2014
DOI: 10.1111/johs.12075
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“We are a people, one people”: How 1967 Transformed Holocaust Memory and Jewish Identity in Israel and the US

Abstract: This paper examines how the "narrative-identities" of Jewish communities in Israel and the US were unified through the events surrounding Israel's 1967 war with Egypt, Jordan and Syria. Using a range of historical materials, I show how key elements of the two communities' identities were rearranged and untied through a new, shared narrative that linked the Holocaust, Jewish victimhood and Israel. I argue that the old Zionist narrative enabled the new one, which in turn helped bind the two communities discursiv… Show more

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(6 citation statements)
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“…In Israel, memorialisation was dominated by public memory, principally through the Yad Vashem Law of 1953 which created the annual Holocaust Remembrance Day known as Yom HaShoah. Public commemorations such as Yom HaShoah selectively remembered uprisings and resistance rather than the victims of the Holocaust (Navon, 2015). War heroes such as the partisans who resisted the Nazis were respected, memorialised and mourned in contrast to the Nazi collaborators – the Kapos – who survived as well as the other survivors and victims who were thought of as weak – part of European Jewry that were lambs to the slaughter.…”
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confidence: 99%
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“…In Israel, memorialisation was dominated by public memory, principally through the Yad Vashem Law of 1953 which created the annual Holocaust Remembrance Day known as Yom HaShoah. Public commemorations such as Yom HaShoah selectively remembered uprisings and resistance rather than the victims of the Holocaust (Navon, 2015). War heroes such as the partisans who resisted the Nazis were respected, memorialised and mourned in contrast to the Nazi collaborators – the Kapos – who survived as well as the other survivors and victims who were thought of as weak – part of European Jewry that were lambs to the slaughter.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The emerging concept of trauma that came out of the trial (Stern, 2000) began to transform survivor identity into a more collective identity that was also part of the Israeli national identity. The dichotomies of either hero or victim or a hero or collaborator shifted and survival itself became reframed as something heroic (Klar et al, 2013; Navon, 2015).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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