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Zvi Y. Gitelman

    Zvi Gitelman is a distinguished scholar focusing on the intricate connections between ethnicity and politics, particularly within post-Communist nations. His work delves into Israeli and East European politics, as well as Jewish political attitudes. His analyses offer profound insights into the dynamics shaping nations and their political landscapes. Gitelman's academic contributions illuminate the enduring impact of ethnic identity on political processes.

    A Century of Ambivalence, Second Expanded Edition
    A Century of Ambivalence
    The Quest for Utopia: Jewish Political Ideas and Institutions Through the Ages
    Bitter legacy
    • Bitter legacy

      • 332 pages
      • 12 hours of reading

      Examines how over a million Jewish civilians were murdered by the Nazis and their local collaborators in the Soviet Union. Topics include Soviet Jewry before the Holocaust; the Holocaust of Ukrainian Jews; Jewish refuges from Poland in the USSR, 1939-1946; Jewish warfare and the participation of Jews in combat in the Soviet Union; Jewish-Lithuanian relations during World War II. Among the documents included are Nazi directives, Nazi actions, eyewitness accounts, and accounts of collaboration and resistance, and rescue. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

      Bitter legacy
    • A photographic history, based mainly on the New York YIVO Institute archives. Surveys Jewish life in Russia, focusing on the pogroms of 1881-82 and 1905 and their effects (e.g. the Jewish revolutionary movements, the Bund, and Zionism), and the Beilis trial of 1911. Pp. 96-108 discuss the ambivalent Jewish reaction to the Bolshevik Revolution. Although the Bolsheviks were hostile to Jewish concerns, the new regime offered great opportunities to literate Jews, while the Whites and the Ukrainians were responsible for pogroms and exploited antisemitism to rally anti-Bolshevik support. Ch. 4 (pp. 175-223) describes the fate of the Jews of the USSR during the Holocaust, Jewish resistance, participation in the partisan movement and in the Red Army. Also surveys Stalin's anti-Jewish campaign from 1948 on, the Doctor's Plot, Soviet anti-Zionism, the emigration movement, and prospects for Jewish life in the USSR. (From the Bibliography of the Vidal Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism)

      A Century of Ambivalence