Ulla-Britta Vollhardt
»More Important than Life«
- The Underground Archive of the Warsaw Ghetto
ISBN: 978-3-835-35545-3
136 Seiten | € 15.00
Buch [Taschenbuch]
Erscheinungsdatum:
27.09.2023
Sonstiges
Ulla-Britta Vollhardt
»More Important than Life«
The Underground Archive of the Warsaw Ghetto
The Underground Archive is the first attempt to document the Shoah from the perspective of those affected and directly during the events.
Before World War II, Poland was home to 3.3 million Jews, and Warsaw was the cultural, religious and political center of this diverse community. A year after the German war of aggression began, the Nazis forced the Jewish population into a sealed-off part of the city. The historian Emanuel Ringelblum then stimulated an unprecedented project: a group working in secret, documenting the daily life of the ghetto under the code name Oneg Shabbat (Joy of Shabbat). Cut off from the world, it collected and produced a wealth of material. With the beginning of the systematic murder of Polish Jews, they unwillingly became chroniclers of the Shoah, which they themselves, with few exceptions, did not survive. After the war, a large part of the archive, buried in tin crates and milk cans, was recovered from under the ruins of the ghetto. With its approximately 35,000 preserved pages, it is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
The volume is published on the occasion of the exhibition of the same name, which the NS Documentation Center Munich will open in cooperation with the Jewish Historical Institute Warsaw in June 2023.
Before World War II, Poland was home to 3.3 million Jews, and Warsaw was the cultural, religious and political center of this diverse community. A year after the German war of aggression began, the Nazis forced the Jewish population into a sealed-off part of the city. The historian Emanuel Ringelblum then stimulated an unprecedented project: a group working in secret, documenting the daily life of the ghetto under the code name Oneg Shabbat (Joy of Shabbat). Cut off from the world, it collected and produced a wealth of material. With the beginning of the systematic murder of Polish Jews, they unwillingly became chroniclers of the Shoah, which they themselves, with few exceptions, did not survive. After the war, a large part of the archive, buried in tin crates and milk cans, was recovered from under the ruins of the ghetto. With its approximately 35,000 preserved pages, it is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
The volume is published on the occasion of the exhibition of the same name, which the NS Documentation Center Munich will open in cooperation with the Jewish Historical Institute Warsaw in June 2023.
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Veröffentlichung: | 27.09.2023 |
Höhe/Breite/Gewicht | H 21 cm / B 17 cm / 338 g |
Seiten | 136 |
Art des Mediums | Buch [Taschenbuch] |
Preis DE | EUR 15.00 |
Preis AT | EUR 15.50 |
Auflage | 1. Auflage |
ISBN-13 | 978-3-835-35545-3 |
ISBN-10 | 3835355457 |
Über den Autor
Ulla-Britta Vollhardt, Studium der Geschichte und Germanistik in München; Promotion an der Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München; seit 2010 wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin und Kuratorin am NS-Dokumentationszentrum MünchenDiesen Artikel teilen
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