Democratization and the Jews: Munich, 1945-1965Published for the Vidal Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism Democratization and the Jews explores the ways in which West Germans in Munich responded after 1945 to the Holocaust. Examining the political and religious discourse on the ?Jewish Question,? Anthony D. Kauders shows how men and women in the immediate postwar era employed antisemitic images from the Weimar Republic in order to distance themselves from the murderous policies of the Nazi regime. In the late 1950s and early 1960s, many people?and particularly Social Democrats and members of the churches, both Catholic and Protestant?began to repudiate antisemitism altogether, appreciating the connection between liberal democracy, on the one hand, and the rejection of hatred of Jews, on the other. This change was a revolutionary moment in the democratization of the Federal Republic, as the language of liberalism merged with the spirit of democracy. |
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... Bavarian capital . Having the former concentration camp Dachau and numerous DP camps in its vicinity , Munich's population was directly faced with the past , so that " repression " or ignorance was hardly viable and conscious responses ...
... Bavaria's Free Democrats , Bavarian prosecutor of Nazi crimes in 1946/47 and Minister of Justice in Adenauer's first Democratization and the Jews 21.
... Bavarian capital , we need to turn to the Jewish community itself , which , contrary to what might be expected , did ... Bavaria 1933-1945 ( Oxford 1983 ) , 383 . 3. Leonard Krieger , Ideas and Events : Professing History ( Chicago 1992 ) ...
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Contents
History as Pedagogy Munichs Jewish Community after the War | 38 |
History as Memory Democracy and Antisemitism 19451949 | 65 |
History and Memory in the Economic Miracle Dormancy and Difference 19491957 | 137 |
History as Change Jews as Fellow Beings 19581965 | 201 |