Eastern Europe’s Jews have their own history. In the 18th and 19th centuries, repression and reform forced the Jews to assimilate to their surroundings. However, attempts to integrate failed repeatedly and led to ideological divisions among the Jews. As Zionists, integrationists, and socialists, they pursued different paths to social and legal equality. Most East European Jews were murdered during the Holocaust. After the Second World War, some of the survivors tried to shape Communist societies – unsuccessfully. Antisemitism and pogroms forced them to emigrate
Historians have devoted increasing attention in the past decade to the aftermath of the Shoah, focus...
The present study tries to show that, during the last years of the rule of Stalin, the Jews from Sov...
391 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2009."Parallel Ruptures: Jews of B...
After the Holocaust, Jewish survivors returned to Poland and Slovakia where they had to cope with th...
Why, after the outbreak of World War II in Eastern Europe, did the in-habitants of some communities ...
Not many decades after the emancipation of the Jews in Western Europe, studies began to appear inves...
The emergence of a seemingly harmonic symbiosis between Hungarian majority and Jewish minority in 19...
Why, after the outbreak of World War II in Eastern Europe, did the inhabitants of some communities e...
The process of European political unification that began in the mid-twentieth century has taken for g...
“Parallel Ruptures: Jews of Bessarabia and Transnistria between Romanian Nationalism and Soviet Comm...
The Jews of Romania and Hungary who returned home from the Holocaust faced a series of difficulties ...
The word “Jew” is used as a more or less self-evident identity category, even though the content it ...
How did cultural assimilation and secularization shape the relationships between Jewish youth, Jewis...
Through an exploration of the history of the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee (JAC), this dissertation ...
The Jews from Romania and Hungary hoped that the installation of communism will put an end to the di...
Historians have devoted increasing attention in the past decade to the aftermath of the Shoah, focus...
The present study tries to show that, during the last years of the rule of Stalin, the Jews from Sov...
391 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2009."Parallel Ruptures: Jews of B...
After the Holocaust, Jewish survivors returned to Poland and Slovakia where they had to cope with th...
Why, after the outbreak of World War II in Eastern Europe, did the in-habitants of some communities ...
Not many decades after the emancipation of the Jews in Western Europe, studies began to appear inves...
The emergence of a seemingly harmonic symbiosis between Hungarian majority and Jewish minority in 19...
Why, after the outbreak of World War II in Eastern Europe, did the inhabitants of some communities e...
The process of European political unification that began in the mid-twentieth century has taken for g...
“Parallel Ruptures: Jews of Bessarabia and Transnistria between Romanian Nationalism and Soviet Comm...
The Jews of Romania and Hungary who returned home from the Holocaust faced a series of difficulties ...
The word “Jew” is used as a more or less self-evident identity category, even though the content it ...
How did cultural assimilation and secularization shape the relationships between Jewish youth, Jewis...
Through an exploration of the history of the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee (JAC), this dissertation ...
The Jews from Romania and Hungary hoped that the installation of communism will put an end to the di...
Historians have devoted increasing attention in the past decade to the aftermath of the Shoah, focus...
The present study tries to show that, during the last years of the rule of Stalin, the Jews from Sov...
391 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2009."Parallel Ruptures: Jews of B...