South Asia Citizens Wire - 10 March 2015 - No. 2849 
[since 1996]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

Contents:
1. No Amnesty for War Crimes - Landmark Judgement by Supreme Court of Nepal
2. Sri Lanka: Justice for War Victims, UN OHCHR Report and Politics of Tamil 
Nationalism
3. Bangladesh: editorials and commentary following the killing of the blogger 
Avijit Roy
4. Petition to Bangladeshi Government: Prosecute Islamists who Killed Avijit 
Roy and Protect Freethinkers
5. Pakistan: Healing our sectarian divide | Pervez Hoodbhoy
6. How does Pakistan today feel about its actions in 1971? | Salil Tripathi
7. Salil Tripathi: Where Assassins are Emboldened and Thoughts are Imprisoned
8. Pakistan - India: Joint Statement of the 4th Islamabad Dialogue | Jinnah 
Institute & Centre for Dialogue and Reconciliation
9. Bina Shah: Should White Women Make Documentaries about Rape in India? | Bina 
Shah
10. The Banning of the Film 'India's Daughter': No leg to stand on - N. Ram / 
Easiest Option is to ban things - Rajeev Dhavan
11. Is the film 'India's daughter' a victim of corporate media war ?
12. India: AIDWA strongly opposes the blanket ban on the documentary titled 
"India's Daughter"
13. India: What's This Din Over Leslee Udwin's Film on Rape in India ? - 
selected commentary & a statement
14. The Challenge of Unreason in South Asia | Subhash Gatade
15. India: Budget for the rich to get richer and throw crumbs to the poor - 
Statement by NTUI
16. Recent on Communalism Watch:
 - India: Assam government and the Centre to Bodo violence are mired in apathy 
(Suhas Chakma)
 - India: 'My father was dragged out of bus and beaten': Other face of NE 
racism (Rezaul Hasan Laskar)
 - India: Dimapur Lynching - Internet and SMS Banned, Curfew Lifted
 - India: Is Anand Patwardhan's Webiste Being Blocked ?
 - India: Patna maulana's say all talk of uniform civil code is an attack on 
freedom of religion
 - India: Mob justice? in Dimapur, Nagaland
 - India: Caste Panchayats Dispensing Justice Through Kangaroo Courts in 
Maharashtra
 - India: Teesta Setalvad and Gujarat riots - media has to be objective (Anil 
Dharker)
 - India: Vigilantism in Dimapur
 - India: Modi government mulls new education policy, including making Vedic 
Maths compulsory
 - India: Progressives and Muslim Right SDPI co-orgnising the founding 
conference of All India People's Forum (14-15 March 2015)
 - India: Photo of 8 March 2015 Delhi Demo and Rally at Jantar Mantar by 
Supporters of rape accused guru Asaram Bapu
 - India: Isn’t ‘illegal Bangladeshi’ Racist Shorthand for All Bengali Speaking 
Muslims in Assam? (Bonojit Hussain)
 - India's new Hindutva laden custodians take charge at ICHR
 - Feminists Rally on Women's Day 2015 in Delhi Provides a Platform to a 
representative of SDPI - The political arm of the Popular Front of India
 - India: Newsreport re Sadhvi Balika Saraswati's vile communal talk at the VHP 
convention in Karnataka
 - India: Latest move underway to harrass Teesta Setalvad - Modi govt's human 
resources development ministry set's up a new probe
 - Press Release by Kashmiri Pandit Sangharsh Samiti (6 March 2015)
 - The problem in RSS’ Hinduism (Kancha Ilaiah)
 - Indians praising Pakistan should be ‘hit with shoes': VHP’s Sadhvi
 - VHP, Bajrang Dal harass people by capturing cattle: Government
 - RSS Chief Mohan Bhagwat, Heal Thyself (Brinda Karat on NDTV)

::: FULL TEXT :::
17. Gary Shteyngart: What I learned from watching a week of Russian TV
18. Historical Preservation in Northwestern Russia after World War II | Susan 
Smith
19. Schmidt Hollander on Nicosia and Scrase, 'Jewish Life in Nazi Germany: 
Dilemmas and Responses'


=========================================
1. NO AMNESTY FOR WAR CRIMES - LANDMARK JUDGEMENT BY SUPREME COURT OF NEPAL
=========================================
Nepalese Supreme Court gave landmark judgement that serious crimes should not 
be the subject of Amnesty and declared ultra vires a several provisions of - 
Commission on Disappearance and Truth and Reconciliation Commission Act.
http://www.sacw.net/article10748.html

=========================================
2. SRI LANKA: JUSTICE FOR WAR VICTIMS, UN OHCHR REPORT AND POLITICS OF TAMIL 
NATIONALISM
=========================================
The UN Human Rights Commission's decision to investigate violations and the 
huge loss of life during the last months of the war concluded in 2009 was a 
significant victory for the victims. The dignity of the victims required that 
the truth must be told without fear or favour, and processes of justice and 
restoration set in motion. And the wrong was not all on one side. Dignity also 
demands that we await the verdict of the judges with restraint and reverence 
for the name of justice.
http://www.sacw.net/article10772.html

=========================================
3. BANGLADESH: EDITORIALS AND COMMENTARY FOLLOWING THE KILLING OF THE BLOGGER 
AVIJIT ROY
=========================================
Selected editorials and commentary in the Bangladesh media on the hacking to 
death of author and blogger Avijit Roy
http://www.sacw.net/article10736.html

=========================================
4. PETITION TO BANGLADESHI GOVERNMENT: PROSECUTE ISLAMISTS WHO KILLED AVIJIT 
ROY AND PROTECT FREETHINKERS
=========================================
We are outraged by the senseless and brutal hacking to death of well known 
scientist, atheist and writer Avijit Roy and the serious attack on his wife and 
blogger, Rafida Ahmed Bonya, by Islamists in Bangladesh.
http://www.sacw.net/article10739.html

=========================================
5. PAKISTAN: HEALING OUR SECTARIAN DIVIDE  | Pervez Hoodbhoy
=========================================
More razor wire, guards, and gun licences cannot assure the safety of Pakistani 
citizens. Whether Sunni, Shia, Christian, Hindu, or Ahmadi, they all live in 
fear. Real protection can come only by educating Pakistan’s upcoming 
generations that all faiths are entitled to equal respect, moving firmly and 
equally against all militant groups, and giving every Pakistani citizen exactly 
the same legal rights and privileges as any other.
http://www.sacw.net/article10761.html

=========================================
6. HOW DOES PAKISTAN TODAY FEEL ABOUT ITS ACTIONS IN 1971? | Salil Tripathi
=========================================
February 21 resonates with special meaning for Bangladeshis. That morning in 
1952, hundreds of students of what was then known as Dacca University, came to 
their campus to protest against restrictions placed on public assembly. The 
students were part of the movement that sought equal recognition for the 
language spoken most widely in East Bengal, and the mother-tongue of most — 
Bangla. Bangladesh was part of Pakistan then, and the national language was 
Urdu.
http://www.sacw.net/article10783.html

=========================================
7. SALIL TRIPATHI: WHERE ASSASSINS ARE EMBOLDENED AND THOUGHTS ARE IMPRISONED
=========================================
The ghastly murder of Avijit Roy on a road in Dhaka reveals just how dangerous 
it has become for writers to express themselves freely in Bangladesh. These 
attacks are outrageous, and the Bangladesh Government, particularly the present 
one which claims to be secular, should stand by the writers and protect their 
right to speak freely. Instead, it has adopted a policy of appeasement of 
‘religious sentiment.’ This comes alongside intimidation of the mainstream 
media that are critical of the government, including the leading national 
newspapers.
http://www.sacw.net/article10752.html

=========================================
8. PAKISTAN - INDIA: JOINT STATEMENT OF THE 4TH ISLAMABAD DIALOGUE | JINNAH 
INSTITUTE & CENTRE FOR DIALOGUE AND RECONCILIATION
=========================================
Senior diplomats, parliamentarians, policy-makers and journalists from Pakistan 
and India met for the fourth round of the Track-II Islamabad Dialogue to 
discuss the state of bilateral relations, ahead of the much anticipated meeting 
between the Foreign Secretaries of the two countries on March 3. The dialogue 
was organised by Jinnah Institute and the Centre for Dialogue and Reconciliation
http://www.sacw.net/article10747.html

=========================================
9. BINA SHAH: SHOULD WHITE WOMEN MAKE DOCUMENTARIES ABOUT RAPE IN INDIA? | Bina 
Shah
=========================================
On the one hand this could be an attempt by these women to reassert control 
over the Indian conversation about rape and women's rights, feeling that 
British filmmaker Leslee Udwin has taken it away from them with this film. 
That's understandable, from an intersectional viewpoint, and also an 
anti-imperialist one. I can see the argument that a white woman has swooped in 
and made statements about India – “a sick culture” – that Indian feminists 
would find insulting. Yet it's not hard to see that the sick culture Udwin 
refers to is the rape culture that is actually sick and diseased. Should an 
Indian woman have made this documentary? Perhaps. Was it wrong for a British 
woman to do so? I don't think so.
http://www.sacw.net/article10781.html

=========================================
10. THE BANNING OF THE FILM 'INDIA'S DAUGHTER': NO LEG TO STAND ON - N. Ram / 
Easiest Option is to ban things - Rajeev Dhavan
=========================================
India's Daughter is a powerful and sensitive documentary that is part of a 
global campaign against rape, violence against women, and gender inequality. It 
explores the life and dreams of an extraordinary young woman, brutally ended. 
The tension between her story and the outrageously reactionary social attitudes 
expressed on camera gives the documentary its power. The government's ban has 
no leg, social, moral, or legal, to stand on.
http://www.sacw.net/article10784.html

=========================================
11. IS THE FILM 'INDIA'S DAUGHTER' A VICTIM OF CORPORATE MEDIA WAR ? | Vidya 
Bhushan Rawat
=========================================
A few days ago our finance minister and the legal brain of the current 
government Mr Arun Jaitley spoke in a conference and said that ‘you can not ban 
anything in the current age of information'. ‘How can any government ban any 
thing when the flow of information is so far and vast he said'. It is not more 
than a month when the government was seen hiding itself in the war cries of 
nationalism and arrogance of ‘we will see' and ‘India's reputation is being 
targeted'.
http://www.sacw.net/article10775.html

=========================================
12. INDIA: AIDWA STRONGLY OPPOSES THE BLANKET BAN ON THE DOCUMENTARY TITLED 
"INDIA'S DAUGHTER"
=========================================
All India Democratic Women's Association (AIDWA) strongly opposes the blanket 
ban on the documentary titled “India's Daughter” made by BBC 4. This is a knee 
jerk reaction that constitutes an attack on the freedom of expression. 
Furthermore the film reveals the reality of the brutality of rape without 
sensationalizing it.
http://www.sacw.net/article10770.html

=========================================
13. INDIA: WHAT'S THIS DIN OVER LESLEE UDWIN'S FILM ON RAPE IN INDIA ? - 
SELECTED COMMENTARY & A STATEMENT
=========================================
Article by Anna MM Vetticad, Sanjay Hegde and a review by Sonia Faleiro of 
Leslee Udwin's Film on Rape in India there is also the statement by the Editors 
Guild of India opposing any ban on the film.
http://www.sacw.net/article10768.html

=========================================
14. THE CHALLENGE OF UNREASON IN SOUTH ASIA | Subhash Gatade
=========================================
Words, ideas scare fundoos rather fundamentalists of every kind, every colour 
and every stripe.
http://www.sacw.net/article10762.html

=========================================
15. INDIA: BUDGET FOR THE RICH TO GET RICHER AND THROW CRUMBS TO THE POOR - 
STATEMENT BY NTUI
=========================================
The government’s promise of ‘poverty elimination’ comes with an 
across-the-board reduction in government expenditure on social protection and 
social security. The funds allocated for the MGNREGA are frozen at Rs. 34,000 
crores and have for the first time come to below 2 percent of government 
expenditure. Expenditure on health, education, women and child development, 
both rural and urban housing, drinking water and sanitation, and welfare of 
SCs, STs and minorities all taken together have faced cuts amounting to 1 
percent of the total budgeted expenditure or nearly Rs. 10,000 crores.
http://www.sacw.net/article10746.html

=========================================
16. RECENT ON COMMUNALISM WATCH:
=========================================
available at: http://communalism.blogspot.in/
 - India: Assam government and the Centre to Bodo violence are mired in apathy 
(Suhas Chakma)
 - India: 'My father was dragged out of bus and beaten': Other face of NE 
racism (Rezaul Hasan Laskar)
 - India: Dimapur Lynching - Internet and SMS Banned, Curfew Lifted
 - India: Is Anand Patwardhan's Webiste Being Blocked ?
 - India: Patna maulana's say all talk of uniform civil code is an attack on 
freedom of religion
 - India: Mob justice? in Dimapur, Nagaland
 - India: Caste Panchayats Dispensing Justice Through Kangaroo Courts in 
Maharashtra
 - India - Delhi: churches, gurdwaras and temples stand in the path of 
signal-free corridor
 - India: Teesta Setalvad and Gujarat riots - media has to be objective (Anil 
Dharker)
 - India: Vigilantism in Dimapur
 - India: Modi government mulls new education policy, including making Vedic 
Maths compulsory
 - India: Progressives and Muslim Right SDPI co-orgnising the founding 
conference of All India People's Forum (14-15 March 2015)
 - India: Photo of 8 March 2015 Delhi Demo and Rally at Jantar Mantar by 
Supporters of rape accused guru Asaram Bapu
 - India: Isn’t ‘illegal Bangladeshi’ Racist Shorthand for All Bengali Speaking 
Muslims in Assam? (Bonojit Hussain)
 - India's new Hindutva laden custodians take charge at ICHR
 - Feminists Rally on Women's Day 2015 in Delhi Provides a Platform to a 
representative of SDPI - The political arm of the Popular Front of India
 -  Seminar Announcment: Trilokpuri to Trilokpuri: 30 years of Targeted 
Communal Violence, 9-10 March, IIC, New Delhi
 - India: Newsreport re Sadhvi Balika Saraswati's vile communal talk at the VHP 
convention in Karnataka
 - India - Maharashtra govt scraps Muslim quota
 - India: Latest move underway to harrass Teesta Setalvad - Modi govt's human 
resources development ministry set's up a new probe
 - Press Release by Kashmiri Pandit Sangharsh Samiti (6 March 2015)
 - The problem in RSS’ Hinduism (Kancha Ilaiah)
 - Indians praising Pakistan should be ‘hit with shoes': VHP’s Sadhvi
 - VHP, Bajrang Dal harass people by capturing cattle: Government
 - RSS Chief Mohan Bhagwat, Heal Thyself (Brinda Karat on NDTV) 

and More ...
available at: http://communalism.blogspot.in/

::: FULL TEXT :::
=========================================
17. ‘OUT OF MY MOUTH COMES UNIMPEACHABLE MANLY TRUTH’
GARY SHTEYNGART: WHAT I LEARNED FROM WATCHING A WEEK OF RUSSIAN TV
=========================================
(Magazine, The New York Times, February 18, 2015)

On a cold, sunny New Year’s Eve in 2014, I am sitting at the edge of my 
king-size bed at the Four Seasons hotel in New York, munching through a stack 
of Wagyu beef slices and demolishing a bottle of pinot noir while watching a 
woman play a man playing a bearded woman on Russian state television. Standing 
on a stage lit by gleaming chandeliers before an audience of Russia’s elite 
celebrities, the parodist Elena Vorobei sings to the tune of Gloria Gaynor’s “I 
Will Survive,” in a crude impersonation of Conchita Wurst, the Austrian drag 
queen who won the 2014 Eurovision song contest. Vorobei is dressed in a 
sparkling gown, winking cheekily, scratching at her bearded face and swishing 
her lustrous wig around. “I have a beard!” she belts. At one point she throws 
out a Hitler salute, a gesture that’s meant to evoke Austria, Conchita’s 
homeland. The camera pans the laughing audience, cutting for a moment to a 
well-known actor-singer-writer-bodybuilder and then to one of the show’s M.C.s, 
Russia’s pop king, the also-bearded Philipp Kirkorov (widely assumed to be 
gay). The men, who are almost all tanned, in sharply cut suits, grin with 
unconstrained glee. The bejeweled women wear tight, knowing smiles. Everyone 
sways and claps.

Viewers in Yekaterinburg
wolfing down their morning
kasha are given a rundown
of the crimes committed
by the British royal family.

With the exception of fishing, soccer and the Orthodox Church, few things are 
taken more seriously in Russia than Eurovision. Indeed, much of the sequined 
musical fare on Russian television looks like an endless Eurovision rehearsal. 
When Conchita won, back in May, Vladimir Zhirinovsky, an ultranationalist in 
Russia’s Parliament who is roughly equivalent to Michele Bachmann, said her 
victory meant “the end of Europe.” The deputy prime minister and the Orthodox 
Church issued statements essentially denouncing the collapse of Christian 
civilization as we know it. On tonight’s show, broadcast to millions of 
Russians, the message is clear: Europe may have rejected homophobia, a value it 
once shared with Russia, by giving a musical prize to a drag queen, but Russia, 
like Gloria Gaynor herself, will survive, never to succumb to the rest of the 
world’s wimpy notions of tolerance. A country where gangs of vigilantes who 
call their cause “Occupy Pedophilia” attack gay men and women on the streets of 
its major cities will now carry the mantle of the European Christian project.

“I love you, Russia,” the bearded singer intones in English at the end of her 
number. “Russia, I’m yours,” she adds in Russian.

Seven more days of this, I think, as I crawl over to the minibar.

You might be wondering why I left my home and family and started watching 
Russian drag-queen parodies. I am the subject of an experiment. For the next 
week, I will subsist almost entirely on a diet of state-controlled Russian 
television, piped in from three Apple laptops onto three 55-inch Samsung 
monitors in a room at the Four Seasons Hotel in Manhattan. (If I have to imbibe 
the TV diet of the common Russian man, I will at least live in the style of one 
of his overlords.) Two of the monitors are perched directly in front of my bed, 
with just enough space for a room-service cart to squeeze in, and the third 
hangs from a wall to my right. The setup looks like the trading floor of a very 
small hedge fund or the mission control of a poor nation’s space program. But I 
will not be monitoring an astronaut’s progress through the void. In a sense, I 
am the one leaving the planet behind.

Continue reading the main story
I will stay put in my 600-square-foot luxury cage, except for a few reprieves, 
and will watch TV during all my waking hours. I can entertain visitors, as long 
as the machines stay on. Each morning I will be allowed a walk to the New York 
Health & Racquet Club on West 56th Street for a long swim. Vladimir Putin 
reportedly takes a two-hour swim every morning to clear his head and plot the 
affairs of state. Without annexing Connecticut or trying to defend a collapsing 
currency, I will be just like him, minus the famous nude torso on horseback.

Ninety percent of Russians, according to the Levada Center, an independent 
research firm, get their news primarily from television. Middle-aged and older 
people who were formed by the Soviet system and those who live outside Moscow 
and St. Petersburg are particularly devoted TV watchers. Two of the main 
channels — Channel 1 and Rossiya 1 — are state-owned. The third, NTV, is 
nominally independent but is controlled by Gazprom-Media, a subsidiary of the 
giant energy company that is all but a government ministry. Executives from all 
three companies regularly meet with Kremlin officials.

Each channel has a slightly different personality. Channel 1 was the Soviet 
Union’s original channel, which beamed happy farm reports and hockey victories 
at my parents and grandparents. It features lots of film classics and a raucous 
health show whose title can be roughly translated as “Being Alive Is Swell!” 
Rossiya 1 is perhaps best known for a show called “News of the Week,” featuring 
a Kremlin propagandist, Dmitry Kiselev, who once implicitly threatened to bomb 
the United States into a pile of “radioactive ash.” (Sadly, for me, Kiselev is 
taking this week off from ranting.) NTV is more happy-go-lucky, blasting 
noirish crime thrillers and comedy shows, like a “Saturday Night Live” rip-off 
shamelessly titled “Saturday. Night. Show.” But during regular breaks for the 
news, the three networks are indistinguishable in their love of homeland and 
Putin and their disdain for what they see as the floundering, morally corrupt 
and increasingly lady-bearded West.

Here is the question I’m trying to answer: What will happen to me — an 
Americanized Russian-speaking novelist who emigrated from the Soviet Union as a 
child — if I let myself float into the television-filtered head space of my 
former countrymen? Will I learn to love Putin as 85 percent of Russians profess 
to do? Will I dash to the Russian consulate on East 91st Street and ask for my 
citizenship back? Will I leave New York behind and move to Crimea, which, as of 
this year, Putin’s troops have reoccupied, claiming it has belonged to Russia 
practically since the days of the Old Testament? Or will I simply go insane?

A friend of mine in St. Petersburg, a man in his 30s who, like many his age, 
avoids state-controlled TV and goes straight to alternative news sources on the 
Internet, warns me in an email: “Your task may prove harmful to your psyche and 
your health in general. Russian TV, especially the news, is a biohazard.” I’ll 
be fine, I think. Russians have survived far worse than this. But, just in 
case, I have packed a full complement of anti-anxiety, sleep and pain 
medication.

Continue reading the main story
DAY 1

I glance from monitor to monitor, muting the volume on Channel 1, pumping it up 
on Rossiya 1, lowering it two bars on NTV. On one channel, Asiatic dwarves are 
shooting confetti at one another. Another screen shows a musical number 
performed by cadres of athletic dancers celebrating the 33 medals Russia won at 
the Sochi Olympics. Each line is met with the English refrain “Oh, yeah!” 
Another channel has two men dressed as giant bears, break dancing.

Russian TV has lovingly preserved all eras of American and European pop 
culture, and it recombines them endlessly, the more nonsensically, the better. 
Two frosted-haired individuals — a small bearded man and a middle-aged giantess 
— belt out a cover of the 1989 Roxette hit “The Look.” On another monitor, the 
famed Tatar crooner Renat Ibragimov, a dapper elderly man, performs a rousing 
version of Tom Jones’s 1960s dark pop ballad “Delilah.” If Spinal Tap actually 
existed, it would be touring its heart out in Vladivostok right now. But no 
matter what the style of the music, the studio audience goes bananas with the 
clapping and cheering. I send a few clips to my friend Mark Butler, who teaches 
music theory and cognition at Northwestern University, to help me understand 
the Russian style of enthusiasm. “The audience is not clapping solely on two 
and four, as listeners versed in rock do,” he writes back. “Nor are they 
‘one-three clappers’ (the stereotype of people who don't get rock rhythm). 
Instead, they are clapping on every beat.”

I remember all this clapping from my early teenage years, at bar and bat 
mitzvahs in the Russian nightclubs of Queens and Brooklyn, and my constant need 
to slink away from the applause so I could be shy and alone in the parking lot. 
The happiest applause, in my memory anyway, belonged to my grandmother and her 
generation, who seemed amazed to still be walking the earth and to be doing so 
in the relative wonderland of Rego Park, Queens.

Slightly drunk off a frisky Clos Du Val pinot noir, which I’ve been sipping 
along with another helping of Wagyu, I can’t help myself. I begin clapping too, 
mouthing the lyrics “Forgif me, Deelaila, I jas’ kudn take anymorr.” In my high 
spirits, I take an affectionate look at my surroundings. The Four Seasons is a 
fine choice of hotel for my task. The lobby is filled with Russians, trendy 
grandmas sparkling from head to toe in Louis Vuitton and Chanel, guiding their 
equally gilded granddaughters past an enormous Christmas tree. The view from my 
room faces the nearly completed 432 Park Avenue, a 96-story luxury condominium 
building, which will be one of the tallest habitable towers in Manhattan 
(apartments start at nearly $17 million). If I had checked in for New Year’s 
Eve 2015, by which time 432 Park Avenue is expected to be complete, some of the 
tenants staring back at me would very likely belong to the class of Russian 
oligarchs who have helped transform the real estate in London, and now in New 
York, into the priciest on earth.

On NTV’s New Year’s extravaganza, the talk among the presenters turns to 
politics. The end of the year, after all, is a time to take stock, and 
stock-taking, whether at the kitchen table or the bathhouse or upon waking up 
after a night of drinking on some icy railroad platform far from home, is a 
national tradition. Russia is a country blessed but mostly cursed to endure 
years of civil war, global upheaval and dissolution of empire so transformative 
that other countries would have just given up and called it a day: 1917, 1941 
and 1991 come to mind as moments when the very nature of Russia changed. In 
2014, Russia changed again, or rather, Putin has taken a more definitive turn 
in his increasingly aggressive, anti-Western style of politics. He has become a 
conqueror, like the Russian czars he sometimes invokes with pseudomystical 
reverence in his speeches. In 2014, he concentrated his neo-imperial ambitions 
on Crimea, a sunny peninsula jutting into the Black Sea.

The year wasn’t supposed to end the way it did. The Sochi Olympics, perhaps the 
most corrupt in Winter Olympic history, were designed to present Russia as a 
nation that could compete with the West on its own terms, a nation that could 
mount an expensive pyrotechnical display while celebrating literary heroes like 
Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky, Chekhov and Nabokov. The fact that in 2013 a museum 
dedicated to Nabokov’s work in St. Petersburg was spray-painted with the word 
“pedophile” by the same sort of people who revile Conchita was not mentioned.

In February, a pro-European revolution swept the Ukrainian president, Viktor 
Yanukovych, a strong ally of Putin’s, from power in Kiev, replacing him with 
Petro Poroshenko. With Ukraine slipping from the Kremlin’s orbit, Putin sent 
Russian troops to occupy and later annex Ukrainian Crimea. Putin has said that 
Crimea is as important for the Russian people as the Temple Mount is for the 
Jews and Muslims, an opinion that should offend Russians, Jews and Muslims 
alike. For most people born in the U.S.S.R., myself included, the word Crimea 
evokes memories of summer vacations gorging on pelmeni (a species of dumpling) 
and getting reacquainted with the sun in decaying hotels and private huts. 
Think of it as a shabbier Fort Lauderdale with the occasional Chekhov statue. 
In any case, the loss of Crimea, with its majority-speaking Russian population, 
has been one of the most acutely felt wounds of the dissolution of the Soviet 
Union — having Crimea fall outside of Russia’s borders was like cutting off a 
piece of the Floridian peninsula below Jacksonville — and its reconquest has 
elevated Putin’s standing far above that of any Russian leader in perhaps a 
century. But that proved not to be enough for him.

The imposition of Western sanctions against Russian officials after Crimea’s 
annexation dealt but a glancing blow to the Russian economy. Putin’s next move, 
his support of pro-Russian rebels in Ukraine’s industrialized Donbass region, 
led to a war that the United Nations estimates has displaced a million people 
and resulted in more than 5,000 deaths, and further sanctions from the West. 
(As of this writing, a cease-fire has been brokered, but it is fragile and may 
not last.) But it is the collapse of the price of oil, Russia’s main export 
commodity, that has weakened the regime. As the price of a barrel of Brent 
crude and the value of the ruble go down, the tenor of propaganda on Russian 
television goes up.

The presenters of a Pan-Slavic Russian-Ukrainian-Belorussian concert are 
rattling off a list of Russian pop stars no longer allowed into Ukraine after 
Putin’s invasion of Crimea. “We don’t have such blacklists,” the M.C. says. “We 
wish all people love and friendship without any boycotts.”

Photo
Shteyngart dining on Wagyu beef during his captivity at the Four Seasons. 
Credit Sasha Rudensky for The New York Times
“They” — meaning Ukraine and the West; according to the Russian media, NATO and 
the C.I.A. have all but taken over Ukraine’s government, so it’s hard to resist 
conflating the two — “have oppressed our artists!” another singer says.

“They’re not allowing us to have our own point of view.”

“How can one not love one’s own president? That’s our point of view.”

“On our stage, there are no borders.”

The presenters sound genuinely hurt, and they are speaking for much of their 
television audience when they complain about the West’s cold shoulder. This is 
geopolitics as middle-school homeroom. Like an ambitious tween who longs for 
social success, Russia wants to be both noticed and respected. The invasion of 
Crimea and the bloody conflict in Eastern Ukraine got the world’s attention, 
but now the cool nations are no longer inviting Russia for unsupervised 
sleepovers, and the only kids still leaving notes on Russia’s locker are Kim 
Jong-un and Raúl Castro.

DAY 2

I miss Putin. He is on a TV sabbatical for most of this week, enjoying the 
11-day extended New Year’s holiday, swimming up a tsunami in his presidential 
pool, I’m sure. Putin’s face did show up on all three of my monitors around 
midnight, Moscow time, as he delivered his New Year’s address to the country. 
“Love of homeland is one of the most powerful, elevating feelings,” Putin 
declared, with his patented affectless-yet-deadly seriousness. The return of 
Crimea will become “one of the most important events in the history of the 
fatherland.”

For the rest of New Year’s Day, Russia falls into catatonic American-movie 
mode. The state-controlled networks hand themselves over to “Avatar,” “The 
Seven Year Itch” and “The Chronicles of Narnia.” Despite the bad blood with 
Obama, there is simply no way to fill out a day of programming without “Die 
Hard” or a David Blaine magic show. I enjoy a light snooze interrupted by 
further beef injections from room service.

The evening news on Rossiya 1 starts off with Ukraine. The anchors of the three 
networks are a clan of attractive, dead-eyed men and women. They speak in the 
same unshakable “out of my mouth comes unimpeachable manly truth” tone that 
Putin uses in his public addresses, sometimes mixing in a dollop of chilly 
sarcasm. Their patter has a hypnotic staccato quality, like a machine gun going 
off at regular intervals, often making it hard to remember that they are moving 
their mouths or inhaling and exhaling oxygen.

Putin’s popularity has mostly survived intact despite the ruble’s collapse and 
the gradual pauperization of his subjects. The media helps with a twofold 
strategy. First, the West and its sanctions are blamed for the economic 
situation. Second, the nascent Ukrainian democracy is portrayed as a movement 
of torch-wielding Nazi fascists under direct control of their Western masters. 
Few Russian families escaped unscathed from Hitler’s onslaught, and Nazi 
imagery, which remains stingingly potent, is invoked frequently and 
opportunistically, as a way of keeping historical wounds fresh.

Continue reading the main story
On today’s news, the so-called Ukrainian Nazi fascists are celebrating the 
fascistic life of the neo-Nazi Stepan Bandera with a torch-lit Hitlerite 
parade. Bandera is a complicated figure, a Ukrainian nationalist who flirted 
with the invading Germans during the Second World War but was ultimately 
imprisoned by them. Any march through Kiev by Ukraine’s Right Sector, a 
xenophobic, socially conservative right-wing movement that has more in common 
with Moscow’s current regime than either side would like to admit, is catnip to 
the newscasters. “Instead of celebrating New Year’s, they’re celebrating the 
fascist Stepan Bandera,” the reporter declares. “It looks like fascist ideology 
will be the basis of the Ukrainian state.”

The leader of Right Sector did run for president of Ukraine in the May 2014 
elections. He and his “fascist ideology” received 0.7 percent of the vote. 
Since the election of Poroshenko, who won by a majority, Ukraine is now easily 
the most democratic and pro-European republic in the former Soviet Union, 
excepting the Baltic States. It is, in fact, the anti-Russia. This, of course, 
drives Russia nuts.

DAY 3

I wake up feeling swollen. Movement is difficult, especially in my lower 
extremities. Probably just gout. The monitors are turned off at night, but the 
laptops are still whirling, the satellites still transmitting. I waddle over to 
my marble bathroom and look at my sleep-creased face.

There’s one small consolation in my day: crossing 57th street, moving through 
crowds of Russian, Asian and South American shoppers who are spending their way 
across New York, and finally dropping into the saltwater pool at the health 
club. I try to clear my mind of Russian TV, but the high-decibel pop soundtrack 
and the booming voices of the news anchors travel with me underwater, haunting 
my eardrums.

Back in my cage, the morning’s Catskill-smoked-salmon-and-egg-white sandwich 
arrives as I flick on the monitors, one showing the Red Army Choir singing its 
brains out, another with an advertisement for a 24-karat golden necklace for 
men that “doesn’t just show your material status but your good taste.” The 
thick, gleaming chain — chains, I should say; buy one, get one free — goes for 
1,490 rubles, about $45 at the start of 2014, but about $25 at the start of 
2015 as the ruble continued to plunge.

The news is pretty exciting today. Two reporters for LifeNews, a Russian 
channel that heavily supports the rebels in Ukraine and is rumored to have ties 
to Putin’s F.S.B. security service, had their camera smashed during a torch-lit 
parade through Kiev. “Anti-Russian feelings are approaching hysteria,” the 
reporter says.

I look at my watch. A full minute into the piece, and he hasn’t mentioned 
fascism, Nazism, neo-Nazism or the perfidy of the West.

“Torch-bearing parades are associated with Nazi Germany,” the reporter says.

Photo

Russian TV, Shteyngart writes, “dulls the senses and raises your ire.” Credit 
Sasha Rudensky for The New York Times
On the monitor tuned to NTV, I catch a comedy called “An Ideal Pair.” The 
programming notes describe the plot: “Zoya is a sportswoman with a male 
character. That’s why she has trouble with the stronger sex and everyone runs 
away from her.”

Continue reading the main story
I’m noticing a trend of movies about Russians in their mid-30s who are not yet 
married, a phenomenon confounding to most Russians who prefer to marry, have 
1.61 children and then divorce early in life (according to the United Nations, 
Russia consistently has one of the highest divorce rates). Like most Russian 
rom-coms, the movie seems overly long, wordy and ridiculously chaste. Even a 
mild kiss fades out before anything can happen under the sheets. It’s rare to 
find a society with a more contradictory approach to sex. A new conservatism, 
led by the Orthodox Church, is constantly at odds with whatever progressive 
notions the Soviet Union instilled. Abortion was pretty much the most common 
form of birth control: The efficacy of Soviet prophylactics left much to be 
desired. Today, you can barely find explicit sex in a commercial film like “An 
Ideal Pair,” but watching one of the dance numbers on television makes you want 
to reach for a body condom just to be safe.

I crack open another bottle of wine and settle back into the world I cannot 
leave, with the January wind whipping past my lonely skyscraper. On Channel 1, 
the scandal of the smashed camera in Kiev rages on. There are many close-ups of 
the injured camera lying in what looks like snow or confetti. Then it’s time 
for Macaulay Culkin in the original “Home Alone.”

DAY 4

I am crawling through the snow in Kiev searching for my cellphone, which has 
been stolen by the neo-Nazi fascists. I find it by a wall defaced by a giant 
swastika, its screen shattered by the torch-bearing Ukrainians. “Allo,” I say 
in Russian. “Someone please help me. It’s cold out here.” A dead-eyed anchor 
from Rossiya 1 appears on my FaceTime. “Torch-bearing parades are associated 
with Nazi Germany,” he declares. I wake up and trundle off to the bathroom, pop 
some benzos and crawl back into bed. I sleep maybe three hours total. When I’ve 
occasionally returned to Russia for visits, I’ve sometimes woken up in the 
middle of the night thinking, What if they closed the borders? What if I’m 
supposed to live out the rest of my life here? Even though I’m ensconced in a 
luxury pad in the very epicenter of Manhattan, a similar feeling disturbs my 
sleep.

Today, I’m a mess. My breast stroke at the club looks more tadpole than frog. 
Back in my sunlit chamber of horrors, Rossiya 1’s news is on a rampage. A 
35-car pile up in New Hampshire. No serious injuries, it seems, but clearly the 
West is falling apart. Things are even worse across the ocean. “An unpleasant 
New Year’s present for Prince Andrew,” a reporter says with a honed mixture of 
seriousness, sarcasm and glee. “Britain is shocked by a sex scandal between the 
prince and a minor who claims to have been held in ‘sexual slavery.’ ” Viewers 
in Yekaterinburg wolfing down their morning kasha are given a rundown of the 
crimes committed by the British royal family, from Prince Harry wearing a Nazi 
uniform to Princess Diana’s death “in mysterious circumstances.”

Continue reading the main story
Russians, on the other hand, are leading exemplary nonfascist lives. At the 
site of the Air Asia disaster, in the Java Sea, “Indonesian authorities are 
relying heavily on Russian divers and their equipment” to find and recover the 
doomed plane. In the northernmost reaches of Russia, we meet Aleksey 
Tryapitsyn, a “salt of the Earth” postman in a tiny village who somehow doesn’t 
smoke or drink and has been featured in a recent documentary, “The White Nights 
of the Postman Aleksey Tryapitsyn.” His wife is pretty salt-of-the-earth too. 
“I’m such an ordinary woman,” she says, “I know how to do everything: shoot a 
gun, catch ducks.”

The lessons for all Russians, especially spoiled Camembert-addicted Muscovites, 
are clear: In the difficult days to come, learn to shoot a gun, learn to catch 
ducks.

Today I have visitors: the Moscow-born writer Anya Ulinich and her friend Olga 
Gershenson, a professor at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. I order a 
meat plate from room service, and we settle in for lunch.

Last night, Anya found out that her cousin was killed in a small town not far 
from Donetsk, the Ukrainian city that has been a stronghold for pro-Russian 
fighters. “He was found dead in the lobby of his apartment building,” Anya 
tells me. “Nobody knows who killed him. There’s no police. It’s just anarchy.”

“I blame Putin roundly for this,” she says. “It used to be a normal town.”

She sighs. We glance from screen to screen. On NTV a man in a leather harness 
is dancing — well, practically having leather intercourse — with an equally 
leathered woman in front of two giant gilded statues of gladiators.

“That ballet is kind of cool,” Anya says.

“Yeah, it’s amazing,” Olga adds.

We watch for a while without saying another word.

DAY 5

My psychiatrist agrees to make a rare house call. We try to recreate the 
customary couch-and-psychiatrist’s-chair arrangement, except I’m in my 
king-size bed and he’s seated just to the right of me. The monitors are still 
on. On one, a Ukrainian drug dealer is caught in Moscow, and there are 
close-ups of his dastardly red Ukrainian passport. On another, two men are 
passed out on the grass, a spent vodka bottle between them. “There it is,” I 
say to my doctor. “Russia.”

I shut my eyes and think of what I mean by that.

“In my books, I’ve tried to understand my parents and what they went through in 
the Soviet Union,” I say. “Maybe this project is another way to get to know 
them. Times change, regimes change, but the television stays pretty much the 
same.

Photo

Shteyngart’s psychiatrist, Dr. Richard Lacy, holds a therapy session at the 
hotel. Credit Sasha Rudensky for The New York Times
“I don’t agree with my parents about politics in the States that much, but we 
do tend to agree on Putin. That’s true of a lot of Russian-born friends of 
mine. It’s weird, but Putin brings us together with our parents. It’s nice to 
know that there’s a source of cruelty in the world that we can identify 
together.

“Imagine if my parents had never taken me out of Russia. Where would I be now? 
All this” — I gesture to the three screens — “would be my permanent reality.”

Continue reading the main story
“You’re in a virtual childhood here,” my psychiatrist says. “These are 
regressive feelings.”

“Also, the televisions in the Soviet Union used to explode,” I say. “Sixty 
percent of the house fires in Moscow used to be caused by exploding televisions 
at one point.”

We’re silent for a bit, as happens often in the course of psychoanalysis.

Still, it’s good to talk.

DAY 6

Oh, the hell with it. I’m just going to start drinking after breakfast. And no 
more shaving or wearing clothes. The Four Seasons robe will do just fine. A 
woman with a Russian name on her tag rolls in my coffee and an H & H bagel with 
whitefish.

“Whitefish and not salmon?” She chastises me as if she were a Channel 1 
television anchor and I were Ukraine.

“I’ll get the salmon tomorrow,” I promise her.

I watch a Jerry Springer-style show called “Male/Female.” Today’s topic: 
Tatyana, a woman from the village of Bolsheorlovskoe, 300 miles from Moscow, 
wants to find out the paternity of her latest child. A DNA test is administered 
to scores of the village men, and there are shots of poor Tatyana’s bedraggled 
neighbors voicing their opinions of her.

“A whore is a whore.”

“You get drunk, come to her house and bang!”

The village itself looks as if it has been banged repeatedly by some coarse 
muzhik in an ill-fitting Chinese-made sweater. The dwellings are tiny holes 
with room for a refrigerator, television and a sprinkling of roaches.

There’s a panel of experts, including a lawyer, a psychologist, a painter and a 
poet with a velvet jacket and a luxuriant, poetic mustache, commenting on 
Tatyana’s problems. “All Russian couples should have children while sober,” the 
poet duly notes.

Tatyana herself speaks with a hoarse country warble and is missing many 
critical teeth. Still, she’s oddly beautiful, and unlike a similar apparition 
on Jerry Springer, she never fights back even as the hosts and audience 
humiliate her. She sits there stoically, like a fallen character out of 
Dostoyevsky. In her own way, she is a model citizen for Putin’s new Russia. She 
knows to keep her trap shut while being continuously shouted at by persons in 
authority.

The DNA results are presented, and none of the assembled sad sacks proves to be 
the father. Tomorrow, Channel 1 will air the second part of Tatyana’s story. 
More villagers will be brought in for their DNA tests. Tatyana will once again 
be told she’s a whore.

There’s no way I can watch the news anymore without at least two minibottles of 
the Absolut, which I wash down with a couple of beers. The monitors are 
blurring one into the next, and I’m having trouble following the proceedings. 
On one screen, a man with a gun is being inhumane to others, while on another a 
woman of cubic-zirconia-grade glitz is singing nonsense. I let myself dissolve 
into the nonsense and the menace, as if I were a man just returned from a day 
of hardship at the hands of thieving bosses and thieving traffic cops somewhere 
in Tomsk or Omsk. What a powerful weapon Putin’s television is. How skillfully 
it combines nostalgia, malice, paranoia and lazy humor; how swiftly it both 
dulls the senses and raises your ire.

I bury my face in a hypoallergenic pillow. I need another drink.

But instead of the Absolut, I decide to do something forbidden. I whip out my 
laptop and log on to the progressive news site www.slon.ru. (Slon means 
“elephant” in Russian.) My friends in St. Petersburg subsist on these 
analytical blogs and news sites, the Slates and Salons of Russia. Slon is one 
of the remaining few that has not been bent to the will of the regime. Two 
other favorites, Gazeta.ru (gazeta means “newspaper”) and Lenta.ru, have lost 
their impartiality.

The two main headlines on Slon are not about the decline of the euro versus the 
dollar. They are about the price of Brent crude oil falling below $57 a barrel. 
Another article concerns the opposition leader Alexey Navalny’s refusal to 
continue to live under house arrest (the activist and his brother were 
convicted of unsubstantiated charges for challenging the administration). 
Another article is titled “How the Regime Will Fall: A Possible Scenario.”

Tens of millions of Russians, mainly younger and urbane, use social media. I 
imagine at least a few of them are posting the article on “How the Regime Will 
Fall” on their timelines or tweeting it out with abandon.

DAY 7

Today is my lastday in virtual Russia. The Christmas tree in the Four Seasons 
lobby is being disassembled, the ornaments put into boxes labeled “American 
Christmas ‘We Make the Magic Happen.’ ” Upstairs in my room, Russian Christmas 
Eve — Orthodox Christmas is celebrated on Jan. 7 — is just beginning.

I watch the second part of the “Male/Female” exposé of Tatyana, the village 
temptress. Today on the panel of important people judging Tatyana, instead of a 
poet, there’s a “showman” or “performer,” with a Barbie doll stuck in the lapel 
of his studded jacket, his hair styled into a thick pompadour. A redheaded dude 
in a jacket bearing the single word “Russia” proves to be the father. “Yes! 
Yes! Yes!” Tatyana screams.

“I would castrate all of these men,” one of the program’s hosts says of the 
male villagers present in the studio.

Keith Gessen, the Moscow-born novelist and journalist, comes by. I have ordered 
a mortadella and Spanish jamón platter. “You’re like a Russian person who lives 
in luxury, but you have to imbibe this trash,” Keith says after examining the 
three monitors.

Keith follows Russian TV closely, and he has noted a shift in the last few 
years. “You’re watching the news, but the news is the news. Not from the 
information they’re giving you but from how they’re presenting the information. 
You feel like it’s a message being sent to you by the Kremlin.”

As the television drones on about the glory of Russia-backed rebels in Ukraine, 
he asks me if I’ve heard of the murder of Batman, an especially lawless rebel 
commander in the Donbass region in Eastern Ukraine.

“Apparently,” Keith tells me, “he was attacked and killed by Russian forces or 
other rebels because he was out of control.”

Continue reading the main storyContinue reading the main storyContinue reading 
the main story
I snap open my laptop and take a look at the uncensored Russian websites. 
Batman’s murder is top news. The New York Times has already posted an article 
about Batman’s demise. The only places where he’s not mentioned are Rossiya 1, 
NTV and Channel 1.

After Keith leaves, I focus on the Christmas service, currently reverberating 
live across two networks. There are blue-eyed women in kerchiefs, bearded 
priests in gold, gusts of incense. From the proceedings at the ornate Cathedral 
of Christ the Savior, we suddenly cut to a small, humble church in an equally 
small and humble town to the south of Moscow.

Dressed in a simple sweater, his gaze steady and direct, Vladimir Putin 
celebrates the holiday surrounded by several girls in white kerchiefs. In the 
solemn act of religious contemplation, Putin’s expression is as unknowable as 
ever. Here he is, the self-styled restorer of the nation. But who is he? We are 
briefly shown people in the back pews reaching upward, straining to snap a 
photo of him with their smartphones. We are told that children who are refugees 
from rebel-held Luhansk are staying on the grounds of the church. The Kremlin 
has given them “candy and historical books” for the holiday. Are the girls in 
white kerchiefs standing next to Putin the very same ones who had to flee the 
violence his regime has backed, if not itself unleashed, in Ukraine?

Putin stands there, the centerpiece of his tableau, a contented man. Therein 
lies the brilliance of Russian television and why watching a week of it has 
been so painful. Unless you’re a true believer, its endless din just reminds 
you of how alone you are in another man’s designs. That man is Vladimir 
Vladimirovich Putin. These are his channels, his shows, his dreams and his 
faith.

On my last visit to Moscow several years ago, a drunken cabdriver from a 
distant province drove me through the city, nearly weeping because, he said, he 
was unable to feed his family. “I want to emigrate to the States,” he said. “I 
can’t live like this.”

“You should try Canada,” I suggested to him. “Their immigration policies are 
very generous.”

He mock-spit on the floor, as he nearly careened into the sidewalk. “Canada? 
Never! I could only live in a superpower!”

It doesn’t matter that the true path of Russia leads from its oil fields 
directly to 432 Park Avenue. When you watch the Putin Show, you live in a 
superpower. You are a rebel in Ukraine bravely leveling the 
once-state-of-the-art Donetsk airport with Russian-supplied weaponry. You are a 
Russian-speaking grandmother standing by her destroyed home in Luhansk shouting 
at the fascist Nazis, much as her mother probably did when the Germans invaded 
more than 70 years ago. You are a priest sprinkling blessings on a photogenic 
convoy of Russian humanitarian aid headed for the front line. To suffer and to 
survive: This must be the meaning of being Russian. It was in the past and will 
be forever. This is the fantasy being served up each night on Channel 1, on 
Rossiya 1, on NTV.

A generation from now, Channel 1 news circa 2015 will seem as ridiculous as a 
Soviet documentary on grain procurement. Young people will wonder at just how 
much nonsense their parents lived through and how, despite it all, they still 
emerged as decent human beings. As for me, I am escaping from Russia once more. 
Three satisfying clicks of three Samsung remotes and my whole week fades to 
black.

Gary Shteyngart is the author of “Little Failure,” a memoir, and the novels 
“Super Sad True Love Story,” “Absurdistan” and “The Russian Debutante’s 
Handbook.”

A version of this article appears in print on February 22, 2015, on page MM118 
of the Sunday Magazine with the headline: ‘Out of My Mouth Comes Unimpeachable 
Manly Truth’.

=========================================
18. HISTORICAL PRESERVATION IN NORTHWESTERN RUSSIA AFTER WORLD WAR II
by Susan Smith
=========================================
(Dissertation Reviews, March 2, 2015)   

A review of The Material Culture of Stalinism, The City of Novgorod, Urban 
Reconstruction, and Historic Preservation in the Soviet Union After World War 
II (1943-1955), by Marina Dobronovskaya.

Marina Dobronovskaya’s dissertation is an examination, rich in archival 
sources, of Soviet urban planning and historic restoration ideas, policies, and 
bureaucracies in the pre- and immediate postwar periods, particularly as 
relating to the historically important city of Novgorod. Among the strengths of 
this dissertation, two are worth noting immediately. The first is that this 
work is multi-disciplinary as is appropriate for a dissertation in Preservation 
Studies: it combines the study of urban planning with architectural, political, 
economic, and cultural history. The second is the comparison of these themes as 
they developed in Soviet Russia to developments in a broader European context.

The dissertation includes an introduction and conclusion, six body chapters 
organized thematically and chronologically, and nearly sixty images. The 
introduction makes clear the scale of destruction during World War II and the 
resulting importance of reconstruction throughout Europe, but particularly in 
the Soviet Union where “close to seventy-five percent of urban and rural 
settlements lay in ruins and 25,000,000 people were left homeless” (p. 1). 
Novgorod had not been an economically important city but it was historically 
important and had become a symbol of Russian resistance during the war when 
Russian nationalism’s propaganda value became essential and even Orthodox 
practice was allowed. As such, Novgorod, an early Russian city with ties to 
important historic figures such as the warrior-prince Alexander Nevskii, serves 
Dobronovskaya as a case study of “historic preservation planning within the 
broader context of urban planning; [of] how the needs of preservation and 
reconstruction of architectural monuments affected, and were affected by, 
policies of urban reconstruction and development after World War II” (p. 7). 
The study ends in roughly 1955, by which time, according to Dobronovskaya and 
the historiography of European postwar rebuilding, planners and architects had 
become less concerned with reconstruction and more concerned with moving away 
from planning and building that responded directly to the destruction of the 
war.

In addition to laying out the dissertation, the introduction provides an 
overview of this historiography for both Western and Eastern Europe, and 
argues, correctly, that the work is a step towards addressing the dearth of 
studies on preservation in the Soviet Union and the scarcity of 
English-language works on the history of Soviet urban planning. (Karl Qualls, 
one of the few authors to address such issues, served on Dobronovskaya’s 
committee.) Dobronovskaya also notes the recent work of Andreas Schönle on 
Russian imperial perceptions of ruins and Steven Maddox’s study of the shift 
from revolutionary iconoclasm to the rehabilitation of the pre-revolutionary 
past, as well as the work of postwar geographers on urbanization and housing. 
She argues that, regarding the broad picture of historic preservation in 
Russia, “there exists only one fundamental and reliable study,” which was 
edited by Aleksei Shchenkov and published in 2004. Her work is also meant to 
complement scholarship on other aspects of postwar urban life, such as the work 
of Donald Filtzer, Elena Zubkova, and Elena Trubina. Finally, it is worth 
mentioning that several of the most important studies upon which she modeled 
her work are themselves comparative across cities. These include the essay 
collections Remembering, Forgetting and City Builders (Farnham: Ashgate, 2010) 
and Three Postwar Eras in Comparison: Western Europe, 1918-1945-1989 
(Houndmills, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2002), and the work of Nick 
Tiratsoo on English reconstruction and of Jeffry Diefendorf on German 
reconstruction, as well as Anders Åman’s monograph, Architecture and Ideology 
in Eastern Europe during the Stalin Era: An Aspect of Cold War History 
(Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1992).

Chapter One, “Soviet Urban Planning and Historic Preservation in the European 
Context,” argues that the related modernist movements such as the International 
style and Constructivism, so important in the 1920s, started to give way in 
Soviet Russia in May 1930 when the Central Committee of the Communist Party 
first intervened in architectural and urban planning discussions. The Soviet 
Union was not the only country to turn in the 1930s towards a “totalitarian” 
style, which made selective use of the trends of the war and early interwar 
periods, however. So,

   [d]espite the revolutionary isolation of the Soviet Union prior to 1946, 
architecture and urban planning there developed within the mainstream of 
European trends. After the war, while Soviet practice followed and extended 
these same trends, practice and ideology in other countries, especially the 
defeated “totalitarian” states shifted dramatically. From this perspective, 
Soviet post-war urban planning can be seen as conservative rather than 
revolutionary. Soviet victory in the war served to legitimate the monumentalism 
of the totalitarian style of urban planning and architecture from before the 
war, even while practice and theory in the defeated areas of Europe took 
different directions in accordance with the establishment of new, more 
democratic, systems of government (p. 50).

For those of us less familiar with the developments in these fields, 
architectural drawings and urban plans provide important visual clarifications 
of the ideas and styles under discussion during the interwar period and the 
continuities and discontinuities between the avant-garde and Socialist Realist 
work.

The first chapter concludes by providing the reader with a sense of the scale 
of the destruction throughout Europe that led governments to take the lead in 
reconstruction after war. Priorities and approaches were different in different 
countries, however, with Western European states supporting local governments 
and planning and encouraging residents’ participation in related discussions, 
and, perhaps unsurprisingly, focusing on housing needs. In the developing 
socialist bloc, the central governments played much larger roles. In the Soviet 
Union in particular, the unparalleled destruction led to not only bureaucratic 
changes, but also to a focus on industrial needs rather than on housing, the 
development of city plans for 250 cities by 1950, and the increased importance 
of pre-revolutionary Russian architectural heritage.

The second chapter, “Agency and Practice,” looks at the histories of urban 
planning and historic preservation in the Soviet Union in the interwar, war, 
and postwar periods and finds bureaucratic confusion and unattainable goals. 
Different commissariats were responsible for their own planning needs, 
resulting in an enormous number of stakeholders with their own goals, funding, 
and champions. Central, republic-level, regional, and local stakeholders also 
had different priorities and shortcomings. As Dobronovskaya argues, this 
bureaucratic mess with the push for rapid industrialization and extensive 
immigration into old and new cities, combined with an insufficient number of 
trained planners and architects, meant that few Soviet cities were truly 
planned or modernized. In addition to this set of problems, Soviet historic 
preservation was also hampered by two other elements: first, most structures 
recognized as historical monuments had been built by the defeated class 
enemies, such as earlier regimes, the Orthodox Church, and members of the upper 
classes; and second, the space and construction materials these structures 
could provide could be “utilized” for Soviet purposes. As a very old and 
historically politically important city, Novgorod had a large number of such 
structures, several of which are discussed at various points throughout the 
work. This chapter, like those that follow, makes very clear that although 
Soviet historians use the word “totalitarian” and write extensively about how 
the Soviet Union was centrally controlled, the country was far from being 
either. Moreover, “the complexity, confusion, lack of clear jurisdictions, and 
policy contradictions that described the bureaucracies of urban planning and 
preservation were typical” (p. 164).

Aleksei Shchusev’s career as a planner and preservationist and his important 
scheme for postwar Novgorod are the subjects of the third chapter, “A. V. 
Shchusev and Novgorod.” Dobronovskaya sees the career of the architect, best 
known as the architect of Lenin’s tomb on Red Square, as a strong 
representation of not just the “ideological and stylistic trends in 
architecture, urban planning, and reconstruction of historic towns” (p. 50) of 
the first half of the twentieth century, but also of the possibilities for 
leading figures in their respective fields to simultaneously benefit from, 
represent, and challenge the programs and ideas put forth by the state. His 
plan for Novgorod, designed towards the end of his career and during a short 
period of liberalization from 1944-1946 in which Western ideas in planning and 
preservation were acceptable, was not typical for a Socialist Realist city 
plan. Rather it combined stylistic elements that he desired with the 
restoration of particular architectural monuments. Creating a plan for Novgorod 
was an especially important commission. As Dobronovskaya demonstrates, 
“[s]everal unique factors—the high concentration of architectural monuments, 
the ideological shift of the regime, the revival of a mythically heroic Russian 
past, and the history of Novgorod—provided the context that made the 
reconstruction of the city important for the Soviet government” (pp. 190-191). 
Although the Russian Republic’s Council of People’s Commissars approved his 
general plan at the end of 1945, Shchusev’s decision to focus on Novgorod’s 
historical importance rather than its industrial potential became very 
problematic. In many ways, these seemingly incompatible identities shaped the 
bureaucratic entanglements and struggles as it did many of the failures of the 
planning and preservation processes, all of which are recounted in the second 
half of the dissertation and all of which, Dobronovskaya argues, were typical 
of the Soviet experience.

“Reconstruction and Restoration in Novgorod: The Beginning (1944-1949)” 
demonstrates that reconstruction planning was underway even before the war was 
over and that it was the chaos resulting from the proliferation of planners and 
plans that made success impossible. This fourth chapter begins with Novgorod’s 
liberation in January 1944 after two years of German occupation and the ensuing 
rapid return of residents, of whom military officers apparently only found 
fifty-four as the Germans retreated, despite a small number of intact 
buildings. The number and variety of decrees issued after this liberation and 
related to reconstruction make the head spin even today and allowed local 
politicians and builders then to manipulate the scanty resources available for 
their own ends, personal and/or political. Efforts to promote the development 
of housing; municipal services, such as water and sewage systems; and 
industrial development suffered from overlapping bureaucracies, unenforced 
legislation, scarce resources, poor workmanship, and corruption. Little had 
been achieved by 1949.

In 1949, urban planning experienced a dramatic shift away from focusing on 
urban development for the typical resident towards a monumentalism glorifying 
the state. “Changing Directions (1949-1955),” the fifth chapter, explains how 
this shift, together with two events of 1949—the purge of officials during the 
Leningrad affair and the death of Shchusev, a critical proponent of maintaining 
Novgorod’s historic urban core—encouraged urban planning designed to promote 
the city’s industrialization and administrative importance. Shchusev’s plan had 
come under strong attack before his death and regional authorities had 
requested a new general plan for the city from the Soviet Council of Ministers 
in late 1948. The Council approved a revision of Shchusev’s plan at the 
beginning of 1953 but a detailed plan of the city’s center to flesh out this 
revision did not become law until 1957. This plan called for a mix of old and 
new: preservation of elements of the historic center and new boulevards 
connecting the railway station and a new, central Victory Square alongside the 
old Kremlin. New housing units would be taller than Shchusev had desired and 
public buildings would be erected on Victory Square. In the years it took for 
this plan to work its way through the system, work had been carried out but 
much more remained to be done, with housing for the rapidly growing population 
being a particular problem. The 1950s were important, nonetheless, and 
Dobronovskaya notes that today Novgorod clearly reflects that era.

The sixth and final chapter, “Historic Preservation,” begins by noting a 
problem common to Soviet studies, namely, the inability of scholars to rely on 
official numbers. Dobronovskaya does a good job of tracking the changes made to 
the official register of architectural monuments in Novgorod beginning with the 
earliest post-revolutionary compilation. Of particular concern for her study 
are two complexes at the heart of the historic center: the Kremlin and 
Yaroslav’s Court, and several churches dating from the twelfth through 
seventeenth centuries. “Adaptive use,” both official and unofficial, damaged 
buildings further. So, in addition to the damage caused by the war, none of the 
structures fared well in the postwar period. Historical structures were used as 
housing, storage facilities, small plants, office space, and toilets; none 
received the attention needed. Even the reconstruction of the Kremlin, deemed 
ideologically important, was controversial although it received significantly 
more attention than the other monuments and nearly all of the funds devoted to 
restoration. Restoration officials were purged in the summer of 1950, 
exacerbating problems. Dobronovskaya ends the chapter on a happier note, 
addressing the conservation and stabilization projects that had taken place by 
1955 and the creation in 1958 of the Novgorod State Historical-Architectural 
Preserve, a collection of ensembles and structures to be protected and 
supported by the Russian Republic’s Ministry of Culture. This designation 
marked an official recognition of an idea that Shchusev had promoted, namely 
that Novgorod’s historic core could serve not only as a source of pride but as 
an economic driver through tourism.

English-language case studies of urban planning for the Soviet Union are 
unusual. Even more uncommon are studies of historic preservation. Happily, both 
fields are growing, albeit slowly. More broadly for students of governance and 
or Soviet history, this dissertation is a rare in-depth case study of state 
administration in the Soviet Union that spans the era of World War II and looks 
specifically at the provinces. Dobronovskaya’s admirable work at disentangling 
the people and organizations involved helps explain a typical and very bumpy 
trajectory for the modernization of Soviet towns and uncovers some of the 
hidden costs of the Stalinist system. After all, as Dobronovskaya reminds us, 
the Stalinist system was one of “dysfunctional totalitarianism—not a rationally 
working, command administrative system of governance, but an overlapping tangle 
of bureaucratic levels and authorities” in which local authorities were able to 
resist central directives (p. 357). Importantly, this work places Soviet 
developments in urban planning and historic preservation into a comparative 
European framework and draws heavily on the archives. All of this makes it rich 
in examples to be considered for students in any of these aforementioned fields.

Dr. Susan Smith
Independent Scholar
dr.susan.n.sm...@gmail.com
Primary Sources

State Archive of Novgorod Region (GANO)
State Archive of Contemporary History of Novgorod Oblast, former archive of the 
Oblast Committee of the Communist Party of the USSR (GANINO)
State Archive of Russian Federation (GARF)
Russian State Archive of the Economy (RGAE)
Published documents from the inaccessible archival collection of Aleksei V. 
Shchusev located in the State Museum of Architecture
Dissertation Information

University of Delaware. 2013. 380 pp. Primary Advisor: Robert Warren.

=========================================
19. SCHMIDT HOLLANDER ON NICOSIA AND SCRASE, 'JEWISH LIFE IN NAZI GERMANY: 
DILEMMAS AND RESPONSES'
=========================================

Francis R. Nicosia, David Scrase, eds. Jewish Life in Nazi Germany: Dilemmas 
and Responses. New York: Berghahn Books, 2010. xv + 245 pp. $60.00 (cloth), 
ISBN 978-1-84545-676-4.

Reviewed by Hanna Schmidt Holländer (University of Hamburg/Clark University)
Published on H-Genocide (March, 2015)
Commissioned by Elisa G. von Joeden-Forgey

In their edited volume, Jewish Life in Nazi Germany: Dilemmas and Responses, 
Francis R. Nicosia and David Scrase assemble a collection of essays by 
distinguished German, Australian, Israeli, and US scholars. The book consists 
of seven chapters about different aspects of Jewish private and public life in 
Germany during the Nazi period. It covers the changing structures of Jewish 
families; different strategies of Jews to evade Nazi persecution by legal means 
or emigration; the problem of cooperation with the Nazis faced by Jewish 
political and welfare organizations; and the ever-increasing spatial, social, 
economic, and cultural exclusion of German Jews.

Two main themes pervade the individual chapters: ghettoization of German Jews 
and the dilemmas they faced when reacting to Nazi persecution. The 
ghettoization policy in Germany did not, as suggested in some chapters, 
resemble the practice as it was implemented in the occupied countries in the 
East. Several chapters in this book describe the gradual “social death” of Jews 
in Nazi Germany, causing German Jews to live in a “ghetto without walls.” Other 
chapters deal with the dilemma of identifying as Jewish and German in a society 
that rejected the idea that these two identities could coexist; the dilemma of 
making the decision “to stay or go” (to remain in a country that is not safe 
anymore or to go to a foreign place with all its unknown difficulties); and the 
dilemma of making the impossible decision of whether to cooperate with the 
Nazis or to resist Nazi orders.

According to Nicosia’s introduction these dilemmas stemmed from the “historic 
failure” of Jewish emancipation. Nazism destroyed the hope and promise of 
nineteenth-century ideas of Jewish legal, social, and cultural integration into 
German society. This “failure” is evinced firstly from Nazi persecution and 
secondly from the Jews’ understanding of their place in Germany. In his words, 
the essays in this volume try to help clarify the tragedy of this failure by 
focusing on Jewish attitudes and reactions as an integral part of the unfolding 
history of Nazi persecution.

The collection begins with “Changing Roles in Jewish Families,” a chapter by 
Marion Kaplan, which leads the reader into the individual experience of Nazi 
persecution. The essay describes the changing roles of men, women, and children 
in the unfolding persecution by the Nazis in Germany in the 1930s. She poses 
the question whether, in times like this, families could still (or, in some 
cases, for the first time) function as a “safe haven.” She illustrates the 
stress inflicted on Jewish families by ever-increasing persecution and the 
conflicts that resulted. Jewish mothers were now more than ever expected to 
take care of the emotional well-being of the family and carried out the 
“emotional housework” when children were harassed in school and men lost their 
jobs (p. 16). Women moved more and more into the role of provider and into the 
public sphere, as men were pushed out of their professions, lost their societal 
status, and often faced arrest. While the role of women as providers was still 
seen critically by most Jewish organizations and the press, it became a 
necessity for most families and was slowly accepted as a response to the 
crisis. According to Kaplan, the main dilemma families faced in the 
increasingly hostile environment was to decide whether to emigrate. Women had 
to take on the role of decision makers and organize emigration or survival in 
Germany, including negotiating with Nazi authorities and foreign governments.

In his chapter with a somewhat misleading title, “Evading Persecution: 
German-Jewish Behavior Patterns after 1933,” Jürgen Matthäus focuses on Germans 
who were defined as Jewish or partly Jewish and who pursued legal measures to 
“enhance” their racial status in order to avoid persecution. “Volljuden” (full 
Jews) and “Mischlinge” (people of "mixed race") with “questionable” ancestry 
(most often previously hidden illegitimate “Aryan” fathers) increasingly 
approached courts with their “shameful” family history as persecution increased 
and ancestry became a matter of life and death. Pointing out the often rather 
bizarre “science,” legislation, and competence struggles between different 
German agencies concerned with racial questions, Matthäus discusses several 
cases in which these conflicts and the fate of those investigated were decided. 
Using what he calls “evasion by compliance” (p. 64), people affected by 
anti-Jewish persecution actively rejected the “out-group” definition, thus 
undermining the definition of who was a Jew with legal means. They did not 
question (at least not publicly) the notion itself, only that they themselves 
were part of this group. “Compliance” might be a strong word here, considering 
that Jews were not in the position to question German law and were desperate 
for any means of rescue, especially after 1941, the time this essay covers. 
Matthäus acknowledges that most of the cases reported to the prosecutor were 
not even brought to court and many ended with the appeal not granted. The cases 
in which “full” or “half Jews” were reclassified remained exceptions. 
Furthermore, Matthäus illustrates the borders of seemingly strict racial laws 
and the complicated enforcement on the individual level.

In his chapter “Jewish Self-Help in Nazi Germany, 1933–1939: The Dilemmas of 
Cooperation,” Avraham Barkai poses the question of cooperation or collaboration 
of German Jewish leadership with Nazi authorities. He takes a firm standpoint 
against the critical assessment of the Reichsvereinigung der Juden in 
Deutschland (Reich Association of Jews in Germany) by Raul Hilberg, Hannah 
Arendt, and Isaiah Trunk. Disagreeing with them, Barkai, using his research, 
concludes that the Reichsvereinigung was not the “prototype of the Jewish 
Council in Poland that was to be employed in activities resulting in disaster.” 
Indeed, he argues that through their leadership and diligence they did not 
“participate in the process of destruction” and that the number of victims 
would not have been smaller if the Jews had been unorganized (p. 72). Using two 
examples, the hachschara (vocational training program) and the haavara (money 
transfer program), Barkai analyzes the question whether German Jewish leaders 
were, “at the time or merely in retrospect, right” to cooperate with the 
Germans (p. 79). Stating that the hachschara saved Jewish lives and the haavara 
saved Jewish assets, he claims that the question whether or not to cooperate 
was not in fact a dilemma. In his interpretation, Jews in Germany took the only 
action that was logical and possible at that time, even though from the later 
perspective it might have looked like cooperation with the Germans.

Nicosia, in his contribution “German Zionism and Jewish Life in Nazi Berlin,” 
illustrates the role of Zionism for emigration and Jewish life in Germany from 
1933 to 1945. He takes up the question of legitimacy of Jewish cooperation with 
Nazi authorities. The Nazis initially supported Zionist activities, because 
they were in line with Nazi emigration policy for Jews. In the Jewish 
community, support for the Zionists grew over time, mainly because it remained 
the only political option for Jews in Germany. More and more Jews supported 
Zionism as they recognized that assimilation in Germany had become impossible 
and Zionist organizations offered assistance with emigration, for example, 
through professional retraining and the visa process. However, authorities 
eventually dissolved the Verband nationaldeutscher Juden (VnJ, Association of 
National German Jews) in November 1935; forced the Centralverein deutscher 
Staatsbürger jüdischen Glaubens (CV, Central Association of German Citizens of 
the Jewish Faith) to change its name to Centralverein der Juden in Deutschland 
(Central Association of Jews in Germany); and did not allow any 
assimiliationist tendencies anymore. Despite their traditional differences, 
Centralverein and Zionistische Vereinigung für Deutschland (ZVfD, Zionist 
Federation for Germany) had to cooperate in the Reichsvertretung der Juden in 
Deutschland (Reich Representation of Jews in Germany), an organization formed 
under Nazi pressure by a broad range of Jewish organizations in 1933 which was 
the only Jewish organization allowed in Germany after 1938. The ZVfD faced 
problems as it was growing and simultaneously losing leadership to emigration. 
While Zionism was in theory supported by the Nazis, Zionists were not exempt 
from brutal treatment as Jews. Zionist work, like any Jewish activity, became 
increasingly difficult and dangerous. Nicosia therefore concludes that 
cooperation with the Nazi state was necessary to facilitate Jewish emigration.

In his essay “Without Neighbors: Daily Living in Judenhäuser,” Konrad Kwiet 
explores the “termination of the cohabitation of Germans and Jews” and 
illustrates Jewish daily life in Judenhäuser (Jews’ houses) and Judensiedlungen 
(Jewish settlements) (p. 117). To accelerate complete segregation of Jewish and 
non-Jewish living space, Jews were expelled from their homes, were forced to 
move into designated places, and had to wear the star. Nazi authorities 
enforced these practices to depersonalize, concentrate, and control the Jews. 
Kwiet argues that as the Nazis planned to expel the German Jews as quickly as 
possible, there was no need to relocate them behind ghetto walls. Complete 
segregation did not require ghettos. German Jews were already without 
neighbors: “the Jews trapped in Germany had become on the eve of deportation a 
pariah caste that society saw only as a burden and that the Nazi state could 
dispose of as it saw fit” (p. 121). 

Kwiet describes the legal procedure and administrative process taken by the 
Nazis to strip Jews of their rights as tenants and owners, remove them from 
their homes, and acquire Jewish property and leases for the Volksgemeinschaft 
(national community). He argues that the segregation of “Jewish” and “Aryan” 
living space was implemented from “above” and carried out “inconspicuously,” 
“systematically,” “gradually,” and “free of trouble” (p. 125). Further 
analyzing the involvement of Jewish leadership in these processes, he also 
discusses how Jewish organizations had to provide help in the re-housing 
programs. Kwiet shows that the relocation program and the expulsion of Jews 
were in fact neither a means to solve the housing crisis nor did they ease the 
shortage of workers in Germany during the war.

On the contrary, he argues that in the way these “excluded communities” were 
first segregated and surrendered to their social death and then sent to their 
deaths, they shared the fate of their coreligionists in Nazi-conquered 
countries. Judenhäuser and Judensiedlungen thus served as a means to “exclude 
Jews from society and to include them—temporarily—into ... a segregated Jewish 
living quarter.” This function, as Kwiet points out, “was assigned to all 
ghettos set up by the Nazis in the occupied territories, be it in the form of a 
hermetically sealed ghetto, a ‘semi-open,’ or an ‘open’ ghetto.” Understanding 
Judenhäuser in Germany synonymously with ghettos in Eastern Europe, he 
considers both as “based on racial hatred and mass murder,” as “steps along the 
path to genocide” (p. 143).

Deepening further our understanding of the problem of cooperation versus 
collaboration, Beate Meyer’s chapter “Between Self-Assertion and Forced 
Collaboration: The Reich Association of Jews in Germany, 1939–1945” divides the 
history of the Reich Association (the Reichsvereinigung) into three phases. The 
first phase from 1939 to October 1941 marks the period when the Reich 
Association was involved in “enforced emigration.” During this time, the 
interests of the Nazis and the Reichsvereinigung coincided in the task of 
emigration. Mostly powerless, only in very few cases was the Reichsvereinigung 
able to intervene when deportations were scheduled. They were able, however, to 
assist Jews with emigration. During the second phase, from October 1941 to June 
1943, the association became, says Meyer, an instrument of 
Reichssicherheitshauptamt (Reich Security Main Office ) and the Gestapo in 
organizing deportations of German Jews to the East. Functionaries of the Reich 
Association were told that they would be exempt from deportations and 
threatened that the SA and SS would take over if they did not cooperate. Afraid 
of the brutality, the Jewish leadership cooperated and prepared deportation 
lists. When many of them were deported to Theresienstadt, they assumed leading 
positions there as well and continued their work. The third phase began in the 
summer of 1943, when, upon completion of deportations from Germany, the 
Reichsvereinigung was officially dissolved. De facto, it continued to exist as 
it cared for the needs of Jews who were married to non-Jewish partners.

Meyer then returns to the question of why Jewish functionaries continued to 
cooperate with Nazi authorities until the end. Her explanation lies in their 
mentality. Since most Jewish functionaries had been in leading positions during 
the Weimar years, they followed, she argues, the principles of an “old-style 
administration.” They believed that bureaucratic rules would act as a 
“counterweight to arbitrariness, violence, and murder.” She points out, 
however, that “such bureaucratic rules and mass murder by no means precluded 
one another,” and that, on the contrary, they might have formed a “tight bond, 
contradict[ing] the personal experience of these Jewish functionaries.” The 
National Socialists, she explains, “propagated the ideal of a ‘fighting 
administration’ that was not bound by norms and the law” (p. 165). This was 
where the Jewish leadership in Germany, much like in many ghettos in the East, 
was tragically mistaken.

Michael Brenner concludes the collection with a short piece, “Jewish Culture in 
a Modern Ghetto: Theater and Scholarship among the Jews of Nazi Germany.” In 
the first section, he focuses on the role of the Jüdischer Kulturbund (Jewish 
Cultural League; before 1935, Kulturbund deutscher Juden). He interprets it as 
“perhaps the most blatant symbol of Nazi Germany’s cultural ghettoization of 
Germany’s Jewish community,” and he discusses its role in the Third Reich (p. 
171). In the second section, he reflects on Jewish historians who studied 
Jewish history during the Nazi years, either at one of the few Jewish research 
institutions or as independent scholars, after the Nazis had stripped them of 
their positions. Brenner concludes his essay and the book with one of the 
questions that Jewish historians during the Nazi period posed, historians today 
still ask, and this collection aims to answer: “Why and how did emancipation 
and assimilation fail in the context of modern German-Jewish history”? (p. 182).

Throughout the book, “Jews” appear as a group separate from “Germans.” This is 
partly owed to the fact that it focuses on the Nazi years. Relations with 
non-Jewish Germans, before and during the war, however, are mainly mentioned on 
the level of official entities, government, police, etc., as negotiations 
between Jewish and non-Jewish institutions. Thus, the collection creates the 
image of two spheres of Jewish and German life that were only remotely 
connected, even in prewar Nazi Germany. Also underrepresented is the analysis 
of Jewish everyday life (with the exception of Kaplan) and social and cultural 
life (with the exception of Brenner). Although the title of the book, Jewish 
Life in Nazi Germany, promises a wide range of topics, issues of Jewish 
organized political life are clearly emphasized with three chapters out of 
seven focusing on this topic. German-Jewish experiences in workplaces, forced 
labor camps, and extermination camps, as well as the economy, culture, etc., 
remain faint.

The introduction features a quote by Primo Levi, which is instructive for the 
analysis of Jewish life in Nazi Germany: “We believe, rather, that the only 
conclusion to be drawn is that in the face of driving necessity and physical 
disabilities many social habits and instincts are reduced to silence” (p. 2). 
According to Nicosia, beginning in 1941, Jews in Germany faced the same 
difficult dilemmas in the choices they were forced to make. The assumption that 
social habits were “reduced to silence,” something Levi said about Auschwitz, 
leads to an underrepresentation of social aspects. To use this specific quote 
also points to a misconception about life in Nazi Germany versus life in the 
ghettos and camps in occupied Poland, a misconception that is suggested in 
several of the chapters. While in both countries Jews experienced exclusion and 
were eventually sent to their death, the paths that led up to this point were 
very different. In Poland, for example, the perpetrators came as occupiers from 
outside and this created a unique dynamic between Jews, the local population, 
and German occupying forces, and it also shaped Jewish experiences. Because 
Poland was suddenly attacked, the dilemma of whether to stay or to go presented 
itself in a different way than in Germany. Other problems had to be considered 
in the emigration process and the timing was different. To compare Jewish life 
in Germany with Jewish life in occupied Poland by using the term 
“ghetto/ghettoization” for both cases oversimplifies the matter and does not 
help with the analysis of the path to the Holocaust in either place.

While these are only a few shortcomings, the strengths are manifold. What was 
mentioned before as a weakness of the book—the emphasis on Jewish political 
life—is also its strength. The combination of several chapters dealing with 
Jewish representative organizations and their activity in Jewish welfare, 
assistance with emigration, and negotiations with Nazi authorities provides a 
strong picture of Jewish agency. This also allows for critical analysis of 
Jewish leadership in Germany and their balancing act between cooperation and 
collaboration with the Nazis. Carefully weighing responsibilities and 
actionability of Jewish functionaries, and thereby broadening the view of the 
scope of Jewish responses to Nazi persecution, the authors are never 
unreasonable with their ex-post facto judgment of what could be expected from a 
Jewish leader who himself was persecuted.

The clear forte of this collection of individually written chapters is its 
coverage of the time beyond 1939. Many introductory surveys do not allow for 
such detailed analysis of Jewish life in Germany until 1945. As suggested by 
the editors, this book is especially well-suited for teaching purposes. The 
book serves as an excellent introduction into the special issues that Jews were 
facing in Germany in an increasingly hostile environment without having a 
textbook character. This collection brings together the work of excellent 
scholars and can be used in the classroom to teach not only the interesting 
content but also its fine historiography. I highly recommend it to all 
interested readers, students, teachers, and scholars of Holocaust history.


_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/

South Asia Citizens Wire
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