Save Your Souls: Jewish Conversion and Survival in the Occupied Soviet Territories During the Holocaust

IF 0.5 3区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY MODERN JUDAISM Pub Date : 2019-04-10 DOI:10.1093/MJ/KJZ005
K. Feferman
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Abstract

Religion is one of many factors that can help to elucidate aspects of Jewish and non-Jewish behavior during the Holocaust. By the outbreak of the Second World War, Europe was already well advanced in a process of secularization; however, the process was uneven, with Eastern and Southern Europe remaining arguably more traditionally religious regions. Consequently, we must consider religion as a factor, both in motivating non-Jews to help Jews threatened existentially by the Nazis and, conversely, that non-Jews driven by different religious considerations might also act against Jews. Viewed from this perspective, gauging the impact of religion in Soviet territories occupied by Axis armies constitutes a formidable difficulty. Since its inception, the Soviet state has pursued policies alienating all religions, which climaxed in an actual anti-religious crusade targeting the remaining religious leaders and laymen during the immediate prewar period. Nevertheless, religion persisted in the Soviet Union. Some 57 percent of Soviet citizens defined themselves as believers in the 1937 population census. The combined effect of these factors, prompted by active German promotion of religion in the context of their struggle against the “godless Judeo-Bolsheviks” seems to have brought a certain degree of religious revival in the occupied Soviet territories under German and auxiliary Axis rule. This article assesses the role of religion, most specifically conversion, viewed as a capstone of religious experience, when a Jew was caught on the horns of a dilemma whether—and to what extent—to cling to his or her “born” religion, or to relinquish it, hoping to survive in the occupied Soviet territories. Regarding history from below, it is necessary to address the methodological problem of what responses can be qualified as religious. For the purposes of this study, the area to be scrutinized was narrowed to
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拯救你的灵魂:大屠杀期间苏联占领区犹太人的皈依和生存
宗教是许多有助于阐明大屠杀期间犹太人和非犹太人行为方面的因素之一。到第二次世界大战爆发时,欧洲已经在世俗化进程中取得了很大进展;然而,这个过程是不平衡的,东欧和南欧可以说仍然是更传统的宗教地区。因此,我们必须将宗教视为一个因素,既可以激励非犹太人帮助受到纳粹生存威胁的犹太人,也可以反过来说,受不同宗教考虑驱使的非犹太人也可能对犹太人采取行动。自成立以来,苏联一直奉行疏远所有宗教的政策,在战前时期,这种政策以一场针对剩余宗教领袖和俗人的实际反宗教运动为高潮。然而,宗教在苏联依然存在。在1937年的人口普查中,约57%的苏联公民将自己定义为信徒。这篇文章评估了宗教的作用,尤其是皈依,被视为宗教经历的顶点,当一个犹太人陷入两难的境地时,是坚持他或她的“天生”宗教,还是放弃它,希望在被占领的苏联领土上生存下去。关于从下而上的历史,有必要解决方法论上的问题,即哪些回应可以被定性为宗教。为了本研究的目的,要仔细审查的领域被缩小到
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来源期刊
MODERN JUDAISM
MODERN JUDAISM HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
22
期刊介绍: Modern Judaism: A Journal of Jewish Ideas and Experience provides a distinctive, interdisciplinary forum for discussion of the modern Jewish experience. Articles focus on topics pertinent to the understanding of Jewish life today and the forces that have shaped that experience.
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