7:00 PM Jan T. Gross
Jewish Experiences in Eastern Europe, 1945-1968
Conception: Jan C. Behrends, Potsdam; Juliane Fürst, Potsdam; Mischa Gabowitsch, Potsdam; Semion Goldin, Jerusalem
Participants: Samuel Barnai, Jerusalem; Stefano Bottoni, Budapest; Naida-Michal Brandl, Zagreb; Kateřina Čapková, Prague; Diana Dumitru, Chișinău; Konstanty Gebert, Warsaw; Zvi Gitelman, Ann Arbor; Jan T. Gross, Berlin; Pavel Kolář, Konstanz; Ilse Josepha Lazaroms, Frankfurt am Main/Utrecht; Joanna Nalewajko-Kulikov, Warsaw; Pól Ó Dochartaigh, Galway; Andrea Pető, Budapest; Iryna Ramanava, Vilnius; Joshua Rubenstein, Cambridge, Mass.; Dariusz Stola, Warsaw
The Holocaust decimated Eastern Europe’s Jewish communities, but it didn’t obliterate them. Several million Jews were living in the Soviet Union and its newly expanded sphere of influence after the end of the Second World War. Their postwar experiences are often seen as an epilogue to the Shoah, or else portrayed as an interlude cut short by the communist regimes’ anti-Zionist campaigns and the renewed wave of emigration they caused. Fifty years later, this conference reconsiders Jewish experiences before 1968 and places them in the wider context of postwar European societies.
Nov 11, 2018
Nov 12, 2018
10:00 AM Zvi Gitelman
Revival, Repression, and Restriction: Jews in Communist Regimes, 1945–68
11:00 AM Diana Dumitru
Jews in Soviet Moldavia and Romania after WWII: What We Know and What We Don’t Know
1:00 PM Dariusz Stola
The History of the Jews in Communist Poland and Its Representations Since the 1980s
3:00 PM Andrea Pető
Jews in Postwar Hungary. The Politics of Emotions
4:30 PM Kateřina Capková
Jews in Communist Czechoslovakia: Official and Private Sources
5:30 PM Pavel Kolář
The Enemy Never Sleeps: Communist Concepts of the Other from Stalin to the Prague Spring, 1945–68
Conference brochure
A joint event with the Leonid Nevzlin Research Center for Russian and Eastern European Jewry at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the Centre for Contemporary History, Potsdam