Product Description In the Shadow of Hitler chronicles the experiences of Alabama Jews as they worked to overcome their own divisions in order to aid European Jews before, during, and after the Second World War.In this extensive study of how southern Jews in the United States responded to the Nazi persecution of European Jews, Dan J. Puckett recounts the divisions between Alabama Jews in the early 1930s. As awareness of the horrors of the Holocaust spread, Jews across Alabama from different backgrounds and from Reform, Conservative, and Orthodox traditions worked to bridge their internal divisions in order to mount efforts to save Jewish lives in Europe. Only by leveraging their collective strength were Alabama’s Jews able to sway the opinions of newspaper editors, Christian groups, and the general public as well as lobby local, state, and national political leaders. Puckett’s comprehensive analysis is enlivened and illustrated by true stories that will fascinate all readers of southern history. One such story concerns the Altneuschule Torah of Prague and describes how the Nazis, during their brutal occupation of Czechoslovakia, confiscated 1,564 Torahs and sacred Judaic objects from communities throughout Bohemia and Moravia as exhibits in a planned museum to the extinct Jewish race. Recovered after the war by the Czech Memorial Scrolls Trust, the Altneuschule Torah was acquired in 1982 by the Orthodox congregation Ahavas Chesed of Mobile. Ahavas Chesed re-consecrated the scroll as an Alabama memorial to Czech Jews who perished in Nazi death camps. In the Shadow of Hitler illustrates how Alabama’s Jews, in seeking to influence the national and international well-being of Jews, were changed, emerging from the war period with close cultural and religious cooperation that continues today. Review "One of the most impressive contributions of this book is Puckett’s gathering of such a vast array of resources to compile the narrative. Many of the materials are relatively inaccessible for the general public, but the compilation of information places unpublished archival material at the disposal of the reader. Puckett’s organization and conclusions provide order and meaning which make his work a starting point for those who may approach related topics in the future. The book tells the stories of many prominent individuals whose contributions to Alabama could otherwise easily evaporate over time. Influential persons like Abe Berkowitz, Leon Schwartz, Rabbi Milton Grafman, and Dora Roth deserve a place in Alabama’s history. On the other side of things, it is fitting for us to remember the dissension caused by hatemongers like Arthur Terminiello. Puckett’s book reviews the impact of these characters upon the state and the nation. Researchers, lay and professional, will find the book enlightening and useful." —The Alabama Review “Puckett has written a wonderful examination of America’s Jews in Alabama and the Deep South, their conflict between orthodoxy and the more modern Reform Judaism, religious liberalism and cultural survival, and the realities of Jim Crow and Nazi mass murder. Every newspaper is examined, along with many organizations, archival documents, and synagogue newsletters—recorded in seventy-seven pages of detailed notes and bibliography. In the Shadow of Hitler is exhaustively researched, well written, and important.” —Journal of American History "[a]... meticulously researched and carefully hewn study of Alabama Jews in the 1930s and 1940s."—American Jewish History"[Puckett’s] excellent chapter on Alabama newspapers’ coverage of the Holocaust, for example, is enlightening and informative well beyond its specifically Jewish relevance, as is his careful survey of expressions of anti-Semitism in the state. While Puckett’s primary focus throughout the book is on the Jewish community, his insights will be of great interest to anyone curious about the impact of global events on the American South.” —Journa
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