Authors: Deborah E. Lipstadt
*
Even after the war, when the Allies had to deal with the survivors, they maintained the policy of treating Jews as nationals of the country they came from. To have done otherwise, they claimed, would have been to perpetuate Hitler's discriminatory policy. In one of the most painful historical ironies this meant that initially, German and Austrian Jews were treated as Germans and Austrians, i.e., enemy nationals.
75
*
The Secretaries of State, the Treasury, and War.
*
Other peoples had suffered and many had died in the concentration and death camps; but no people had been as singled out as the Jews and none had lost such a large proportion of its population.
*
Ohrdruf was one of the camps to which the Germans had marched survivors of Auschwitz in mid-January 1945. Ohrdruf had been planned as a future army command center which was to be built by thousands of Jewish slave laborers.
104
*
Typically, in a pictorial essay on Palestine which appeared in 1943,
Life
matter-of-factly noted that of the 8 million Jews who had been in prewar Europe at least 3 million were “certainly dead.”
110
*
Hearst and his papers constituted a notable exception to this. There are those who attribute Hearst's strong stand on rescuing Jews as well as his outspoken support of a Jewish national home in Palestine to a desire to embarrass the British, whom he had loathed since the prewar years when he had been an isolationist and believed that the British were intent on involving America in the war.
It is also important to note that in many circles, particularly official government ones, liberal publications such as
The Nation, The New Republic
, and
PM
were neither popular nor considered representative of mainstream American views. Arno Mayer, who eventually became a member of the history department at Princeton, learned this in 1944 when he was a young soldier assigned to get information from German generals who had been captured and flown to Washington. The generals had served the Wehrmacht and the notorious Waffen SS on the eastern front. Mayer was told to learn as much as possible from them about the Red Army (America was already preparing for the Cold War). He was to “keep these fellows happy” by providing them with anything they might need, including liquor and newspapers. One day he brought them
The Nation
and PM. He was told by his commanding officers “in no uncertain terms” that in the future he could provide them with
Life
, the
New York Times
, and
Reader's Digest
but not “any of that other stuff.”
111
Agee, James,
243
Allentown
(Pennsylvania)
Chronicle and News
,
93
Amateur Athletic Union (AAU),
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,
75
,
78
America
,
203
American Federation of Labor (AFL),
199
American Institute of Public Opinion,
127
American Jewish Conference,
224
American Jewish Congress,
192
,
198
,
199
American Olympic Committee (AOC),
64
â66,
75
â76
Amerika-deutscher Volksbund,
123
â124
Angriff, Der
,
83
Anderson, David,
226
â227
Annihilation program;
see also
Deportations; Massacres
     Allied confirmation of,
180
â188
     barriers to belief,
136
â142
     British response to,
189
â192,
195
,
196
     early reports of conditions in camps,
143
â144
     first public reports of gassing,
162
,
163
,
167
â168
     interpretations of term,
146
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     liberation of camps,
248
â249,
253
â268,
271
â275
     official doubts,
192
â196
     time of decision on,
146
n
     universalizing the victims,
250
â263
Anti-Nazi Federation,
77
Antisemitism
     as fundamental element of Nazism,
3
,
13
â15,
27
â28,
31
,
32
,
40
â41,
56
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102
,
141
    Â
“Jews as cause of” theory,
42
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     “nothing but” theory,
56
â57,
60
,
62
     rising tide of American,
127
Armstrong, Hamilton Fish,
26
,
36
Associated Press (AP),
19
,
28
,
53
,
79
,
81
,
150
,
152
,
153
,
156
,
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,
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235
,
262
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Atlanta Constitution
,
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104
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165
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186
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188
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219
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273
Atrocity reports of World War I,
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17
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,
188
,
240
Auschwitz,
223
,
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245
,
258
,
259
,
261
â267,
270
,
271
Austria, German invasion of,
86
,
87
â90
Axelson, George,
172
â173
Babi Yar,
245
â247,
260
,
261
,
262
n
,
270
Ball, Rudi,
72
Baltimore Evening Sun
,
101
Baltimore Sun
,
5
,
50
,
55
,
59
,
95
,
118
,
154
,
181
,
182
,
195
,
229
,
269
,
272
Barden, Judy,
258
Baster Deutscheszeitung
,
271
Bauer, Yehuda,
146
n
Bayles, William D.,
144
â145
Beattie, Edward,
80
Bergson, Peter,
139
n
,
200
,
224
,
225
Bergson group,
200
,
214
,
224
,
225
,
227
Berle, A. A.,
145
Berlin Hochschule,
36
Berlin riots (1935),
41
,
50
,
53
,
54
,
56
Bermuda conference (1943),
185
,
205
â216
Bernays, Edward L.,
8
Bialer, Tosha,
197
Binger, Carl,
46
n
Binghamton Press
,
107
Binghamton Sun
,
106
Birchall, Frederick T.,
16
â17,
51
â52,
66
,
82
,
83
Bombing of death camps issue,
71
â72,
263
Boston American
,
122
Boston Evening Transcript
,
49
Boston Globe
,
68
,
119
,
155
,
214
,
230
Boston Post
,
77
Boston Transcript
,
60
Bouton, S. Miles,
22
Bremen
incident,
58
â60
Brigham, Daniel,
236
British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC),
162
,
163
,
170
,
172
,
190
,
195
,
198
,
247
British Foreign Office,
193
,
195
,
196
Brodsky, Louis,
58
Brooklyn Citizen
,
77
Brown Shirts,
35
Brú, Federico Laredo,
116
Brundage, Avery,
64
â67,
69
,
70
,
72
,
75
Buchenwald,
243
,
244
,
255
,
256
,
258
,
260
,
268
Buffalo Courier Express
,
145
,
153
Bullitt, William,
129
Business Week
,
34
Businessmen,
34
â35
Canterbury, Archbishop of (William Temple),
189
,
190
,
195
,
204
Canton
(Ohio)
Repository
,
49
Carlson, John Roy,
122
Casablanca conference (1943),
47
Catton, Bruce,
126
Celler, Emanuel,
112
,
210
,
213
,
214
,
226
Censorship, German policy on,
21
Charleston Post
,
72
Chattanooga Times
,
55
Chicago Daily News
,
22
,
25
,
28
,
55
,
104
,
122
,
160
Chicago Herald American
,
270
,
271
Chicago Tribune
,
5
,
14
,
15
,
17
,
27
â28,
36
,
37
n
,
42
,
51
,
70
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90
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106
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145
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152
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154
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155
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165
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172
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174
,
177
,
181
,
187
,
211
,
212
,
215
,
219
,
226
,
265
Chichester, Bishop of,
191
Childs, Marquis,
242
â243
Christian Century, The
,
5
,
17
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36
â37,
45
,
70
,
76
,
77
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93
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107
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114
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143
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184
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192
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202
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224
,
230
,
237
,
241
,
249
â250,
274
Christian Science Monitor
,
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17
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35
,
42
â44,
51
,
59
,
60
,
78
,
107
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117
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177
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181
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188
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219
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221
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223
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239
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