- Black Book (World War II)
"The Black Book: The Ruthless Murder of Jews by German-Fascist Invaders Throughout the Temporarily-Occupied Regions of the Soviet Union and in the Death Camps of Poland during the War 1941–1945" alternatively "The Black Book of the Holocaust", or simply "The Black Book", ( _ru. Чёрная Книга, "Chornaya Kniga"; Yiddish transliteration: "Dos Shvartzer Bukh") was a result of the collaborative effort by the
Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee (JAC) and members of the American Jewish community to document the anti-Jewish crimes ofthe Holocaust and the participation of Jews in the fighting and theresistance movement against the Nazis duringWorld War II .Background
Prominent Jewish Soviet writers and journalists
Ilya Ehrenburg andVasily Grossman served as war reporters for theRed Army . Grossman's documentary reports of the opening of the Treblinka andMajdanek extermination camp s were some of the first eyewitness accounts — as early as 1943 — of what later became known as theShoah . His article "The Treblinka Hell" ( [http://lib.ru/PROZA/GROSSMAN/trebl.txt Треблинский ад] , 1944) was disseminated at theNuremberg Trials as a document for the prosecution.Manuscripts and publications
In 1944–1945, based on their own experiences and on other documents they collected, Ehrenburg and Grossman produced two volumes under the title "Murder of the People" in
Yiddish and handed the manuscript to the JAC. Copies were sent to theUnited States ,Israel (then theBritish mandate of Palestine ) andRomania in 1946, and excerpts were published in the United States in English under the title "Black Book" that same year. In Romania, a part of the manuscript was also published in 1946. It was also printed in Israel. A handwritten manuscript of the Book is held atYad Vashem .The fate of the Black Book in the USSR
According to Ehrenburg, the mandatory State literary commission did not commit to publish the Book in October 1944: "Instead of a straight answer, the resolution was: 'write the book, and if it comes out well, it would be published.' But it is not we who are the authors, it is the fascists… What does that mean, 'comes out well' this is not a novel, it is a document."
The Book was partially printed in the Soviet Union by the Yiddish publisher "Der Emes", however the entire edition, the typefaces, as well as the manuscript, were destroyed. First the censors ordered changes in the text to conceal the specifically anti-Jewish character of the atrocities and to downplay the role of
Ukrainians who worked as Nazi police officers. Then in 1948 the Soviet edition of the book was scrapped completely. The collection of original documents that Ehrenburg handed down to theVilnius Jewish Museum after the war was secretly returned to him upon the Museum's termination in 1948. The JAC was also disbanded, its members purged at the outset of the state campaign against the "rootless cosmopolitan s", a Soviet euphemism for Jews. (See also theDoctors' plot ). Typically, the official Soviet policy regarding theHolocaust was to present it as atrocities committed against Soviet citizens, without acknowledging thegenocide of the Jews.A Russian-language edition of the Black Book was published in
Jerusalem in 1980, and finally inKiev , Ukraine in 1991.See also
*
History of the Jews in Russia and the Soviet Union References
*" [http://www.jewishgen.org/yizkor/black_book/Black_Book.html The Black Book] : The Ruthless Murder of Jews by German-Fascist Invaders Throughout the Temporarily-Occupied Regions of the Soviet Union and in the Death Camps of Poland during the War 1941–1945." Compiled and Edited by Vasily Grossman, Ilya Ehrenburg. (Only the table of contents is available here)
* [http://motlc.wiesenthal.com/text/x06/xm0617.html The Black Book of Soviet Jewry]
* [http://www.worldcatlibraries.org/wcpa/oclc/48100080&tab=holdings?loc=#tabs Find the English translation of The Black Book in a library]
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