This volume is the twenty-sixth in the Holocaust Studies Series
sponsored by the Rosenthal Institute for Holocaust Studies at the
Graduate Center of the City University of New York. It contains ten
seminal studies the catastrophe that befell the Jews of Europe during
the Nazi era. It also reprints two historically crucial documents
relating to the so-called Hungarian Gold Train, a freight train that, in
1944, carried stolen or confiscated Jewish valuables from Hungary.
Essays recount the unfolding of the Holocaust in Hungary and the history
of the Jews in Europe. They detail the elimination of Jews in Greece,
particularly from the large Sephardic community of Salonika, and
describe the rescue of Jews in Albania. Nonhistorical essays concern
autobiographical narratives in which survivors and their descendents
reflect on the return to former shtetls in East Central Europe and the
attitudes of victims toward the perpetrators of Holocaust crimes. Taken
altogether, this volume formulates a more complete understanding of the
Holocaust in Eastern Europe.