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Why Did So Many of the Jews in Antwerp Perish in the Holocaust?

Reviewed by Dan Michman

  1. There were 4,284 Jews in Belgium in 1880; 17,250 in 1890; slightly more than 40,000 in 1914; 17,000–20,000 (!) in 1920; 50,000 in 1930; and slightly more than 70,000 in 1940. See p. XVI in the book reviewed here, and also Jean Paul Schreiber, Immigration et integration des juifs de Belgique, 1830–1914, Ph.D. Dissertation (Universite Libré, Brussels, 1993).
  2. For a broader discussion, see my introductory article, “Research on the Holocaust in Belgium and in General: History and Context,” in Dan Michman, ed., Belgium and the Holocaust: Jews, Belgians, Germans (Jerusalem: Yad Vashem, 1998), pp. 3–38, esp. pp. 20– 28. The comprehensive study is Maxime Steinberg, L’Étoile et le fusil, I-III (Bruxelles: Vie Ouvrière, 1983–1986).
  3. Two factors brought this about: the belated development of research, as noted above, and the fact that most researchers on this topic in Belgium were Francophones, who do not read studies in other languages extensively. See Dan Michman, Pour une historiographie de la Shoah. Conceptualisations, terminologie, définitions et problèmes fondamentaux (Paris: In Press Éditions, 2001), pp. 462–466.
  4. Two books that discuss the 1930s, and point to the importance of their research topics for the era of German occupation are especially noteworthy: Rudi van Doorslaer, Kinderen van het getto. Joodse revolutionairen in België (1925–1940) (Antwerpen-Baarn-Gent: Hadewijch AMSAB, 1995) and Frank Caestecker, Ongewenste Gasten. Joodse vluchtelingen en migranten in de dertiger jaren (Brussels: VUBPress, 1993).
  5. The proceedings of this symposium are available in English: Michman, ed., Belgium and the Holocaust.
  6. Les Biens des victimes des persécutions anti-juives en Belgique. Spoliation— Rétablissement des droits; Résultats de la Commission d’étude. Rapport Final de la Commission d’étude sur le sort des biens des membres de la Communauté juive de Belgique spoliés ou délaissés pendant la guerre 1940–1945 (Brussels: Services du Premier Ministre, 2001).
  7. Lieven Saerens, De houding van de Belgische publieke opinie tegenover de Joden in de jaren vóór Wereldoorlog II: De Gazet van Antwerpen tijdens de periode 1933–1940, 2 vols, Licentiaatverhandeling Geschiedenis (Leuven: Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, 1983).
  8. Two of them—on the attitude of the Belgian Catholic priesthood and the population of Antwerp toward the Jews before the Holocaust—originated in lectures at the aforementioned 1989 symposium at Bar-Ilan University and were published in the book of proceedings. See Michman, ed., Belgium and the Holocaust, pp. 117-194.
  9. “Wij [houden] dit werkstuk voor een doctoraat dat de vakgroep Nieuwste Geschiedenis van de KUL onwaardig is”—Yvan Verbraeck, “Tot bewijs van het tegendeel blijft doctoraat van Lieven Saerens historisch onverantwoord,” in Belgisch Israëlitisch Weekblad, 24–31 December 1999; “de doctoraatsstudie van Lieven Saerens kan zeker niet als een historisch document worden beschouwd,” in L[ouis] D[avids], “Oorlogsburgemeester Delwaide valselijk beschuldigd van antisemitisme,” in Belgisch Israëlitisch Weekblad, 17 December 1999.
  10. Maxime Steinberg, Un pays occupé et ses juifs. Belgique entre France et Pays-Bas (Brussels: Quorum Eds, 1998).
  11. Michman, Pour une historiographie de la Shoah, p. 416.
  12. For a discussion of similar developments in the Netherlands and France, see Dan Michman, “Changes in the Attitude of the Dutch toward the Jews on the Eve of the Holocaust,” in Joseph Michman, ed., Studies in the History of Dutch Jewry (Hebrew), 3 (Jerusalem: The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, The Institute for Research on Dutch Jewry, 1981), pp. 247–262; Vicki Caron, “The Antisemitic Revival in France in the 1930s: The Socioeconomic Dimension Reconsidered,” The Journal of Modern History, 70 (March 1998), pp. 24–73.
  13. On this see also, Martin Conway, Collaboration in Belgium. Léon Degrelle and the Rexist Movement (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1993).
  14. The book’s bibliography indicates that the author did read extensively on this topic and others. However, he uses this bibliography to extract certain details, such as the background of the April 1941 pogrom in Antwerp (p. 568), but not to paint a comprehensive contextual picture.
  15. Michman, “Research on the Holocaust in Belgium,” pp. 30–31.
  16. Guus Meershoek, Dienaren van het gezag. De Amsterdamse politie tijdens de bezetting (Amsterdam: Van Gennen, 1999).