Subject: | Nabokov List Request |
---|---|
Date: | Thu, 13 Oct 2011 20:20:23 -0500 |
From: | Cary Henson <henson@uwosh.edu> |
Reply-To: | <henson@uwosh.edu> |
To: | <sblackwe@utk.edu> |
I’m wondering if you could forward a message for
me to
the Nabokov list. I haven’t been a member for a
while,
as my work has taken me elsewhere, but it seems to
me
that members might be well placed to answer the
question below regarding the Russian émigré impact
on
anti-Semitism in post-war Germany. (It comes from
the discussion list for the International
Association
of Genocide Scholars).
Replies to henson@uwosh.edu
Regards,
Cary
Cary Henson
Dept. of English
UW Oshkosh
Greetings from Berlin
where I have been doing research for a short piece of historical
fiction.
This
week I visited the Centre for Psychiatric Research in Berlin which,
until after WWll, was known as the Dalldorf Asylum.
Perhaps
their most famous patient was Anna Anderson, the woman who tried to
commit suicide by jumping into a Berlin canal in 1920 and then claimed
-- in Dalldorf -- to be Grand Duchess Anastasia, daughter of Czar
Nicholas ll of Russia.
What
has fascinated me in my research is the half-million-strong white
Russian colony of emigres in Germany after the 1917 revolution, and
their staunch anti-semitism. Some 100 000 settled in Berlin, making it
the largest population of Russians in exile outside Paris.
Many
of the Jews rounded up by Hitler in Poland, Hungary and Germany had
fled earlier pogroms in Russia, moving west between 1820 and 1870. Now
their tormentors, driven from power by the Bolshevik dictatorship, had
followed.
In
the disorganized Weimar Republic, Russians set up their churches,
social groups and emigre councils, peddling literature against Lenin
and the communists and handing out anti-semitic pamphlets that resemble
the worst of Nazi propaganda.
My
question here is: was the sudden jump in anti-Jewish feeling after
World War l a spontaneous German event, or did the Russian settlers act
as catalyst?
Any
thoughts would be welcome.
Best
always
Geoff in Berlin