• Headlines
  • Tech
  • Space
  • Animals
  • Earth
  • Science
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Health

Jewish Experiences of the Holocaust Are Complex, Study Finds

By ScienceMode on Mar 31st, 2008 in Culture | Add story link to StumbleUpon

jewish-experiences-of-the-holocaust-are-complex-study-finds.jpgJewish experiences of the Holocaust are complex. Swedish researcher Laura Palosuo from Uppsala University has studied the testimony of Hungarian survivors, and in her dissertation she shows that the way different people experienced the anti Jewish legislation and the violence in the German occupied areas is linked to gender, age and social class.

Hungary was the first country in Europe to legislate against the Jewish minority in 1920. In the late 1930s and early 1940s several anti-Jewish laws were introduced, but the deportations did not take place until after the German occupation in March 1944. Then, over half of the country’s 800,000 Jews were transported in goods trains to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where the majority were killed immediately after arrival.

The thesis Yellow Stars and Trouser Inspections is based on 151 interviews, reports and memoirs with and by Hungarian Jews who survived the Holocaust. Most of them came from Budapest, and belonged to the group that was not deported but that experienced the terror of the Fascist Arrow Cross party. With the aid of these accounts Laura Palosuo has analysed the way Jewish men and women of different ages and from different social strata describe the persecution and their own reactions to it, and how their experiences can be linked to gender, age and class.

The results show that the experiences were extremely complex, and that they cannot be related just to ‘race’.

“A clear example of the role played by gender was the so-called trouser inspections. When a Jewish man was outdoors the authorities could easily check whether he was circumcised by simply pulling down his trousers,” says Laura Palosuo.

Jewish women could move about outdoors more freely if they removed the yellow star, and since they did not have any physical markers indicating their ‘Jewishness’ they could more easily avoid harassment. However, the differences linked to gender, age and class were erased in the course of time, and towards the end of the war these factors came to play a smaller and smaller role in people’s experiences.

Analysing the importance of gender combined with other factors in the way Laura Palosuo has done is a new and unexplored perspective in the field of genocide research.

“The results are of interest to anyone who wants to know more about how people perceive and react to catastrophic situations,” she says.

source:Uppsala University.

Post this story to:    Del.icio.us    Digg this    Newsvine    Nowpublic    Reddit


Comments are closed.

Latest Science News

  • Arctic Map, the Future Gold Rush
  • New Way to Fight Tropical Deforestation
  • Perchlorates Found on Mars “Neither Good Nor Bad for Life,” NASA Says
  • ID Theft Ring Steals Millions of Credit/Debit Numbers
  • Vaccines Approved for Flu Season
  • Famous Feline Powder Finds a Home?
  • Kansas Dog Plays Mommy to Tiger Cubs
  • Eat Eggs For Breakfast Lose More Weight, New Study Finds
  • Edouard Churning Into Texas
  • Phoenix Mission Extended, Water Confirmed on Mars
  • Cassini Confirms Liquid Lake on Saturn Moon Titan
  • Uncertain Future for Elephants in Thailand, Scientists Say
  • Cow Manure Could Generate Electricity for Millions
  • Water Discovered On the Moon, Not Entirely Vaporized, Scientists Say
  • Watermelon Secret Ingredients
  • Americans Challenged to Rethink Gas Savings
  • Government Seizes Pet Food from PETCO
  • NASA’s New Eye in the Sky to Watch Weather
  • Five States Report West Nile Virus Cases
  • Typhoon Fengshun Batters Philippines
  • Update: Salmonella Cases Rise, Probe Moves to Florida & Mexico
  • Phoenix Lander Unearths Hidden Ice on Mars, Vaporized Shortly
  • Math with Medicine to Treat Leukemia
  • Triple System of Super-Earths Detected From Chile
  • Update: Tomato-Linked Salmonella Cases Rise

ScienceMode © 2006-2008 - About us

Login