No justice in Germany: the Breslau diaries, / Willy Cohn ; edited by Norbert Conrads ; translated by Kenneth Kronenberg. Publication | Library Call . · The portion of Cohn’s diary that is included in No Justice in Germany spans the period from to In his entries, Cohn explores his intellectual and religious life; his relationship with his wife, children, and extended family; his trip to Palestine in ; the effects of the Nazis’ anti-Semitic policies on the Jewish community in Breslau, and his eventual attempts to leave Germany for . · With great immediacy, the diaries of Willy Cohn, a Jew and a Social Democrat, show how the process of marginalization under the Nazis unfolded within the vibrant Jewish community of Breslau#;until that community was destroyed in Cohn documents how difficult it Pages:
No justice in Germany: the Breslau diaries, / Willy Cohn ; edited by Norbert Conrads ; translated by Kenneth Kronenberg. Publication | Library Call Number: DSC64 A3 Uniform Title. No justice in Germany: the Breslau diaries, / Willy Cohn ; edited by Norbert Conrads ; translated [from the German] by Kenneth Kronenberg. Willy Cohn Book. No Justice in Germany: The Breslau Diaries, by Willy Cohn, edited by Norbert Conrads (review) Alexandra Garbarini. pp. View. Download. Save. contents. Chełmno and the Holocaust: The History of Hitler's First Death Camp by Patrick Montague (review) Peter Black.
Willy Cohn () was a historian from the then German town of Breslau, which today belongs to Poland and is known under the name of Wrocaw. He was an active participant in the intellectual and cultural life of Breslau, and a well respected member of its Jewish community, by then the third largest of Germany. With great immediacy, the diaries of Willy Cohn, a Jew and a Social Democrat, show how the process of marginalization under the Nazis unfolded within the vibrant Jewish community of Breslau—until that community was destroyed in Cohn documents how difficult it was to understand precisely what was happening, even as people were harassed, beaten, and taken off to concentration camps. With great immediacy, the diaries of Willy Cohn, a Jew and a Social Democrat, show how the process of marginalization under the Nazis unfolded within the vibrant Jewish community of Breslau—until that community was destroyed in
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