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Hardcover The Holocaust by Bullets: A Priest's Journey to Uncover the Truth Behind the Murder of 1.5 Million Jews Book

ISBN: 0230606172

ISBN13: 9780230606173

The Holocaust by Bullets: A Priest's Journey to Uncover the Truth Behind the Murder of 1.5 Million Jews

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The poignant story of how a Catholic priest uncovered the truth behind the murder of one and a half million Ukrainian Jews Father Patrick Desbois documents the daunting task of identifying and... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Never Forget

Father Patrick Desbois removes the dust from a forgotten history and pens a definitive account of the extermination of more than two million Jews by Nazi mobile units in the Ukraine during World War II. During his investigation of seven years, Father Desbois interviewed more than 800 eyewitnesses, while compiling new archival material and has tirelessly worked to identify hundreds of mass graves. He has a goal of providing proper burials for the victims of the overlooked chapter in the Final Solution. One of the disturbing aspects of the mass murder - according to Father Desbois - was the use of children by the Nazis; to make room in the death pits for additional victims by walking barefoot on the bodies and to help remove gold teeth and other valuables from the corpses. Father Desbois is secretary to the French Conference of Bishops for relations with Judaism, adviser to the Cardinal-Archbishop of Lyon and adviser to the Vatican on the Jewish religion. Each page in the book cries out to present and future generations to never forget the atrocities committed in this "Holocaust by Bullets."

"Every village is a different crime scene.

Every case is particular." This book is aptly named, the mass murders perpetrated by Einsatzgruppen, German reserve police companies/battalions, and local auxiliaries took the lives of over one million Jews throughout Eastern Europe. The Holocaust the majority of readers are familiar with took place in the ghettos, labor, concentration, and death camps. This, Holocaust by bullets, took place in villages and countryside of Eastern Europe - in anti-tank ditches and pits dug by locals or Jews themselves for the occasion. As the author explains, each village is a different crime and each case is particular to itself. No two are alike aside from the fact that Jews by the dozens, hundreds, and thousands were slaughtered in sight and within hearing distance of the villagers they used to be friends and/or neighbors of. As with many books written on the Holocaust this is not an easy read but it will make you think and it will show you a side you might not be familiar with when dealing with this human tragedy. Some of the stories within these pages, for all of my years in reading about the Holocaust, I had never encountered and just for that this book is worth its weight in gold. Official German reports and Einsatzgruppen testimony will give you one point of view. While victim accounts will paint a different picture. Finding a point of view that speaks on behalf of what both the victim and perpetrator were doing is an altogether new realization made possible by the interviews presented in this book. Reading eye witness accounts, filled with anguish and sorrow, of men and women who saw Jews being led to the slaughter or helped pack their bodies into pits and lay sand on top of them for the next group, that is something you won't encounter in official German reports, but you'll find it here.

That is how it really was

The "Holocaust by bullets" is an exceptional book on two grounds. Firstly, it gives an insight into a very major and under-researched aspect of the Holocaust, the killing of an estimated 1,500,000 Jews by the Einsatzgruppen (mobile killing squads) and their local helpers.This particularly brutal chapter remains largely unknown to the general public, even those who are familiar with the operation of the Vernichtungslagern (Death Camps of Chelmno, Auschwitz, Treblinka, Belzec, Sobibor and Majdanek, the Ghettos (particularly the Warsaw Ghetto) and the Konzentratzionslagern (Dachau, Matthausen,Bergen-Belsen, Grose Rosen and innumerable others). Secondly, it tells the story as it really was: I know, because I have (just) lived through it. It is a tremendous achievement on the part of the author, a "simple" French priest from la France profonde with no relevant academic background, armed only with an exceptional conscience and a remarkable personality. This book is a must for anyone seriously interested in the Holocaust, but I must warn any prospective reader: this is a harrowing story. S.Sternhell, Sydney, Australia

Review

I just finished this book. I was doing research at the Holocaust Museum and picked it up in the gift shop. I read it all the way through today. At times I felt like crying. I am somewhat hardened, I thought, to these stories. I was wrong. The book becomes a little overwhelming in the repetitiveness of the stories of death of the innocent by the uncaring. The stories of people being buried alive. The pits moving for days afterwards as the bodies decayed and those still alive struggled. These are not new stories to those familiar with the mass killings in the east. Yet in this book they are brought to life by his interviews with eyewitnesses. Children who watched as their neighbors were shot in groups. What is different is here you read about entire village populations being enlisted in the mass murder. Someone had to cook for the Germans; pull the gold teeth; dig, and then fill in the pits. Children were forcibly conscripted to sort the freshly dead Jews clothes. As one villager said "One day we woke up, and we were all wearing the Jews clothes." Now the mass graves are grown over and unmarked. Unlike the cemeteries of the German war dead which are still carefully tended. A story of a noble endeavor.

"These are things that one cannot forget."

In "The Holocaust by Bullets," Father Patrick Desbois, a French Roman Catholic priest, embarks on a sacred mission with the help of many others who are also deeply committed to the ideals of truth and justice. His goal is to uncover the facts concerning the slaughter of roughly 1.5 million Jews in the former Soviet Union by the Nazis and those who collaborated with them. Among the murdered were many young women and children, as well as the elderly. The Jews were usually transported by cart to an area within or just outside the villages where they lived and then made to undress before they were shot and thrown into pits. Desbois and his team traveled to such towns as Rawa-Ruska, Lisinitchi, Busk, Khvativ, and Ternivka to videotape the testimony of often reluctant witnesses who, even after more than six decades, still remember every detail of the massacres that they observed. Their testimony, along with microfilmed documents stored in the archives of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, is bringing renewed attention to "an ocean of extermination" that reached across the Ukraine. Desbois had heard stories about the Second World War from his relatives, and he was especially riveted by the anecdotes of his grandfather, Claudius, who was imprisoned by the Germans in 1942. Claudius proclaimed that no matter how much he suffered, "it was worse for the others!" Patrick later found out that "the others" were the Jews who were methodically exterminated in villages and towns in full view of their non-Jewish friends and neighbors. This book is a nightmarish look at man's inhumanity to man. One by one, those who remain speak about what they saw: Jews being hauled away, forced to undress and remove their valuables, shot in the back of their heads, thrown into a ditch, and either burned or covered with lime or sand. Often, the ground moved for days afterwards, since many of the victims were buried alive. Sadly, there is usually no memorial to mark where most of these atrocities occurred, since the Germans attempted to eradicate any sign of the genocide that they had perpetrated. Desbois's team used metal detectors to find cartridges left behind by the Germans to pinpoint killing sites. This information, along with the statements of local villagers and data from historical records, has led to the discovery of many heretofore unidentified locations where Jews were exterminated. Adding to the impact of this powerful narrative are color photographs of the killing fields and of the people whose memories fill these pages. Father Desbois is to be commended for his compassion and determination in undertaking an arduous, painstaking, and emotionally traumatic task. He has confronted terrible horrors that must have shaken his belief in man's essential goodness, but he has persisted--not only to create "awareness of the barbarity and wrong of what occurred, but also [to] prevent future genocides."
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