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GLST Exam #2

Authored by Angela Gregory

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GLST Exam #2
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41 questions

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1.

OPEN ENDED QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

UNIT 3

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Answer explanation

Eastern Europe: The Experience and Legacy of the Holocaust

2.

OPEN ENDED QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

Jan Gross, Neighbors: the Destruction of the Jewish Community in Jedwabne, Poland, (2001)

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Answer explanation

-Published in 2000, was a groundbreaking and controversial book-raised tremendous amount of debate (as well as anger and denial) in Poland -explores the problem of anti-Semitism and voluntary collaboration in the Holocaust by local peoples in occupied regions. -Jan Gross studies in detail the mass killing in 1941 of around 1,500 Jews who comprised half of a small Polish village of Jedwabne. -raises questions about the Memory politics and memory practices of Poland today. -takes place in Jedwabne, Poland, 1941

3.

OPEN ENDED QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

Jan Gross's Neighbors

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Answer explanation

In Nov 1942, when the Germans began putting ghetto inmates on trains to Auschwitz for extermination, seven of the surviving Jedwabne Jews escaped again and made it to the nearby hamlet of Janczewko. There Polish farmer Antonina Wyrzykowska and her husband Aleksander Wyrzykowski harbored the 7 Jedwabne Jews for 26 months from Nov 1942 to Jan 1945, despite hostility from neighbors and German searches of their property. The fugitives included Moshe Olszewicz, his wife Lea, and his brother Dov; Jacob and Lea Kubran; Jozef Gradowski; and Samuel Wasersztajn, a Jedwabne resident who later provided testimony about the massacre. After the war, the Wyrzkowskis were harassed and beaten up for what they had done.

4.

OPEN ENDED QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

Arguments made by Jan Gross

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Answer explanation

-"institutionalization of resentment" and 'divide and conquer' under the Nazis (and the Soviets) -"Intentionalist" vs. "Functionalist" debates-he does not wish to participate in those -Not only racial, but also an important political dimension to the Jedwabne massacre Disrupted claims -a range of studies have come up with different number of victims of the Jedwabne massacre, varying widely from Gross's 1,400 estimate to a Polish national study finding only over 300 killed -exact number of victims aside, the general point is that local Polish people actively participated in this pogrom.

5.

OPEN ENDED QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

Jan Gross's book Neighbors analyzes:

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Answer explanation

a small village in Poland where a sudden massacre of Jews took place

6.

OPEN ENDED QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

Gross suggests that the two faces of Totalitariamism, Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union were guilty of

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Answer explanation

The institutionalization of "resentment" or pitting people against one another (which in the German case, underpinned the Holocaust)

7.

OPEN ENDED QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

In the excerpts you read, the sources Gross primarily draws upon to make his argument are

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Answer explanation

testimonials of the villagers themselves, just after the event and many years later

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