From Library Journal
With the current debate and accompanying loud publicity over Daniel J. Goldhagen's Hitler's Willing Executioners (LJ 3/15/96), this slim volume will probably be overlooked, especially by general readers. This is unfortunate, since the book, a result of a recent Bavarian conference entitled "No One Participated, No One Knew," contributes to the continual debate: Did the "average" German know what was happening to the Jews during the Nazi years? In the series of accounts presented here, followed by scholarly essays, eyewitnesses living in Germany during the Nazi years all state that German citizens knew what was happening. Wollenberg (Univ. of Bremen), who edits the German, and Pribic (Layfayette Coll.), who translates, do not make the English easy for general readers. Those who are willing to try, however, will be rewarded. This book should be in all academic libraries and public libraries with strong collections on the Holocaust.?Dennis L. Noble, Sequim, Wash.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Originally published in Germany in 1989, this important book contains 15 contributions to a symposium sponsored by the city of Nuremberg to explore the behavior of German citizens toward the Jews during the Third Reich. There are seven eyewitness testimonies of Jews and non-Jews who survived the Holocaust and eight essays by scholars who question the extent of the German public's awareness of Nazi persecution of the Jews. Wollenberg, organizer of the 1988 symposium, in his lucid introduction emphasizes the need to "discuss the whole system of robbery, persecution, and destruction of the Jews which was accepted by the majority of the population." The eyewitness accounts are horrifying, the essays balanced and incisive; the book is an essential work in confronting this dark chapter of Germany history.
George Cohen
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.