Jews in Szczecin, 1945–50: At the Crossroad between Emigration and Assimilation

A. Wörn
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract: In 1946, the Polish authorities settled about 28,000 Polish-Jewish repatriates from the Soviet Union in Szczecin (Stettin). Situated on the Baltic Sea northeast of Berlin, Szczecin had been a German city until the end of the Second World War and then became Polish in July 1945 as a result of the Potsdam Agreement. The Polish government settled Jews in the “regained territories” for a range of opportunistic reasons. In the summer of 1946, Jewish life started to flourish in the city and a wide range of Jewish political and social organizations were established. However, the attempt to keep Jews in Szczecin failed. Anti-Semitism and harsh living conditions encouraged many Szczecin Jews to emigrate. The city became a hot spot of Jewish postwar emigration from Poland. The remaining Jews went through a process of “red assimilation” during the Stalinization of Poland. Most of them left the country later on, due to anti-Semitic government campaigns in 1956–57 and 1968–69.
犹太人在捷克,1945-50年:在移民和同化的十字路口
摘要:1946年,波兰当局在什切青(stetttin)安置了约28,000名从苏联遣返的波兰犹太人。什切青位于柏林东北的波罗的海沿岸,二战结束前一直是德国的一个城市,1945年7月根据《波茨坦协定》成为波兰的一个城市。出于一系列机会主义的原因,波兰政府将犹太人安置在“收复的领土”上。1946年夏天,犹太人的生活开始在这座城市蓬勃发展,各种各样的犹太政治和社会组织也相继成立。然而,把犹太人留在什切青的企图失败了。反犹太主义和恶劣的生活条件促使许多捷克犹太人移居国外。这座城市成为战后波兰犹太人移民的热点。剩下的犹太人在波兰斯大林化期间经历了“红色同化”的过程。由于1956-57年和1968-69年的反犹太主义政府运动,他们中的大多数人后来离开了这个国家。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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