Hungarian Jewish
Forced Laborers on the Eastern Front during the Second World War
Robert Rozett
From the spring of 1942
until the summer of 1944, some 45,000 Jewish men were forced to accompany
Hungarian troops to the battle zone of the Former Soviet Union. The Hungarian
authorities considered these men unworthy of bearing weapons, yet they demanded
they take part fully in the “blood sacrifice” that was the war against Stalin
and his forces. Some 80% of the Jewish forced laborers never returned home.
They fell prey to battle, starvation, disease, and grinding labor, aggravated
immensely by brutality and even outright murder at the hands of the Hungarian
soldiers responsible for them. This study tells the story of these
modern-day slaves – a story that is integral to understanding the destruction
of Hungarian Jewry in the Holocaust.
The Report of the
Budapest Jewish Rescue Committee 1942–1945
By Rezső Kasztner
Editors: László Karsai
& Judit Molnár
Rezső Kasztner was one
of the most controversial figures to emerge from war torn Europe and the ashes
of the Shoah. A leader of the Budapest Jewish Rescue Committee, during the last
year of the war in Europe, the Zionist Kasztner became the point man for
negotiations with the SS to save Hungarian Jewry. In Israel in the 1950s he was
vilified by some for having sold out his Jewish brethren and was saddled with
the blame for the suffering and murder of the lion’s share of Hungarian Jewry.
Kasztner was assassinated in Tel Aviv following a spectacular post-war libel
trial in which he had tried to defend his good name. Today scholarship sees him
in a different light and his Report, now published in English and with
scholarly footnotes for the first time, is one of the main reasons why.
To purchase your copy please email: publications.marketing@yadvashem.org.il
Other books by Yad Vashem Publications are available here: http://secure.yadvashem.org/store/
To purchase your copy please email: publications.marketing@yadvashem.org.il
Other books by Yad Vashem Publications are available here: http://secure.yadvashem.org/store/

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