The Minsk Ghetto: Soviet-Jewish Partisans Against the Nazis
by Hersh Smolar
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by meggyweg
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I profiled Hersh Smolar in a guest entry on the Executed Today blog.
What Marek Edelman's The Ghetto Fights was to the Warsaw Ghetto and Chaika Grossman's The Underground Army was to the Bialystok Ghetto, Hersh Smolar's book is to Minsk. Already in his mid-thirties by the time the war began, he was one of the principal leaders of the Jewish resistance in Minsk. This resistance movement has been unjustly neglected and it was really quite substantial, focusing not only on fighting the Nazis but also rescuing Jewish noncombatants such as children, old people, etc. Some 10,000 Minsk Jews were able to escape the ghetto into the nearby forests.
Smolar isn't writing about himself, but rather the movement in general, in a matter-of-fact tone with show more no flourishes. He concludes the book with some troubling stories about post-war Soviet anti-Semitism; even in the forests, anti-Semetic partisans sometimes shot their fellow Jewish fighters for no reason.
This might be good to read alongside books on the Bielski partisan group, which was also from Belarus; the Bielskis are mentioned in passing in Smolar's account. show less
What Marek Edelman's The Ghetto Fights was to the Warsaw Ghetto and Chaika Grossman's The Underground Army was to the Bialystok Ghetto, Hersh Smolar's book is to Minsk. Already in his mid-thirties by the time the war began, he was one of the principal leaders of the Jewish resistance in Minsk. This resistance movement has been unjustly neglected and it was really quite substantial, focusing not only on fighting the Nazis but also rescuing Jewish noncombatants such as children, old people, etc. Some 10,000 Minsk Jews were able to escape the ghetto into the nearby forests.
Smolar isn't writing about himself, but rather the movement in general, in a matter-of-fact tone with show more no flourishes. He concludes the book with some troubling stories about post-war Soviet anti-Semitism; even in the forests, anti-Semetic partisans sometimes shot their fellow Jewish fighters for no reason.
This might be good to read alongside books on the Bielski partisan group, which was also from Belarus; the Bielskis are mentioned in passing in Smolar's account. show less
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Common Knowledge
- First words
- After almost forty years I find myself writing again about the largest ghetto of "indigenous" Soviet Jews in Minsk, capital of the Byelorussian Republic, which was occupied by the Hitlerites in World War II.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)With love and nostalgia I think about the Jews there with whom I shared the road of prolonged suffering and desperate struggle.
Classifications
- Genres
- Nonfiction, History
- DDC/MDS
- 947.652 — History & geography History of Europe Eastern European Counties and Russia Moldova, Transnistria [Belarus now 947.8] [Western Russia now 947.3]
- LCC
- DS135 .R93 .M5913 — History of Europe, Asia, Africa and Oceania Asia History of Asia Israel (Palestine). The Jews Jews outside of Palestine
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