Sussen Is Now Free of Jews
World War II, The Holocaust, and Rural Judaism
ISBN13: 9780823243297ISBN10: 082324329X
Hardback,
416 pages
May 2012,
Not Yet Published
Price:
$70.00 (06)A Fordham University Press Publication
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Description
Sussen Is Now Free of Jews offers a close look at the legacy of a few Jewish families from Sussen-a village in the District of Goppingen, which is located in the state of Baden Wurttemberg in southern Germany. The author, Gilya Gerda Schmidt, looks at this rural region through the lens of two Jewish families-the Langs and the Ottenheimers-who settled there in the early twentieth century. As a child, she shared with the Langs the same living space for just a few months. She remembers her mother's telling her of the Jews who lived in Sussen until the Holocaust.More than thirty years later, in a used bookstore in Knoxville, Tennessee, the author accidentally found documentation verifying the Jewish presence in a book about the surviving Jews of Wurttemberg. In it, she found confirmation that there had been Jews living in Sussen until the Holocaust. For the first time, she had the proof she needed to look into the reality behind this lingering mystery. Here began her detective-like journey to find out what happened to the Jews of Sussen.
A decade of research into local and regional archives ensued, and this very penetrating study is the result. In it, the author attempts to shed light on not just the original question of what happened to the two families during the Holocaust but also on a host of other questions: What was it like to be Jewish in rural southern Germany a century ago? What were the Jewish traditions of this region? What were the relations between Jews and Christians before the Holocaust? And where did those family members who were able to escape or who survived the concentration camps go when they left Sussen or Goppingen? Few witnesses came forward, yet the documents in the archives spoke volumes. This micro-history records the not-so-romantic journey of two Jewish families who lived in the Fils Valley. The study also addresses issues of being an American prisoner of war; of resuming life after the Holocaust; of the bureaucratic nightmare of requisitions, restitution, and reparations; and of life in America.
This unique book will be of interest to a general readership and is an important book for scholars in German and Holocaust studies.
Features
- This book is an essential chapter in the history of the city of Sussen. It is also a chapter in the history of the city of Goppingen, because the Sussen Jews belonged to the Goppingen Jewish community
- A major contribution to the scholarship of "Landjudentum," or rural Jewry, a category of scholarship that has taken root primarily as a consequence of the Holocaust, in an effort to document some of the hundreds of rural Jewish communities that have been lost forever
About the Author(s)
GILYA GERDA SCHMIDT is Professor of Religious Studies, Department of Religious Studies, and Director, the Fern and Manfred Steinfeld Program in Judaic Studies at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville. She has written three books and edited and/or translated five from German into English.


