Genocide for "sanitary purposes"? : the Bogdanovka murder in light of postwar trial documents
Drawing on Soviet and Romanian postwar trial material, this study offers a renewed exploration of the Bogdanovka mass murder, while highlighting the extemporaneous character of the most deadly single episode of the Romanian Holocaust. As this case demonstrates, even when there was no initial intent to slaughter Jews in a given area, other local circumstances and actors linked up to cause the obliteration of over 45,000 Jews in a matter of days. In the winter of 1941, the Romanian authorities' search for solutions to two separate problems-a man-made sanitary crisis and Bucharest's intention of removing Jews from the territories under its control-closely intertwined to spark a genocidal decision. The documentation reviewed for this study provides rare insight into Romanian and German micro-cooperation on the ground, and reveals the "double functionality" logic, which formed the basis of the Axis powers' jointly planned and implemented murder operation. Simultaneously, the paper discusses the entanglements between the issue of Jewish property, "sanitary considerations," and the rationale for mass killings.
- Dumitru, Diana.
- NIOD Bibliotheek
- Text
- on1105755825
- Bohdanivka (Domanivsʹkyĭ raĭon, Ukraine)--History.
- Bogdanovka (Concentration camp)
- Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--Ukraine--History.
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