Holocaust and North Africa (eBook)

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2018
360 Seiten
Stanford University Press (Verlag)
978-1-5036-0706-4 (ISBN)
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The Holocaust is usually understood as a European story. Yet, this pivotal episode unfolded across North Africa and reverberated through politics, literature, memoir, and memory-Muslim as well as Jewish-in the post-war years. The Holocaust and North Africa offers the first English-language study of the unfolding events in North Africa, pushing at the boundaries of Holocaust Studies and North African Studies, and suggesting, powerfully, that neither is complete without the other. The essays in this volume reconstruct the implementation of race laws and forced labor across the Maghreb during World War II and consider the Holocaust as a North African local affair, which took diverse form from town to town and city to city. They explore how the Holocaust ruptured Muslim Jewish relations, setting the stage for an entirely new post-war reality. Commentaries by leading scholars of Holocaust history complete the picture, reflecting on why the history of the Holocaust and North Africa has been so widely ignored and what we have to gain by understanding it in all its nuances.Published in association with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.

Aomar Boum is Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Los Angeles and Faculty Fellow at the Université Internationale de Rabat, Morocco. Sarah Abrevaya Stein is Professor of History at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Contents and AbstractsIntroduction  Aomar Boum and Sarah Abrevaya Stein chapter abstractThis introduction offers a short historical survey of the Holocaust's manifestations in German-, French-, and Italian-occupied North Africa. In addition, it asks, Why has North Africa been written out of Holocaust history and memory, and, conversely, why has the Holocaust been excised from so many narratives about North Africa? All told, this introduction argues that alongside a penetrating silence about the Holocaust and North Africa is a rich body of texts, voices, and archives that await our attention.1Between Metropole and French North Africa: Vichy's Anti-Semitic Legislation and Colonialism's Racial Hierarchies  Daniel J. Schroeter chapter abstractThis chapter maps out the legal history of the anti-Semitic legislation adopted by France's Vichy regime during World War II. It argues that Vichy laws replicated in many details Nazi anti-Semitic legislation, connecting in documentable ways France's colonies to the Holocaust. As implemented in North Africa, Vichy's Jewish policy is, however, only legible in the colonial context. Seen on a longer continuum, Vichy's anti-Semitic legislation was integral to French colonialism, embedded in the racial policy toward both Muslims and Jews across North Africa that both predated and followed the war. Alongside these historical arguments, this chapter charts a long historiographic tradition by which a connection between the Holocaust and North Africa was denied by scholars.2The Persecution of Jews in Libya Between 1938 and 1945: An Italian Affair?  Jens Hoppe chapter abstractThis chapter explores the measures adopted by Italy against Jews in Italian-occupied Libya, particularly those laws passed between 1938 (when the so-called racial laws were also introduced in Libya) and 1943 (when the British Eighth Army occupied the country and ended Italian rule). Paying close heed to the internment of Libyan Jews in special camps and the deportation of foreign Jews to Tunisia or Italy in 1942, the essay includes background history since the 1920s and extends to the period after 1943, especially the pogroms in November 1945, before finally assessing the Libyan situation.3The Implementation of Anti-Jewish Laws in French West Africa: A Reflection of Vichy Anti-Semitic Obsession  Ruth Ginio chapter abstractThis chapter examines the Vichy period in French West Africa (FWA) and reconstructs the implementation of the ideology of the National Revolution—and, more specifically, anti-Jewish legislation—across the empire. It situates Vichy colonial policy toward the Jews in the context of colonial history, placing it in the more general Vichy colonial ideology and tracing the importance of FWA to the Vichy regime in France. Throughout this essay, it is maintained that even though FWA was never a center of Jewish life and the number of Jews was insignificant there, the area can serve as an excellent case study to demonstrate the effects of the persecution of Jews by Vichy France far beyond the Metropole. The measures taken by the colonial administration in FWA, in keeping with Vichy laws regarding Jews, thus shed light on the obsessive nature of Vichy policy and its blind and often irrational implementation.4"Other Places of Confinement": Bedeau Internment Camp for Algerian Jewish Soldiers  Susan Slyomovics chapter abstractAfter France's 1830 conquest of Algeria, an archipelago of carceral sites were created and built throughout the colony. They were continually operational and maintained and multiplied after World War II into the Algerian War of Independence (1954–1962). A chronicle of France's Algerian Bedeau camp uncovers one among many sites of repression that represent the intersectionality of nineteenth- and twentieth-century histories when colonialism met fascism. Perhaps peripheral to the main theater of war where the Holocaust in Europe took place, this case study of a Vichy-era Algerian work and prison camp, designated uniquely for Algerian Jewish soldiers, foregrounds an important trend in Holocaust historiography: the understudied and underappreciated role of post–World War II reparations organizations in excavating, aggregating, and indemnifying individual victims and survivors of Nazi-era camps of every variety, even outside Europe.5Blessing of the Bled: Rural Moroccan Jewry During World War II  Aomar Boum and Mohammed Hatimi chapter abstractThis chapter highlights aspects of Jewish-Muslim relations during World War II in the pre-Saharan region of rural Morocco, also known as the bled. Before it assumed a strategic military significance for the French colonial administration, this region had long been a liminal space of interaction and communal encounters between Jewish and Muslim communities, between Arabs and Berbers, and also between sedentary populations and Bedouin. The case discussed in this chapter demonstrates how, against this background, the unremitting onslaught of droughts, famine, and disease negatively affected these relations, especially during the early 1940s. Despite such setbacks, relations between Jews and Muslims remained positive. The real economic impact of the war on Jewish-Muslim relations was felt most dramatically in the postwar years, as Jewish families began to leave the rural bled for coastal cities.6 la recherche de Vichy: The Commissariat Général aux Questions Juives and the Implementation of the Statut des Juifs in Tunisia  Daniel Lee chapter abstractThis chapter reinserts Vichy into the story of Tunisian Jewry during World War II. It analyzes the position in the Tunisian protectorate of the Commissariat Général aux Questions Juives (CGQJ), created in March 1941 and led by the notorious anti-Semite Xavier Vallat. By late 1942, the CGQJ's attempts to implement Vichy's racial laws were not as successful as Vallat had initially hoped. Yet the CGQJ's mediocre results had profound implications for understanding some of the larger issues. A closer examination of the intricacies of the failed CGQJ project on the ground reveals the ambiguities of the French colonial order as it coexisted with and was bolstered by the new Vichy regime.It allows for an understanding of why at some moments between 1940 and 1942 anti-Semitic legislation was implemented and experienced so intensely in Tunisia, whereas at other times it was able to pass almost unnoticed.7Eyewitness Djelfa: Daily Life in a Saharan Vichy Labor Camp  Aomar Boum chapter abstractUsing the memoir and literary works of Max Aub, a Mexican-Spanish Jew and a survivor of the camp of Djelfa, this chapter sheds light on Vichy camps in North Africa through the example of Djelfa. It addresses the functions and bureaucratic management of camps and the prisoners' relations and daily lives in them. It analyzes the movement of internees between French labor and internment camps in French North African colonies and their connections to camps on the French mainland. The chapter contends that the collective experience of the camp by Jews and non-Jews is essential to our understanding and reevaluation of the war period in the daily lives of the internees. North African camps exemplify a different model of internment; captives had a margin of hope of survival, despite the harsh topography of the desert and environmental conditions that restricted their movements in and out of the camp.8The Ethics and Aesthetics of Restraint: Judeo-Tunisian Narratives of Occupation  Lia Brozgal chapter abstractThis essay is concerned with recuperating a little-known corpus of primary materials: a handful of chronicles by Tunisian Jews documenting the Nazi occupation of November 1942–May 1943, nearly all of which were written in French and published in Tunisia between 1943 and 1946. Like the events they describe, the chronicles have registered only faintly in specialized scholarship on World War II and the Holocaust and hardly at all in the realm of general knowledge. The significance of the chronicles resides not only in the stories they tell but in their strategies of representation, which have influenced the broader construction of this historical episode. Through historicized close reading of the accounts, this essay explores how the works' poetics—their tropes, narrative techniques, and discursive strategies—shape their production of historical evidence and our interpretation of the events they represent.9Fissures and Fusions: Moroccan Jewish Communists and World War II  Alma Heckman chapter abstractThe World War II years were pivotal for Moroccan Jews and for global communism. The war years represented a watershed moment in several preexisting political trends for Moroccan Jews: communism, Zionism, and Gallicism. Although these political ideologies were fluid during the interwar period, the fissures between these three trajectories hardened during the Vichy period (1940–1942 in Morocco). Moroccan Jewish communists ultimately became marginalized in World War II narratives, Morocco's national liberation movement, and global communist narratives. Through the life and works of Moroccan Jewish novelist and former Moroccan Communist Party leader Edmond Amran El Maleh, this chapter addresses Jewish engagement in the Moroccan Communist Party through the crucible of the Vichy years. El Maleh's work, contextualized within the broader political landscape of Jews and Moroccan politics, contributes to a richer regional understanding of the period, rehabilitating the margins of the margins into a new "standard" narrative.10Recentering the Holocaust (Again)  Omer Bartov chapter abstractThis commentary meditates on the place of North Africa in Holocaust history and historiography and on the extent to which the study of the Holocaust and North Africa has been ignored.11Paradigms and Differences  Susan Rubin Suleiman chapter abstractThis commentary meditates on the place of North Africa in Holocaust history and historiography and on the extent to which the study of the Holocaust and North Africa has been ignored.12Sephardim and Holocaust Historiography  Susan Gilson Miller chapter abstractThis commentary meditates on the place of North Africa in Holocaust history and historiography and on the extent to which the study of the Holocaust and North Africa has been ignored.13Stages in Jewish Historiography and Collective Memory  Haim Saadoun chapter abstractThis commentary meditates on the place of North Africa in Holocaust history and historiography and on the extent to which the study of the Holocaust and North Africa has been ignored.14A Memory That Is Not One  Michael Rothberg chapter abstractThis commentary meditates on the place of North Africa in Holocaust history and historiography and on the extent to which the study of the Holocaust and North Africa has been ignored.15Holocaust and North Africa  Todd Presner chapter abstractThis commentary meditates on the place of North Africa in Holocaust history and historiography and on the extent to which the study of the Holocaust and North Africa has been ignored.

Erscheint lt. Verlag 6.11.2018
Zusatzinfo 9 halftones, 1 table, 4 maps
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Sachbuch/Ratgeber Freizeit / Hobby Sammeln / Sammlerkataloge
Geschichte Allgemeine Geschichte 1918 bis 1945
Geisteswissenschaften Geschichte Regional- / Ländergeschichte
Geschichte Teilgebiete der Geschichte Kulturgeschichte
Schlagworte Colonialism • Fascism • Holocaust • Jews • Nazi Germany • North Africa • Occupation • slave labor • Vichy France • World War II
ISBN-10 1-5036-0706-2 / 1503607062
ISBN-13 978-1-5036-0706-4 / 9781503607064
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