Synopses & Reviews
This important collection brings together contributions from an impressive group of scholars to comprehensively examine Franklin D. Roosevelts response to the Holocaust. Addressing the severe critiques of FDR that arose after the war and what some see as his failure to stop the genocide of Europes Jewish community, the book looks at his policies between 1933 and 1942, his rescue efforts during the war, and the possibility for future research and analysis. This is the definitive resource on a pivotal issue in American history.
Synopsis
The contributors to this volume take a hard look at Roosevelt's reaction to the Holocaust.
Synopsis
What did Franklin Delano Roosevelt know about the Holocaust and what did he do to try to prevent it? This question has proven to be one of the thorniest inquiries ever made into the progress of FDR's presidency. In 1993, some of the world's most outstanding scholars of the Holocaust and of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's presidency came together to discuss this still explosive subject. This collection of original pieces and anthologized articles grew out of the discussions held during two successive days at the Roosevelt Library in Hyde Park, New York. The contributors take a hard look at Roosevelt's reaction to the Holocaust, offering a timely and thought-provoking study that will be indispensable reading for anyone interested in either the FDR presidency or the Holocaust.
About the Author
Verne W. Newton is the former director of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library. He is the author of The Cambridge Spies and the writer/producer of "Harry Hopkins: At FDR's Side," a PBS special.
Table of Contents
PART I: THE HYDE PARK CONFERENCE * PART II: THE HOLOCAUST, AUSCHWITZ, AND WORLD WAR II