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This multifaceted study—at all levels and in different places—enhances the perception of the magnitude, complexity, and interrelatedness of the many components of this history. Based on a vast array of documents and an overwhelming choir of voices—mainly from diaries, letters, and memoirs—Saul Friedländer avoids domesticating the memory of these unprecedented and horrific events. The convergence of these various aspects gives a unique quality to The Years of Extermination. In this work, the history of the Holocaust has found its definitive representation.
Acclaim for Nazi Germany and the Jews: The Years of Persecution, 1933-1939:
"This will be the standard work for many years to come" –Daniel Johnson, The Times
"There have been many books about Nazism's persecution of the Jews, but none as magisterial or comprehensive as this" –Richard Evans, Sunday Telegraph
"The merits of this work are many; it is easily the best book of a distinguished historian. It is based on a great variety of sources, published and unpublished, and the judgement of the author cannot be faulted on any major issue...This is a very good, very important book. It needed to be written before the last historians disappear who, because of the date and place of their birth and their personal experience, know certain things in their bones about the period of the Holocaust." –Walter Lacquer, Los Angeles Times
"Saul Friedlander is the most astute, sophisticated and stylish historian of the Holocaust working in any language today." –Michael Burleigh
870 pages, Hardcover
First published April 10, 2007
In order to be effective, however, the ideological impetus had to emanate not only from the top but also be fanatically adopted and enforced at intermediate levels of the system by the technocrats, organizers and direct implementers of the extermination - by those, in short who made the system work, several levels below the main political leader ship.
As before, hundreds of thousands (possibly millions) of Germans and other Europeans continued tacitly to support the extermination campaign, both for profit and on ideological grounds. ... The determining factors in the passivity of most remained fear, of course, the absence of any sense of identification with Jew, and the lack of decided and sustained encouragement to help the victims from the leaders of Christian churches or the political leadership of resistance movements.
Among the Jews ... two contrary trends... became ever more noticeable: increasing passivity and lack of solidarity with fellow sufferers among the mass of terrorized and physically weakened victims (mainly in the camps) on the one hand, and on the other the tightening bonds within small, usually politically homogeneous groups...