Themes and Selections from the Harry W.ÌýMazal Holocaust Collection

A Thematic View of the Harry W. Mazal Collection
Nazi War Crime Trials 2

In 1993, Harry W. Mazal started The Mazal Holocaust LibraryÌýto provide resources for combatingÌýHolocaust denial and anti-Semitism. Of the collection’s over 25,000 books and other sources, there are many themes that run throughout the entire collection.ÌýThe following expandable options elaborate on some of these themes and list several items you can find in the Harry W. Mazal Holocaust Collection at ¶¶ÒõÂÃÐÐÉä Boulder.ÌýTheÌýthemes selected here generally relate to theÌýJewish experience and perspectives about different cultural, religious, and ethnic groupsÌýboth pre- and post-Holocaust.

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Conversion Practice and Persecution
ManyÌýof those touched byÌýthe repercussions of theÌýHolocaust were forced to makeÌýtheÌýdecision between religion and survival. SomeÌýsaw the racism and unrest early in the processÌýand converted to avoid persecution, but, as some of these texts discuss, it was too late for others. AfterÌýKristallnacht, it was increasingly difficult for conversions to go through if desired.ÌýOther texts cover the manner in which people, not just Jews, were treated after the liberation of the concentration camps - as if they were still dangerous or a risk to society after their torment.ÌýÌý

  • The Jewish People and Jesus Christ After Auschwitz: a study in the controversy between the church and the synagogueÌýby Jakob Jocz BM535.J57 1981Ìý
  • Judaism and the VaticanÌýby Vicomte Leon de Pncins
    • BM535.P573
  • Responsa from the HolocaustÌýby Rabbi Ephraim Oshry
    • BM520.3.O 8413 2001
  • Moral Reckoning:ÌýThe Role of the Catholic Church in the Holocaust and its Unfulfilled Duty of RepairÌýby Daniel Jonah Goldhagen
    • BX 1378.G57 2002
  • The Catholic Church and Nazi GermanyÌýby Guenter Lewy
    • BX 1536.L4
  • Anti-Semitism and the Christian Mind: The Crisis of Conscience after AuschwitzÌýby Alan T. Davies
    • BM 535.D345
  • The Jew and Human SacrificeÌýby Hermann L. Strack
    • BM 717.S86 1909

Anti-Semitism
A majorÌýfuel for growing support in Germany during the Third ReichÌýwas the notion that Jewish people were inherently bad and harming the community. Many citizens of Eastern Europe fell into the notion that if the Jews were contained or Germany was rid of them, the economy and quality of life would improve. This was seen particularly in propaganda and campaigns to contain, intern, and eventually kill eastern European Jews during the early 1940’s. Part of the success of these campaigns came from years of tension and blame, wherein Jewish people were blamed for events such as children going missing eventually leading toÌýJudaism being associated with degree with Satanic practice. Even after the Holocaust, there was and is still is rampant anti-Semitism in some areas for similar supposed reasons. Mazal has collected texts from many facets of Anti-Semitism, to help bring awareness to the problem.

  • Anti-Semitism: A Modern PerspectiveÌýby Caroline Arnold & Herma SilversteinÌý
    • DS 145.A69 1985
  • Blood RItualÌýby Phillip de Vier
    • BM 585.2.D43 2001
  • Anti-Semitism Throughout the AgesÌýby Count Heinrich Coudenhove-Kalergi
    • DS 145.C62 1935
  • Six Million Crucifixions: How Christian Teachings ¶¶ÒõÂÃÐÐÉä Jews Paved the Road to the HolocaustIÌýby Gabriel Wilensky
    • BM 535.W5546 2010
  • Cry of Cassandra: THe Resurgance of European Anti-SemitismÌýby Simon Epstein
    • DS 146.F8 E6713 1985

Holocaust Denial
In an effort to fight Holocaust denial, or "Revisionism," Harry Mazal collected materials from both sides of discussion. Many selections in the collection go in depth on why some people refuse to accept that the Holocaust was a real eventÌýand do not believe that 6 million people, specifically Jews, died in the concentration camps across Europe. Other deniers believe that camps may have existed, but they were never death camps. These texts go into detail about multiple aspects of denial, including works that explain why denial helped to fuel the genocide, works that cover post-Holocaust thought and why the author believe it’s impossible that the atrocity occurred, and even some that discuss the experience of interned people just after liberation, and the manner in which they were treated by the immediate communities who had not been aware or had refused to believe that the camp was actuallyÌýkilling so many people.
  • Harvest of Hate: The Nazi Program for the Destruction of the Jews of EuropeÌýby Leon PoliakovÌý
    • D 810.J4 P614813 1979
  • The Hoax of the Twentieth CenturyÌýby A.R. Butz
    • D 810.J4 B87 1977
  • Documents on the Holocaust: Selected Sources on the Destruction of the Jews of Germany and Austria, Poland, and the Soviet UnionÌýby Yitzhak Arad (ed), Uisrael Gutman (ed), & Abraham Margaliot (ed)
    • D 810.J4 D58 1990
  • The Terrible Secret: Suppression of the Truth about Hitler's "Final Solution"Ìýby Walter Laquer
    • D 810.J4 L278 1982
Social, Cultural, and Religious Jewishness
Every social and cultural group has a unique and distinct experience, but the Jewish experience is particularly unique. Portions of the Mazal collection focusÌýonÌýthe Jewish experience, both in World War II Germany and beyond, including biographies describing the tension felt immediately before and after the war, experience during the Holocaust, and works analyzing what it must be like to exist in a socio-ethnic group that has been an outlet for tension for so long.
  • Judaism Transcends Catastrophe: God, Torah, and Israel Beyond the HolocaustÌýby Jacon Neusner (ed)
    • BM 645.H6 J83 1994
  • The Dissolution of Eastern European JewryÌýby Walter N. Sanning
    • 135.E83 S3313 1983
  • Eight Questions People Ask ¶¶ÒõÂÃÐÐÉä JudaismÌýby Dennis Prager & Joseph Telushkin
    • BM 565.P7
  • Jews in the Post-War WorldÌýby Max Gottschalk & Abraham G. Duker
    • D 829.J4 G65 1945
  • Child of the HolocaustÌýby Jack Kuper
    • D 810.J4 k87 1967
  • What? Again those Jews?Ìýby Henry L. Lantner
    • DS 145.L34 1997
  • A Guide for Reform JewsÌýby Frederic A. Doppelt & David Polish
    • BM 700.D67 1957Ìý

Themes compiled by ¶¶ÒõÂÃÐÐÉä Boulder student Ellen Gostling in SpringÌý2018. Ellen's research was supported by a Post-Holocaust American Judaism Collections Undergraduate Scholarship from the Program in Jewish Studies.


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Selection of Materials from the Harry W.ÌýMazal Holocaust Collection

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