Research Catalog

Sowjetischer und postkommunistischer Antisemitismus : Entwicklungen in Russland, der Ukraine und Litauen

Title
Sowjetischer und postkommunistischer Antisemitismus : Entwicklungen in Russland, der Ukraine und Litauen / Matthias Messmer ; mit einem Vorwort von Walter Laqueur.
Author
Messmer, Matthias, 1967-
Publication
Konstanz : Hartung-Gorre, 1997.

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextUse in library DS146.S65 M48 1997Off-site

Details

Additional Authors
Laqueur, Walter, 1921-2018.
Description
viii, 533 pages; 21 cm.
Summary
  • Traces the policy of the state toward the Jews, and the ideological and political bases of antisemitism, from the Russian Revolution to the present. Opposition to antisemitism and a certain latitude for Jewish culture gave way in the 1930s to suppression and the purging of Jewish officials. In the late 1940s-early 50s, persecution peaked with the "Doctors' Plot" and the murder of Jewish leaders. For Stalin, antisemitism was an instrument in the power struggle. Subsequently, persecution of Jews varied with the state of the Cold War and the personality of the Soviet leader. Jewish communal organization and culture were suppressed. Works exposing a "Zionist world conspiracy" and equating Zionism with Nazism flourished, with official endorsement. With "perestroika, " state antisemitism gradually ended. Surveys the groups and political parties now propagating antisemitism in Russia, Ukraine, and Lithuania. In Russia and Ukraine, it is central only to small neo-Nazi groups; for Russian nationalist and national-bolshevist groups, it is a political tactic. The Orthodox patriarch pleads for brotherhood, but some Church bodies propagate venomous antisemitism. In Ukraine, the Church is not antisemitic. Neither state combats antisemitism vigorously. The Lithuanian independence movement is philosemitic, but the Lithuanians refuse to admit their collaboration with the Nazis in the Holocaust, balancing it against Jewish collaboration with the Soviets. Suggests that antisemitism was.
  • Allowed to flourish under the conditions of Soviet political culture and will diminish with the development of civil societies.
Series Statement
Konstanzer Schriften zur Schoah und Judaica, 0942-6043 ; Bd. 3
Uniform Title
Konstanzer Schriften zur Schoáh und Judaica ; Bd. 3.
Subject
  • Antisemitism > Soviet Union
  • Antisemitism > Russia (Federation)
  • Antisemitism > Ukraine
  • Antisemitism > Lithuania
  • Antisemitism
  • Ethnic relations
  • Antisemitismus
  • Antisemitisme
  • Antisemitism > Russia > History
  • Antisemitism > Russia > History > 20th century
  • Antisemitism > Communist countries
  • Antisemitismus > Sowjetunion > Geschichte
  • Antisemitismus > Russland
  • Antisemitismus > Ukraine
  • Antisemitismus > Litauen
  • Soviet Union > Ethnic relations
  • Russia (Federation) > Ethnic relations
  • Ukraine > Ethnic relations
  • Lithuania > Ethnic relations
  • Lithuania
  • Russia (Federation)
  • Soviet Union
  • Ukraine
  • Litauen
  • Russland
  • Sowjetunion
  • Sowjetunion > Antisemitismus > Geschichte
  • Russland > Antisemitismus
  • Ukraine > Antisemitismus
  • Litauen > Antisemitismus
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. 486-516) and index.
ISBN
  • 3896491598
  • 9783896491596
LCCN
98117844
OCLC
  • ocm38885138
  • 38885138
  • SCSB-577936
Owning Institutions
Princeton University Library