Above the Death Pits, Beneath the Flag: Youth Voyages to Poland and the Performance of Israeli National Identity

Author:   Jackie Feldman
Publisher:   Berghahn Books
ISBN:  

9781845455699


Pages:   328
Publication Date:   01 October 2010
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Above the Death Pits, Beneath the Flag: Youth Voyages to Poland and the Performance of Israeli National Identity


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Author:   Jackie Feldman
Publisher:   Berghahn Books
Imprint:   Berghahn Books
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.70cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.440kg
ISBN:  

9781845455699


ISBN 10:   184545569
Pages:   328
Publication Date:   01 October 2010
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

List of illustrations List of tables Acknowledgements Preface: Seeking a personal past in the deathscapes of Poland Chapter 1. Introduction and Methodology The Shoah, Jewish-Israeli identity and the voyages to Poland Identifying the voyage as a rite of pilgrimage The voyage as model and mirror Commemoration and collective memory Jewish memory paradigms and their Zionist transformations Territorializing Jewish history in Zionist practice Israeli social research on Shoah memory From personal trauma to social constructivism Previous research on the Poland voyages From process to product: The ethnography of the voyage Context, Structure, and Performance in the Voyages to Poland Organization of the Book Chapter 2. The historical and social context of Iraeli Shoah commemoration The history of Shoah memory in Israel Early reactions to the Shoah From the Six Day War to the Yom Kippur War Begin's rise to power: The use and abuse of Shoah memory Generational time, the search for roots, and Israeli ethnicity The Shoah in Israeli education - school textbooks and curricula Spaces and times of Israeli Shoah Commemoration Yad Vashem: monument and memory Holocaust Memorial Day: calendar and commemoration Chapter 3. The structure of the Poland voyages Origins, history, and proclaimed aim of the voyage The title of the voyage: seeking my brothers - the masa to Poland The voyage group as substitute family The Poland voyage as a masa Administration and voyage staff Voyage staff The delegation leader The guides The accompanying teachers The doctor and nurse The Polish guide and driver The survivor - witnesses Security personnel Logistic arrangements: Food, clothing, and flags The preparatory program Selection of participants The content of the preparatory program The itinerary and its implicit messages Exterior and interior space Classification of places in ""exterior space"": death, life, and Polish ""ventilation"" sites Allotment of time at sites The rhythms of time in the voyage itinerary Student expectations, Polish landscape, and guiding narratives Guides' narrative techniques From structure to performance Chapter 4. Performing the Poland voyages On the road: Walking through the Poland Voyage Recruitment and voyage preparations at Sulam High School The threshold of Poland - day one The road to Treblinka - day two ""This is Treblinka Station"" Tykocin: Synagogues of the past and the survivor as sheriff ""See, there are no birds in this forest"" Evening discussion: when do we get to the Shoah? Bus travel, ventilation and prayer - day three Kabbalat Shabbat: Orthodox Judaism as safe Zionist heritage Shabbat rest, Shabbat shopping - day four Slouching through Cracow (Non-)encounter with a Polish school Singing for home After Midnight: the staff meeting The heart of the Shoah: Auschwitz-Birkenau - day five Auschwitz I - Approaching the contested site of memory Manifesting Israel at Auschwitz Visiting the exhibition in Auschwitz I Birkenau — the Heart of the Death Camp ""Honoring"" the Righteous Gentile and the witnesses Ventilazia: on the road again - day six Touching the icons of death: Majdanek - day seven The visit to Majdanek Entering the site The gas chambers Shoes as relics: odour and authenticity ""We’re the same children who were there at the end"" Closing the circle: the final evening discussion Going home: From Warsaw to Tel Aviv - day eight Confronting the not-yet-dead Diaspora The route of victory Final ceremony: the little guy sends us on our way! Chapter 5. The ceremonies of the Poland voyages Introduction: What makes ceremonies different? Contexts of voyage ceremonies School ceremonies in Poland and Israel Sites, times, and configurations of ceremonies Representative examples of ceremony types Delegation-wide ceremonies Above the death pits, beneath the flag of Israel: the ceremony at Birkenau Warsaw: a ceremony that failed Bus-group ceremonies: ""Every person has a name"" Individual ritual acts ""Honoring"" ceremonies for Righteous Gentiles and witnesses Religious texts and the commemorative ceremonies The close of the ceremony: Hatikvah and the flag Ceremonies as ""triggers"": group crying and consolation The ceremonies: Conclusions Chapter 6. Homecoming - the transmission of Holocaust memory and Jewish-Israeli Identity Becoming a witness - the aftermath of the voyage Transmitting the voyage experience Talking about the voyage: Conversations with classmates, family, and survivors Presentations: Albums, videos, ceremonies, and the future of ""witnessing"" Subsequent effects of the voyage on participants Changes in attitudes towards Jewish tradition and the Diaspora The voyage and Polish others The voyage and dedication to the nation Dedication to the flag and students’ political opinions Survival by proxy and service in the Israeli army The future of the Israeli voyages to Poland Chapter 7. Holocaust memory, national identity, and transformative ritual Conclusions: Poland voyages as national pilgrimages Cosmopolitan and nationalist memories of the Shoah in the ages of representations The Poland voyages and modern state ritual: An event that models promoted by a bureaucracy Models and mirrors, bodies and texts The risks of transformatory events in bureaucracies Afterword Appendix: The orthodox delegations to Poland Bibliography Index

Reviews

Feldman's book is to be recommended unreservedly: as an encouragement for empirically based research into the practice of memory, but also in regard to the often mentioned 'future of memory' of the NS crimes.A * H-Net ...this at moments brilliant book is always intelligent and in-depth. It is written with scholarly integrity and erudition. The importance of Feldman's contribution to the scholarship of contemporary Israeli identity and the representations and the memory of the Holocaust is undeniable...It opens up fresh questions about the relationship between nation-state bureaucracies, textual and bodily experiences, and the pursuit of nationalism. And it asks where the limits and risks are of this conscious cultivation of nationalism in today's Israel.A * H-Soz-u-Kult Jackie Feldman's study is a mandatory book, not only for teachers of history, but also for every educator and educational administrator. By means of methodical anthropological research, Feldman describes the components and construction, of the visits by young Israelis to the death camps in Poland, organized on behalf of the Ministry of Education since the 1990s, and their consolidation into a ritual construct of pilgrimage which strengthens and integrates mythical, religious, and national features.A * Journal of Israeli History The study offers an important contribution to an understanding of dealing with memory in Israeli society and creates a basis for a well-grounded and objective debate on a highly sensitive topic, the significance of which reaches well beyond the Israeli context.A * Newsletter of the Fritz Bauer Institute, Frankfurt/Germany Jackie Feldman's extensive research and absorbing analysis of Israeli youth voyages to Poland result in a compelling and unsettling argument about the meanings of Holocaust memory in Israel. This brilliant contribution will make us rethink the use of Holocaust memory in Israeli culture and society and beyond. * Alon Confino, University of Virginia, author of Germany As a Culture of Remembrance: Promises and Limits of Writing History Above the Death Pits, Beneath the Flag offers rich ethnographic data and evocative observations on the transformative power of Israeli youth trips to the death camps in Poland and explores how they shape the youth's historical consciousness. Jackie Feldman's study is a must read for anyone interested in collective memory, tourism and pilgrimage, and the intricate meanings of the Holocaust in contemporary Israeli life. * Yael Zerubavel, Author of Recovered Roots: Collective Memory and the Making of Israeli National Tradition. Professor of Jewish Studies & History and Director, The Allen and Joan Bildner Center for the Study of Jewish Life, Rutgers University


Author Information

Jackie Feldman lectures in Social Anthropology at Ben Gurion University, Beersheba, Israel. His areas of interest are anthropology of religion, collective memory, pilgrimage, and tourism. He has published on Holocaust memory and pilgrimages to the Second Temple and worked as a tour guide for Christian pilgrims to the Holy Land.

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