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In Broad Daylight: The Secret Procedures Behind the Holocaust by Bullets
Contributor(s): Desbois, Father Patrick (Author), Umansky, Andrej (Introduction by)
ISBN: 1628728574     ISBN-13: 9781628728576
Publisher: Arcade Publishing
OUR PRICE:   $22.49  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: January 2018
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- History | Holocaust
- History | Eastern Europe - General
- History | Russia & The Former Soviet Union
Dewey: 940.531
LCCN: 2017041541
Physical Information: 1.2" H x 6.3" W x 9.2" (1.10 lbs) 312 pages
Themes:
- Topical - Holocaust
- Ethnic Orientation - Jewish
- Chronological Period - 1940's
- Cultural Region - Eastern Europe
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
The truth about how the murder of more than two million Jews was as carried out by the Nazis and their allies--for all the world to see and helped by neighbors--from Father Patrick Desbois, the author of the award-winning The Holocaust by Bullets.

After ten years of research and interviews with more than 5,700 neighbors to the murdered Jews and visits to more than 2,700 extermination sites, many of them unmarked, one key finding: Genocide does not happen without the neighbors. The neighbors are instrumental to the crime.

In his National Jewish Book Award-winning book The Holocaust by Bullets, Father Patrick Desbois documented for the first time the murder of 1.5 million Jews in Ukraine during World War II. Nearly a decade of further work by his team, drawing on interviews with neighbors of the Jews, wartime records, and the application of modern forensic practices to long-hidden grave sites. has resulted in stunning new findings about the extent and nature of the genocide.

In Broad Daylight documents mass killings in seven countries formerly part of the Soviet Union that were invaded by Nazi Germany. It shows how these murders followed a template, or script, which included a timetable that was duplicated from place to place. Far from being kept secret, the killings were done in broad daylight, before witnesses. Often, they were treated as public spectacle. The Nazis deliberately involved the local inhabitants in the mechanics of death--whether it was to cook for the killers, to dig or cover the graves, to witness their Jewish neighbors being marched off, or to take part in the slaughter. They availed themselves of local people and the structures of Soviet life in order to make the Eastern Holocaust happen.

Narrating in lucid, powerful prose that has the immediacy of a crime report, Father Desbois assembles a chilling account of how, concretely, these events took place in village after village, from the selection of the date to the twenty-four-hour period in which the mass murders unfolded. Today, such groups as ISIS put into practice the Nazis' lessons on making genocide efficient.

The book includes an historical introduction by Andrej Umansky, research fellow at the Institute for Criminal Law and Criminal Procedure, University of Cologne, Germany, and historical and legal advisor to Yahad-In Unum.


Contributor Bio(s): Desbois, Father Patrick: - Father Patrick Desbois is president of Yahad-in-Unum, founded with Cardinal Lustiger, archbishop of Paris, and Israel Singer, chairman of the World Jewish Congress, and holds an endowed professorship at Georgetown University. He is the author of The Holocaust by Bullets, winner of the 2008 National Jewish Book Award, and has received numerous honors for his groundbreaking work on the Holocaust, including the Humanitarian Award from the US Holocaust Museum and the the 2017 Lantos Human Rights Prize. He travels extensively for speaking engagements and has appeared twice on 60 Minutes. He resides in Washington, DC, and Paris, France.Umansky, Andrej: - Andrej Umansky is a Research Fellow at the Institute for Criminal Law and Criminal Procedure, University of Cologne, Germany, and is historical and legal advisor to Yahad-in-Unum. He obtained a master's degree in French and German law from the Universities of Cologne and Paris I and another master's degree in the history of the Holocaust in Eastern Europe from the University of Paris IV. In 2016, he finished his PhD at the University Amiens, France, about the Holocaust in the Northern Caucasus in 1942-43.