soviet Contributions to the International Military Tribunal 584
- 94. Looming Larger Than Life: Benjamin Ferencz and the Nuremberg War Crimes Trials 590
- 95. Learning from the Nuremberg Trials: Ongoing Lessons for Our World 599
- 96. Seeking Compensation for Slave and Forced Labor in World War II: A History 602
- 97. Blocking Claims for Restitution of Nazi-Looted Art: Judicial Abandonment of Federal Policy against Wartime Plunder, Federal and State Criminal Law against Receipt of Stolen Property 613
- 98. Finding Hope for Restitution of Nazi-Looted Art?: The Holocaust Expropriated Art Recovery Act of 2016 620
- 99. Digitizing the Nazi Theft of European Jewish Culture: The Jewish Digital Cultural Recovery Project 626
- 100. Probing the Provenance of Nazi-Confiscated Art and Achieving Harmonious Resolution of Conflicts: The Washington Principles and the Terezín Declaration 631
-
D. Memorials and Museums Research Centers and Archives of Survivor Testimony
- 101. Probing What the Holocaust Has to Do with America: The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum 642
- 102. Connecting with the Conscience of Museum Visitors: The Ethical Orientation of the USHMM 650
- 103. Telling the Story, Getting It Right: The Permanent Exhibition of the USHMM and the Claude Lanzmann Shoah Collection 657
- 104. Constructing Virtual Tombstones: The Photo Archive of the USHMM 662
- 105. Advancing Study and Teaching of the Holocaust: The Research Center of the USHMM 666
- 106. Struggling to Preserve Memories: The Creation of the USHMM 672
- 107. Making the First “Most Lethal” Nazi Death Camp Unforgettable: The Construction of the Belzec Memorial 676
- 108. Building a Living Museum in the Balkans: The Memorial of the Jews of North Macedonia 680
- 109. Reflecting on Loss, Memorial Art, and the Spaces in Between: The Berlin Denkmal and New York City’s 9/11 Memorial 689
- 110. Giving Voice to Holocaust Survivors: Interviewers of the Shoah Foundation 699
- 111. Preserving Survivor Testimony and Expanding Horizons of Holocaust Education: USC Shoah Foundation’s Visual History Archive® and Documentary Films 706
- 112. Domesticating Holocaust Memory: “House” and “Home” in the US Holocaust Memorial Museum and the USC Shoah Foundation 714
- 113. Thinking Oral Historically: Persons, Places, and Events in Holocaust Testimony 718
-
E. Creative Arts: Poetry and Painting
- 114. Searching for Language Beyond Words: Holocaust Poetry 723
- 115. Defying Violence against Children: Poetry and Painting in the Terezín Ghetto 730
- 116. Embracing Refugees of the Passover, the Shoah, and Our Own Times: Marc Chagall’s Exodus and the Crucified Jesus 743
- 117. Listening with Love: My Father’s Visual and Narrative Memory 746
- 118. Demanding Action—Not Pity: The Holocaust Art of Arthur Szyk 752
-
F. Music
- 119. Rescuing Music Composed in Concentration Camps: The Institute of Concentrationary Musical Literature (ICML) 761
- 120. Preserving and Performing Jewish Music: The Los Angeles Jewish Symphony 769
-
G. Cinema and Theater
- 121. Making Holocaust Films: Michael Berenbaum’s Cinematic Career 775
- 122. Documenting a Complicated Story: Empty Boxcars and the Shoah in Bulgaria and Its Occupied Territories 781
- 123. From Cursing Jews for the Death of Jesus to Blessing Our Brothers and Sisters: The Revised Oberammergau Passion Play 789
- 124. Searching for Ideas with Consequences: Illustrations of Holocaust Insights from Cinema and Theatre 796
- 125. Honoring Persons with Courage to Care and Rejoicing in the Survival of Persons They Rescued: A Photo Essay on Rescuers and Survivors 801
-
Part Seven: Schmoozing with the Mishpacha: Letters from Michael’s Family and an Afterword
- 126. Thanking Our Sabba 835
- 127. Wondering How My Abba Does It 837
- 128. Trading Insider Information on Best Dad Ever 838
- 129. Honoring My Courageous Father 839
- 130. Appreciating My Favorite (and Only) Father-in-Law 841
- 131. Sharing Spiritual Lessons from My Father’s Life: Reflections on Parshat Re’eh on Abba’s 75th Birthday 842
- 132. Celebrating Michael 846
- 133. Rereading an Afterword: Things “The World Must (Still) Know” 848
- Contributors 853
- Copyright Notices and Permissions 867
- Index of Biblical and Qur’anic Texts 870
- Index 872
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter xi
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments xv
- Preface: Blessing an Illustrious Student: The Scholarship of Michael Berenbaum xviii
- Foreword: Giving Thanks for an Amazing Colleague: Michael Berenbaum as an Educator, Museum Builder, and Filmmaker xix
- Introduction: Creating a Multi-Focused Festschrift: Michael Berenbaum as a Multi-Talented Bridge-Builder xxii
-
Part One: Expressing Deep Thanks: Personal Tributes from Old Friends
- 1. Expanding Horizons of Jewish Thought and Modeling Integrity: The Lifelong Impact of a Campus Rabbi on a College Freshman 1
- 2. Grasping and Expressing Foundational Insights: An Anchor and a Pillar in Holocaust Studies 3
- 3. Creating Living Memorials after the Catastrophe: Michael Berenbaum’s Contribution to Holocaust Education 5
- 4. Befriending Our Family, Loving Books, and Building Museums: A Capacious Mind and a Generous Soul 8
- 5. Learning Most from One’s Students: The Highest Standard of Teaching Excellence 10
- 6. Learning from a Patient Teacher: My Steady Friend Michael Berenbaum 12
- 7. Teaching Teachers of the Shoah: The Recurring Impact of a Mentor and Friend 13
- 8. Opening Doors of Opportunity for Other Filmmakers: A Better Understanding of Hollywood 18
-
Part Two: Searching for Meaning in Ancient Texts: Biblical, Talmudic, and Midrashic Narratives and Theology
- 9. Wrestling with God and Contending with Fire: Jacob at the Jabbok and Moses at the Burning Bush 21
- 10. Harvesting the Berry Tree: A Midrash for Michael Berenbaum (on Pirke Rabbi Eliezer 30–31) 26
- 11. Marking Jewish Identity in a Famous Memoir: Page One of Elie Wiesel’s Night 30
- 12. Seeing through the Prism of the Shoah: Biblical, Talmudic, and Hasidic Characters of Elie Wiesel 35
- 13. Honoring Father and Mother: An Impossible Possibility? 41
- 14. Searching for Wisdom: Ethical Guidance in Proverbs, Psalms, Prophets, and Midrash 46
- 15. Probing Deeply for Common Ground: Jewish Scholarship on Jesus the Jew 51
- 16. Transforming a Symbol: The Scandal of the Cross 55
- 17. Rereading “His Blood Be Upon Us”: The Blessing of the Blood of Life in Matthew’s Gospel 61
- 18. Arranging Readings in the Lectionary: The Problem of “Troublesome Readings” in the Liturgy 66
-
Part Three: Rebuilding a Culture after a Catastrophe: Rabbinic Thought and Action
- 19. Restoring Credibility and Revelation in a World Still Full of Atrocities: Religion, Ethics, and Culture after the Shoah 73
- 20. Rethinking Theology after the Shoah: God as a Universal Force of Transformation and Healing 82
- 21. Understanding Jewish Law: Fundamental Purposes, Modern Approaches to Its Observance, and Three Psalms in Its Praise 87
- 22. Acting Justly and Pursuing Peace: The Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism 94
- 23. Agonizing and Preaching Boldly in the Pulpit: Rabbi Isaac Herzog in Dublin and Jerusalem 101
- 24. Discerning a Role for God’s Law and Popular Governance: Rabbi Hayyim David Halevi on the State of Israel and Democracy 108
- 25. Searching Our Souls and Confessing Our Sins: Small and Large Confessions for Yom Kippur 112
-
Part Four: Promoting Growth in Understanding: Jewish Commitment to Education
- 26. Building Edifices of Jewish Knowledge: Michael Berenbaum and the Third Encyclopaedia Judaica 133
- 27. Introducing College Students to Jewish Customs and Beliefs: The Importance of Jewish Studies Programs 149
- 28. Searching for Holocaust Insights: Museums as Living Memorials and Dual Narratives in Holocaust Education 155
- 29. Trusting and Contending in Jewish Education: Curricular Integration and Interaction 161
- 30. Sustaining Jewish Commitment to Education as a Central Value: Holocaust Education and Museum Building 169
- 31. Celebrating Freedom in the Cradle of Liberty: The National Museum of American Jewish History 173
- 32. Illuminating Inclusive Freedom and Equipping Modern Abolitionists: The National Underground Railroad Freedom Center 179
- 33. Helping Teachers to Teach and Students to Learn: Facing History and Ourselves 192
-
Part Five: Reconnecting Abrahamic Collegiality and Building Beautiful Bridges: Interreligious Encounters
- 34. Abandoning Ancient Enmity and Seeking Covenantal Partnership: The Relationship between Judaism and Christianity 197
- 35. Learning through Dialogue: The Work of the ICCJ from Seelisberg to the Present 212
- 36. Replacing the Teaching of Contempt for Jews: Jules Isaac and Historical Truths about Jesus and the Jewish People of His Time 220
- 37. Repenting for Sins against Jews and Harvesting Fruits of Mutual Respect: International Dialogue between Jews and Catholics after Vatican II 231
- 38. Repudiating the Teaching of Contempt for Jews and Ending a Catholic Mission to Convert Jews: Nostra Aetate and the Jubilee Statement on Conversion 240
- 39. Sustaining a Quiet Revolution: Popes and Jews since the Shoah 249
- 40. Confronting Racial Antisemitism and Rejecting Contempt for Jews: Reform of Catholic Preaching and Teaching about Jews 256
- 41. Establishing an Enduring Friendship: Rabbi Marc Tanenbaum and Cardinal Johannes Willebrands 262
- 42. Doing the Will of Our Father in Heaven: Orthodox Jewish Statements on Jewish-Christian Relations 269
- 43. Rereading Dabru Emet and Its Successors: Jewish Statements on Christians and Christianity 275
- 44. Gathering the Fruits of a Half-Century of Reflection on the Shoah: The Annual Scholars’ Conference on the Holocaust and the Churches 282
- 45. Attending to Complicity, Identity, and the Integrity of “And”: The Annual Scholars’ Conference on the Holocaust and the Churches 290
- 46. Repairing a Damaged Relationship: A Half-Century of Jewish-Lutheran Dialogue 294
- 47. Rethinking the Current Goal of Jewish-Christian Relations: Reconsideration Rather Than Reconciliation 303
- 48. Moving beyond “Holy Wars”: Interreligious Dialogue as a Tool for Forging Sustainable Peace 307
- 49. Creating Spiritual Remedies for Our Social Pathologies: Reflections of a Religious Peacebuilder 312
- 50. Rejecting Revenge and Preserving Our Humanity: My Journey from the Parents’ Circle to a Treatise on Peace 317
- 51. Healing a Mother’s Broken Heart: Letters to My Son and the Family of His Assassin 324
- 52. Expanding Dialogue among Jews, Christians, and Muslims: A Step Closer to Human Fraternity, World Peace, and Living Together 329
- 53. Evaluating Jewish-Muslim Relations in the Middle Ages: Golden or Ghastly? 335
- 54. Outing White Supremacy as a Threat to Jews and Muslims: Strategies for Confronting a Common Enemy 340
- 55. Challenging Group Bias: Benefits of Contact and Dialogue among Jews, Christians, and Muslims 343
- 56. Educating Muslims about the Shoah: Memory and Meaning in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam 351
- 57. Knowing a Person by Her Actions to Help Others: The Discovery of the Prophet in His People 357
- 58. Striving for Justice and Protecting Human Life: The Universality of People-Centered Human Rights 360
-
Part Six: Remembering for Our Future: The Shoah
- 59. Seeing within and beyond Shadows: A Memoir of a Personal Journey 381
- 60. Seeing Darkness and Light through a Camera Lens: Judy Glickman Lauder’s Images of the Shoah 395
-
A. Historical and Scientific Research
- 61. Studying the Holocaust: Why It Still Matters 400
- 62. Committing Makeshift Murder: The Disorganized Holocaust 407
- 63. Heeding Warnings from Holocaust History: The Perils of Fake News and Statelessness 413
- 64. Resisting Forced Labor in Warthegau and Galicia: A Tale of Two Cemeteries 418
- 65. Opposing and Protesting: Forgotten Individual Jewish Resistance in Nazi Germany 423
- 66. Meeting Himmler: Norbert Masur’s Negotiation of the Release of Jewish Women from Ravensbrück 429
- 67. Confronting Evil: Ilya Ehrenburg and the Holocaust 435
- 68. Navigating Broad Seas and Difficult Straits: Michael Berenbaum’s Passage from Tikkun Olam to Grey Zones 442
- 69. Honoring the Righteous Among the Nations: Yad Vashem’s Department of the Righteous 446
- 70. Searching for Goodness and Supporting Courage: The Jewish Foundation for the Righteous 452
- 71. Saving Jewish Lives with Schutzpasses and Protected Houses: Rescue of Jews in Budapest by Giorgio Perlasca and Carl Lutz 458
- 72. Honoring Heroic Courage to Care: Lessons to Learn from Raoul Wallenberg 464
- 73. Granting Visas for Life: Courageous and Righteous Diplomats 470
- 74. Confronting a Mixed Record: The Italians and the Holocaust 477
- 75. Heeding Dangers of Holocaust Distortion in Eastern Europe: The Case of Lithuania 483
- 76. Collaborating with Germany in the Final Solution: The Shoah in Bulgarian-Occupied Greece 487
- 77. Remembering an Orphan of Holocaust Studies: The Romaniote Jews of Ioannina 493
- 78. Listening to Sounds from Silence: Healing the Trauma of Child Holocaust Survivors 497
- 79. Hoping that “A Remnant Shall Return”: Survival of “Displaced Persons” 502
- 80. Discovering Memories My Parents Never Spoke Of: Silence, Nachas, and Resilience in the Life of a Second-Generation Survivor 508
- 81. Healing an On-Going Trauma: The Task of the Second Generation 514
- 82. Opening a New Frontier in Holocaust Studies: New Approaches to Geoscience and Archaeology 520
- 83. Finding the Mass Graves of Jews Killed by Bullets: The Work of Yahad—In Unum 528
-
B. Ethical, Philosophical, and Theological Reflections
- 84. Clarifying Shoah Historiography: Jewish Religious and Theological Reflections 534
- 85. Comparing Genocides: An Opportunity to Learn to Care about Humanity 541
- 86. Defining Genocide and Preventing Future Genocides: Never Again for Any Ethnic Group 545
- 87. Holding Important Issues in Tension: Uniqueness, Integration, and Historical Context 550
- 88. Paying Attention to Antisemitism Today: Are Twenty-Nine Million Reasons Enough? 554
- 89. Taking Alarm at American Nazis in a Virginia College Town: Racist and Antisemitic Ideology, Rhetoric, and Symbols at the Charlottesville Rally 557
- 90. Coming to Terms with the Holocaust: Appearances and Truths in Germany 563
-
C. Diplomatic, Legal and Political Issues
- 91. Abandoning Jewish Refugees from Nazi Germany: Evian, Kristallnacht, and the SS St. Louis 569
- 92. Recalling Nuremberg at Seventy-Five: The Greatest Criminal Trial in Modern History 577
- 93. Remembering an Elided Ally: Soviet Contributions to the International Military Tribunal 584
- 94. Looming Larger Than Life: Benjamin Ferencz and the Nuremberg War Crimes Trials 590
- 95. Learning from the Nuremberg Trials: Ongoing Lessons for Our World 599
- 96. Seeking Compensation for Slave and Forced Labor in World War II: A History 602
- 97. Blocking Claims for Restitution of Nazi-Looted Art: Judicial Abandonment of Federal Policy against Wartime Plunder, Federal and State Criminal Law against Receipt of Stolen Property 613
- 98. Finding Hope for Restitution of Nazi-Looted Art?: The Holocaust Expropriated Art Recovery Act of 2016 620
- 99. Digitizing the Nazi Theft of European Jewish Culture: The Jewish Digital Cultural Recovery Project 626
- 100. Probing the Provenance of Nazi-Confiscated Art and Achieving Harmonious Resolution of Conflicts: The Washington Principles and the Terezín Declaration 631
-
D. Memorials and Museums Research Centers and Archives of Survivor Testimony
- 101. Probing What the Holocaust Has to Do with America: The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum 642
- 102. Connecting with the Conscience of Museum Visitors: The Ethical Orientation of the USHMM 650
- 103. Telling the Story, Getting It Right: The Permanent Exhibition of the USHMM and the Claude Lanzmann Shoah Collection 657
- 104. Constructing Virtual Tombstones: The Photo Archive of the USHMM 662
- 105. Advancing Study and Teaching of the Holocaust: The Research Center of the USHMM 666
- 106. Struggling to Preserve Memories: The Creation of the USHMM 672
- 107. Making the First “Most Lethal” Nazi Death Camp Unforgettable: The Construction of the Belzec Memorial 676
- 108. Building a Living Museum in the Balkans: The Memorial of the Jews of North Macedonia 680
- 109. Reflecting on Loss, Memorial Art, and the Spaces in Between: The Berlin Denkmal and New York City’s 9/11 Memorial 689
- 110. Giving Voice to Holocaust Survivors: Interviewers of the Shoah Foundation 699
- 111. Preserving Survivor Testimony and Expanding Horizons of Holocaust Education: USC Shoah Foundation’s Visual History Archive® and Documentary Films 706
- 112. Domesticating Holocaust Memory: “House” and “Home” in the US Holocaust Memorial Museum and the USC Shoah Foundation 714
- 113. Thinking Oral Historically: Persons, Places, and Events in Holocaust Testimony 718
-
E. Creative Arts: Poetry and Painting
- 114. Searching for Language Beyond Words: Holocaust Poetry 723
- 115. Defying Violence against Children: Poetry and Painting in the Terezín Ghetto 730
- 116. Embracing Refugees of the Passover, the Shoah, and Our Own Times: Marc Chagall’s Exodus and the Crucified Jesus 743
- 117. Listening with Love: My Father’s Visual and Narrative Memory 746
- 118. Demanding Action—Not Pity: The Holocaust Art of Arthur Szyk 752
-
F. Music
- 119. Rescuing Music Composed in Concentration Camps: The Institute of Concentrationary Musical Literature (ICML) 761
- 120. Preserving and Performing Jewish Music: The Los Angeles Jewish Symphony 769
-
G. Cinema and Theater
- 121. Making Holocaust Films: Michael Berenbaum’s Cinematic Career 775
- 122. Documenting a Complicated Story: Empty Boxcars and the Shoah in Bulgaria and Its Occupied Territories 781
- 123. From Cursing Jews for the Death of Jesus to Blessing Our Brothers and Sisters: The Revised Oberammergau Passion Play 789
- 124. Searching for Ideas with Consequences: Illustrations of Holocaust Insights from Cinema and Theatre 796
- 125. Honoring Persons with Courage to Care and Rejoicing in the Survival of Persons They Rescued: A Photo Essay on Rescuers and Survivors 801
-
Part Seven: Schmoozing with the Mishpacha: Letters from Michael’s Family and an Afterword
- 126. Thanking Our Sabba 835
- 127. Wondering How My Abba Does It 837
- 128. Trading Insider Information on Best Dad Ever 838
- 129. Honoring My Courageous Father 839
- 130. Appreciating My Favorite (and Only) Father-in-Law 841
- 131. Sharing Spiritual Lessons from My Father’s Life: Reflections on Parshat Re’eh on Abba’s 75th Birthday 842
- 132. Celebrating Michael 846
- 133. Rereading an Afterword: Things “The World Must (Still) Know” 848
- Contributors 853
- Copyright Notices and Permissions 867
- Index of Biblical and Qur’anic Texts 870
- Index 872