Die letzten Tage von Buczacz - Die Zerstörung einer multiethnischen Stadt
The Last Days of Buchach - The Destruction of a Multi-Ethnic City
Author(s): Omer BartovContributor(s): Jana Starek (Editor)
Subject(s): Recent History (1900 till today), WW II and following years (1940 - 1949), Fascism, Nazism and WW II, History of the Holocaust
Published by: Wiener Wiesenthal Institut für Holocaust-Studien
Keywords: Ukraine; Buchach; destruction; Ukrainians; Poles; Jews; WWII; holocaust;
Summary/Abstract: Omer Bartov’s presentation addressed the way in which Ukrainians, Poles and Jews remember the Holocaust in the formerly multi-ethnic town of Buczacz, where Simon Wiesenthal was born (as was Omer Bartov’s mother). Buczacz is located in what used to be the Austro-Hungarian province of Galicia, then became part of Poland’s eastern lands and is now part of the Western Ukraine. For centuries, it was marked by its population’s ethnic and religious diversity. During the time of the Second World War, the Nazis murdered the entire Jewish population; the Polish inhabitants fell victim to ethnic cleansing by Ukrainian nationalists and Soviet authorities. Omer Bartov used written and oral reports by victims and survivors in order to investigate the relationship between memory and history, between individual fates and grand historical processes of change. He argued for the healing effect of remembrance and coming to terms with the past. The presentation was accompanied by a wealth of pictures of Buczacz and of Omer Bartov’s research activities in that city.
Journal: S:I.M.O.N. Shoah: Intervention. Methods. Documentation.
- Issue Year: 1/2014
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 54-67
- Page Count: 14
- Language: German