by Mike Mitchell (Translator), Mike Mitchell (Translator), Maurice Rajsfus (Author), Phyllis Aronoff (Translator)
A two-volume book in which Maurice Rajsfus, a French activist and former investigative journalist for Le Monde, shares his research and personal recollections in order to shed new light on France's role in the Holocaust. In the first volume, Operation Yellow Star, Rajsfus meticulously analyzes archival documents, demonstrating the extent of police collaboration with the Vichy regime and how it facilitated the persecution, deportation, and ultimately the death of hundreds of thousands of Jews. Examining long-unseen arrest records and transcripts, Rajsfus seeks to understand how and why many average French citizens resisted Nazi occupation while others were willingly complicit. In the second book, Black Thursday, Rajsfus recounts his own experiences of July 16, 1942, when he and his family were arrested as part of the Vel' d'Hiv roundup, the largest ever in France, of 13,000 Jews. While most of those detained during the two-day sweep eventually died in Auschwitz, the author survived and has spent the rest of his life grappling with his country's betrayal. Together, the two volumes by Rajsfus offer a damning expose of the bureaucracy of genocide, laying bare how cultural bias, political self-interest, and the influence of right-wing media led to the implementation of the Yellow Star as a segregationist device and determined France's culpability in the Holocaust. Maurice Rajsfus is the author of thirty books and from 1994--2012 he created and circulated Que fait la police, a Cop Watch bulletin detailing human rights abuses. He lives in Paris with his wife, sons and grandchildren.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 288
Publisher: DoppelHouse Press
Published: 13 Jul 2017
ISBN 10: 0997003499
ISBN 13: 9780997003499
Book Overview: $4000 marketing and publicity budget Published to coincide with the 75th commemorative anniversary of the implementation of the Yellow Star in France and the infamous round-up of Vel' d'Hiv, where 13,000 Jews, including the author and his family, were kidnapped by collaborationist French police. The majority of these people died in the Holocaust. Early book publicity in anticipation of the book publication happening around the time of the annual yarzeit, Holocaust Remembrance Day on April 23, 2017. Former director of publicity for Oxford University Press, Christian Purdy, will be working with us on this book. Early interest in the book expressed by one of the The New York Times' Paris-based correspondents, Pamela Druckerman, who spearheaded Kaminsky coverage and animation in The Times. Aiming for first and second serials in major leftist publications. Rare interview with Rajsfus conducted by Justine Malle, the daughter of filmmaker Louis Malle, will be circulated by DoppelHouse Press on our YouTube channel as part of publicity and marketing efforts.