Category Archives: Review

Ordinary Men : Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland

Christopher Browning, one of the better known Holocaust scholars today, used evidence from the post-war investigations of Police Battalion 101 to create an image of the “ordinary men” who participated in the massacre of Jews in Eastern Europe. By examining … Continue reading

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Not My Turn To Die (review)

As the former Yugoslavia broke into a multi-national civil war, it became clear that the Serbs intended to gain control over Bosnia and Herzegovina through a campaign of ethnic cleansing. In Not My Turn To Die, Savo Heleta, a thirteen … Continue reading

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We Wish to Inform You That Tomorrow We Will be Killed With Our Families

When you deal with books on genocide, you’re usually looking at one of three different formats. The most commonly seen is probably the third person objective variety; the second is the first person narrative (the survivors tale); and the third … Continue reading

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