Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- List of Contributors
- Map 1. The Jews of Italy, 1938
- Map 2. Principal Centers of Anti-Jewish Persecution, 1938–1943
- Introduction
- Part One ITALIAN JEWRY FROM LIBERALISM TO FASCISM
- Part Two RISE OF RACIAL PERSECUTIONS
- 4 Characteristics and Objectives of the Anti-Jewish Racial Laws in Fascist Italy, 1938–1943
- 5 The Exclusion of Jews from Italian Academies
- 6 The Damage to Italian Culture: The Fate of Jewish University Professors in Fascist Italy and After, 1938–1946
- 7 Building a Racial State: Images of the Jew in the Illustrated Fascist Magazine, La Difesa della Razza, 1938–1943
- 8 The Impact of Anti-Jewish Legislation on Everyday Life and the Response of Italian Jews, 1938–1943
- 9 The Children of Villa Emma at Nonantola
- 10 Anti-Jewish Persecution and Italian Society
- Part Three CATASTROPHE – THE GERMAN OCCUPATION, 1943–1945
- Part Four THE VATICAN AND THE HOLOCAUST IN ITALY
- Part Five AFTERMATH: CONTEMPORARY ITALY AND HOLOCAUST MEMORY
- Index
- Plates A–D
9 - The Children of Villa Emma at Nonantola
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- List of Contributors
- Map 1. The Jews of Italy, 1938
- Map 2. Principal Centers of Anti-Jewish Persecution, 1938–1943
- Introduction
- Part One ITALIAN JEWRY FROM LIBERALISM TO FASCISM
- Part Two RISE OF RACIAL PERSECUTIONS
- 4 Characteristics and Objectives of the Anti-Jewish Racial Laws in Fascist Italy, 1938–1943
- 5 The Exclusion of Jews from Italian Academies
- 6 The Damage to Italian Culture: The Fate of Jewish University Professors in Fascist Italy and After, 1938–1946
- 7 Building a Racial State: Images of the Jew in the Illustrated Fascist Magazine, La Difesa della Razza, 1938–1943
- 8 The Impact of Anti-Jewish Legislation on Everyday Life and the Response of Italian Jews, 1938–1943
- 9 The Children of Villa Emma at Nonantola
- 10 Anti-Jewish Persecution and Italian Society
- Part Three CATASTROPHE – THE GERMAN OCCUPATION, 1943–1945
- Part Four THE VATICAN AND THE HOLOCAUST IN ITALY
- Part Five AFTERMATH: CONTEMPORARY ITALY AND HOLOCAUST MEMORY
- Index
- Plates A–D
Summary
At the beginning of the Second World War, Jews in Germany and in Austria, then annexed to the Third Reich, were almost totally deprived of their rights, impoverished, and excluded from society. Their condition became even more dramatic as most escape routes were cut off. Borders became frontlines, passenger ships no longer could cross the North Sea and the Baltic, and the powers at war with Germany denied admission to all persons living in territories under Nazi domination. The only remaining chances of escape were now remote destinations in North, Central, or South America or in Asia – which could be reached via neutral and nonbelligerent European countries that as a rule denied permanent residence – or illegal immigration to Palestine.
During the first two weeks of war, “enemy aliens” were interned in Germany, as they were in all other belligerent countries. This measure chiefly affected Polish citizens. At the end of 1938 there were 13,000 Jews with Polish citizenship still living in Germany, although their number had declined by the time the war began. On September 7, 1939, Gestapo headquarters in Berlin issued an order that all Jewish males over sixteen having Polish citizenship were to be taken into custody, while all women and children were to be registered. Jews were therefore arrested in their homes and taken to the concentration camps at Dachau, Sachsenhausen, and Buchenwald.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Jews in Italy under Fascist and Nazi Rule, 1922–1945 , pp. 182 - 198Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005