Andrew Kornbluth is a Research Fellow at the Institute of Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies at the University of California, Berkeley. He is a former fellow of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany.
Kornbluth’s forensic examination of August trials documents, only
recently made available for scrutiny, confirms that the Jedwabne
pogrom was not an isolated event…As a result of actions taken by
Germans and Poles during this period, 90 per cent of Poland’s 3.5
million Jewish population was exterminated. Kornbluth’s detailing
of cases makes difficult reading.
*Jewish Chronicle*
Pioneering…Kornbluth examines the decree, its consequences and
iterations, and its functioning in the complex realities of postwar
Poland—both then and, by implication, today. Then, as now, the
government largely sought to underscore crimes against Poles and to
minimize crimes against Jews…Kornbluth shows brilliantly how, when
those actually found guilty and sentenced for crimes against Jews
challenged the verdicts, the description of facts would be totally
changed between the original trial and the appeals trial,
exonerating the perpetrators and strengthening the legend of Polish
innocence.
*Moment*
This is an excellent study and an important contribution to the
ongoing discussion about collaboration, retribution, and justice in
postwar Poland…A must read for anyone interested in the long-term
consequences of crimes committed on the ‘margins of the
Holocaust.’
*Antisemitism Studies*
Excellent…Complicating the dominant Polish myth of heroic
resistance, The August Trials provides a rich, sobering account of
how Poles perpetrated and then evaded responsibility for many
heinous Holocaust crimes.
*Canadian Journal of History*
A singularly important book, demonstrating how the opening of the
archives after the fall of communism transformed our understanding
of the past…an invaluable guide to a body of trial records in
postwar Poland.
*Journal of Modern History*
I cannot think of a book that provides a better understanding of
the dominant contemporary Polish discourse, in which good deeds and
heroism during the war are invariably attributed to the Polish
nation, whereas adverse behavior is always attributed to
‘criminals,’ ‘individuals,’ or the ‘margins of society’…a riveting
portrayal of nationalism in a smaller nation that, even today,
remains uncertain of its identity and place within a complex and
rapidly changing world — and, in consequence, is obsessed with
promoting a sanitized version of national history.
*Studies in Contemporary Jewry*
The narratives Kornbluth has pieced together from interrogation and
trial transcripts are extraordinary, telling stories that prompt
anger, outrage, and reflection. This impressive work is
unprecedented in providing an understanding of Poland’s legal
reckoning with World War II. The results bear comparison with and
lessons for ongoing attempts to master violent pasts around the
world.
*Samuel Moyn, author of The Last Utopia: Human Rights in
History*
A brilliant and courageous book. The story Kornbluth exposes is
deeply tragic, for it shows that in World War II Poland heroic
resistance to the Nazis was accompanied by the treacherous
collaboration of those who betrayed Jewish fellow citizens. After
the war, despite thousands of trials of collaborators, Polish
Communists asserted the wartime innocence of all Poles, cobbling
together a usable past that exonerated their compatriots. History
is a heavy burden in this tale, but facing it boldly is the most
important first step in lifting that burden.
*Ronald Grigor Suny, author of Stalin: Passage to
Revolution*
A pathbreaking, vital, and engaging work. Kornbluth’s engrossing
account of the possibilities and impossibilities of justice in
postwar Poland allows us to see into the dynamics of Holocaust
violence and memory in revealing new ways.
*James Loeffler, author of Rooted Cosmopolitans: Jews and Human
Rights in the Twentieth Century*
How did Poland’s Communists gain traction in the most
anti-Communist society in Europe? In this landmark study, Kornbluth
gives an unsettling answer: it was by fostering the corrosive myth
that Poland was the one society in occupied Europe to avoid
complicity with the Nazis. He revises not only our view of
Communist Poland, but of the history of the Holocaust in
Poland.
*John Connelly, author of From Enemy to Brother: The Revolution
in Catholic Teaching on the Jews, 1933–1965*
Kornbluth’s superbly readable book takes as its focus a largely
neglected aspect of the legal response to the Holocaust: the
postwar Polish trials of Poles who committed crimes against their
Jewish compatriots. This sensitive, groundbreaking study offers an
important and sophisticated meditation on the limits of justice and
the lure of myth-making when it comes to a nation’s reckoning with
a history of collective crimes.
*Lawrence Douglas, author of The Right Wrong Man: John Demjanjuk
and the Last Great Nazi War Crimes Trial*
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