-40%

Franco's Refugees Record of Jews Who Came Through Spain and Portugal To NYC New

$ 5.28

Availability: 11 in stock
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted

    Description

    Franco's Refugees
    Records of the Jews Who Came Through Spain and Portugal to New York City, 1940-1941. Volume I (June-October 1940)
    Lawrence H. Feldman
    Softbound    volume  totaling
    96
    pages. Book  is in new condition. Just what you need  for genealogy research. Per the publisher;
    During the 1990s, Dr. Lawrence Feldman, at the request of the United States National Holocaust Memorial Museum, conducted research in Spain to determine what role, if any, Spain had played in the destruction of world Jewry by Hitler during World War II. Based on separate trips to relevant Spanish archives in 1995 and 1998, Feldman prepared reports for the Holocaust Museum concluding that the Spanish leader, Generalissimo Francisco Franco, far from abetting the Holocaust, had actually helped to rescue a limited number of Spanish-speaking Jews (Sephardim). When Dr. Feldman initiated his own research into Spain’s role in World War II in 2007--this time in passenger records and state Department records at the U.S. National Archives, as well as newspaper files at the Library of Congress--he discovered that Franco’s role in the rescue of European Jewry was considerably more significant.
    In the Introduction to his new book,
    Franco’s      Refugees. Records of the Jews Who Came Through Spain and Portugal to New      York City, 1940-1941
    , Lawrence Feldman provides a historical account,      drawn from original sources, of the reasons leading to Franco’s decision to      provide safe passage to European Jews. Despite the support he had received      from Germany during the Spanish Civil War and the on-again, off-again      negotiations between Spain and Germany from the fall of France in June 1940      and Hitler’s invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, Franco ultimately entered      into a secret treaty with the U.S. and its allies for the duration of the      conflict. Franco was also sympathetic to the plight of the Jews inasmuch as      he had witnessed the financial and military support given to Spain by      Sephardic Jews in Spain’s war with Morocco in the 1920s. Finally, Franco’s      ability to assist escaping Jews was limited to the early years of the war      (1940-41)
    before
    Hitler      agreed to Germany’s "final solution" to its Jewish problem.
    Volume One of
    Franco’s      Refugees
    identifies several      thousand fortunate escapees. The passenger records are arranged, first, by      each vessel’s country of origin and thereunder by port and date of departure      and date of arrival in New York. Most of the vessels in Volume One were      bound for New York from Lisbon; however, a few left from Haifa and a number      completed their journeys from Havana. Dr. Feldman identifies each passenger      by name, age, occupation, birthplace, and the place and date his visa was      issued.
    Take a Look at My Other Genealogical Books up for Auction
    Track Page Views With
    Auctiva's FREE Counter