The Third Reich and the Palestine Question

Front Cover
Transaction Publishers, 2000 - History - 319 pages

In order to ensure its racial, ideological, and strategic interests, the Hitler regime actively supported the status quo in Palestine and the Middle East during the interwar period. This included the perpetuation of British imperial power in Palestine, the Jewish National Home (not an independent Jewish state) promised by the Balfour Declaration, and the rejection of Arab self-determination and independence.

The Third Reich and the Palestine Question is the first comprehensive study of German Palestine policy during the 1930s. Francis R. Nicosia places that policy within the context of historical German interests and aims in Palestine, the Middle East, and Europe from the Wilhelminian era through the Weimar period and the Third Reich. He also provides insight into the broader foreign policy aims and calculations of the Nazi regime throughout the Arab Middle East before World War II.

In a new introduction, Nicosia places his ground-breaking research in its proper historical perspective. He reviews some of the recent literature on the history of Nazi Germany and the Holocaust. He also discusses some of the archival materials that have recently become available in the former German Democratic Republic and Soviet Union.

"Nicosia has written the definitive study of this fascinatingepoch in the histories of the participants. It is a masterful examination of every interwoven thread in the complicated tapestry of Nazi Germany's relations with the Middle East, as well as with Great Britain and the Zionist movement."--Arnold Krammer, American Historical Review

"The tight structure of the book, lucid narrative, and exhaustive use of relevant sources lend this book a definitive character."--Martin Kramer, Middle Eastern Studies

"A masterly piece of scholarship, Nicosia's historical study defines the aims and purposes of Nazi foreign policy toward Palestine in the thirties A valuable addition to an often neglected area of Holocaust studies."--Dimensions, A Journal of Holocaust Studies

Francis R. Nicosia
is professor of history at St. Michael's College in Colchester, Vermont.

 

Contents

Imperial and Weimar Precedents
1
Early National Socialist Attitudes toward Zionism
16
The Development of the Haavara Transfer Agreement
29
The Zionist Connection 19331937
50
The Role of England in Hitlers Foreign Policy Plans
67
The Peel Partition Plan and the Question
109
The Rejection of Diplomatic Initiatives against
123
Hitlers Intervention and the Continuation of Jewish
140
The Economic Ausschaltung
148
The Limits of the Legal Immigration System
157
Toward the Final Solution
163
German Propaganda and Italian Middle East Policy
174
Germany and the Arab World 19381939
180
Conclusions
193
Copyright

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About the author (2000)

Francis R. Nicosia is professor of history at St. Michael's College in Colchester, Vermont.

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