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Nobodies’ Jews: Non-national Jews between Refuge and Deportation during the 1930s and the Holocaust

Description du projet

Une étude plus approfondie des réfugiés Juifs pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale

L’objectif principal du projet HoloNNatJews, financé par l’UE, est de dresser un portrait chronologique contextuel des réfugiés juifs à compter de l’arrivée au pouvoir des nazis. Prenant la Belgique comme cas d’étude pertinent, le projet s’intéresse aux réfugiés juifs d’Europe occidentale, centrale et orientale en développant un cadre analytique tenant compte des points de vue juridiques, institutionnels et sociaux. Articulé autour de trois objectifs de recherche et recouvrant plusieurs champs disciplinaires, le projet sera mis en œuvre en mobilisant deux approches méthodologiques et différentes sources de recherche. Les données collectées seront analysées à l’aide de logiciels statistiques et d’outils numériques en sciences humaines. Si l’on veut construire un avenir non discriminatoire pour la société européenne, le terrible passage de la normalité à l’Holocauste doit être documenté afin d’empêcher que des atrocités similaires ne se reproduisent.

Objectif

The Nazi’s rise to power and occupation of large swathes of Europe had a significant impact on more than 17 million individuals. Jews formed the biggest group that was racially targeted by Nazi Germany. National Jewish communities in all European countries suffered from the increasing destruction of the Nazis. Notably, more than two thirds of all the Jewish victims in Nazi-occupied and Nazi allied countries were non-national Jews. Within this group, a large number were refugees after the Reich’s conquests of the 1930s. Tragically, many of them found refuge in countries that were subsequently occupied by Nazi Germany, from where the vast majority of them would be deported and killed. Although non-national Jews make up a significant percentage of the Jewish victims in their respective countries, we know next to nothing about them. Taking Belgium as a particularly relevant case study, with more than 93% of non-national Jews within its total Jewish population, but less than half of non-national Jews within its total Jewish victims, this proposal investigates Jewish refugees from Western Europe and Central and Eastern Europe alike. This research project will reconstruct the timeline of Jewish refugees’ lives since their arrival, throughout the 1930s, and during Nazi occupation of the 1940s by employing an analytical framework comprising legal, institutional, and social standpoints. Build around three research objectives and cutting across several disciplinary fields, this research idea will be implemented by mobilizing two methodological approaches and a variety of research sources. The research data will be analysed by employing statistical software and digital humanities tools. This research subject is relevant for the European policy on learning from the Holocaust to address the situation of refugees’ today, while this fellowship project constitutes a key step in this fellow career trajectory: to return to research and reach medium and long-term goals.

Coordinateur

KATHOLIEKE UNIVERSITEIT LEUVEN
Contribution nette de l'UE
€ 267 480,00
Adresse
OUDE MARKT 13
3000 Leuven
Belgique

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Région
Vlaams Gewest Prov. Vlaams-Brabant Arr. Leuven
Type d’activité
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Liens
Coût total
€ 267 480,00