EUROPEAN JUDAISM Sponsored by the Leo Baeck College and the Michael Goulston Foundation Editor: ALBERT H FRIEDLANDER, Kent House, Rutland Gardens, London SW7U 1BX, UK For over 20 years, European Judaism has provided a voice for the post-war Jewish world in Europe. It has reflected the different realities of each country and helped rebuild Jewish consciousness after the Holocaust. The journal acts as a focal point and vehicle of experience for cross-currents of intellectual, cultural and spiritual influences which can be creatively used by the Jewry of the new Europe. Leading Jewish writers, poets, scholars and intellectuals regularly contribute their work to the journal - over a wide range of subjects and from a variety of viewpoints. The journal also explores contemporary issues in the relationship between the Jewish community and the outside world, notably in terms of Jewish-Christian and Jewish-Muslim dialogue. It has also helped to pioneer a dialogue between Judaism and psychotherapy. European Judaism is a major resource for contemporary European Jewish thought. A Selection of Papers ROBERT S WISTRICH, German-Jewish symbiosis. GABRIEL JOSIPOVICI, Paradoxes of exile. EVA SZITA-MORRIS, Hungary: relighting the flame. ALIX PIRANI, Cain and Abel: a case for family therapy? ALBERT H FRIEDLANDER, The Bundesbahn and Chanina ben Teradion: dialogues of darkness. JONATHAN MAGONET, Creating a Holocaust liturgy. HOWARD COOPER, The last temptation of Noah. ELISABETH MAXWELL, The righteous gentiles. 1991 Volume 24 (2 issues) Annual subscription (1991) DM 100.00 Two-year rate (1991/92) DM 190.00 ISSN: 0014-3006 (00926) HOLOCAUST AND GENOCIDE STUDIES An International Journal Published in association with the United States Holocaust Memorial Council and Yad Vashem, The Holocaust Martyrs and Heroes Remembrance Authority, Jerusalem, Israel Editor-in-Chief: YEHUDA BAUER, Institute of Contemporary Jewry, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Mount Scopus 91905, Jerusalem, Israel Associate Editor: HUBERT G LOCKE, University of Washington, Seattle WA 98105, USA Chairman of the Editorial Board: ELIE WIESEL "This superb journal should become the leading publication in the academic study of the Holocaust." European Judaism, January 1986 The aim of Holocaust and Genocide Studies is to publish the foremost scholarly material reflecting the best in contemporary thought on the Holocaust and the related study of genocide. The journal will contain original material, research and review articles. By its publication policy, the journal will resolutely endeavour to combat genocidal practices and maximise human rights worldwide. A Selection of Papers Y BUCHLER (Israel), Kommandostab Reichsfuhrer-SS: Himmlers personal murder brigades in 1941. V N DADRIAN (USA), The role of Turkish physicians in the World War I genocide of Ottoman Armenians. A L ECKARDT (USA), Post-Holocaust theology: a journey out of the kingdom of night. N KAMPE (FRG), Normalizing the Holocaust? The recent historians debate in the Federal Republic of Germany. Z AMISHAI-MAISELS (Israel), The complexities of witnessing. A H ROSENFELD (USA), Reflections on Isaac. D J DIETRICH (USA), Catholic resistance in the Third Reich. Indexed/Abstracted in: Curr Cont/Arts & Hum, IBZ & IBR 1991 Volume 6 (4 issues) Annual subscription (1991) DM 200.00 Two-year rate (1990/91) DM 380.00 ISSN: 8756-6583 (00567) YAD VASHEM STUDIES Editor: AHARON WEISS, Yad Vashem, The Holocaust Martyrs and Heroes Remembrance Authority, Har Hazikaron, POB 3477, Jerusalem, Israel Yad Vashem Studies is a yearbook containing important scholarly contributions to the study of the Holocaust, and is published in Hebrew and English. The central memorial to the Holocaust in Israel is also an archive and a research institution. Its governing body is chaired by Dr Yitzhak Arad. Books published by Yad Vashem include reports of conferences on such topics as Jewish leadership during the Holocaust, rescue attempts, resistance and concentration camps. Each year there are three week courses in English, French and Spanish dealing with the Holocaust and antisemitism which are conducted in conjunction with the International Center for the Study of Antisemitism of the Hebrew University. A Selection of Papers N LENGEL-KRIZMAN, A contribution to the study of terror in the so-called independent state of Croatia: concentration camps for women 1941-1942. C MADAJCZYK, Hitlers direct influence on decisions affecting Jews during World War II. D BANKIER, The Germans and the Holocaust: what did they know? F BECKER & U JEGGLE, Memory and violence: local recollections of Jewish persecution during the Reichskristallnacht. D LEVIN, The fateful decision: the flight of the Jews into the Soviet interior in the summer of 1941. D PORAT, "A Year of Extermination" - a document on the attitude of the Yishuv in Eretz-Israel toward youth movements in Europe during the Holocaust. H ESHKOLI, The founding and activity of the Hehalutz-Histadrut Rescue Center in Geneva. N COHEN, Diaries of the Sonderkommandos in Auschwitz: coping with fate and reality. I GELLER, The Jewish educational system in Romania during World War II (1940- 1944). Z MANKOWITZ, The formation of Sheerit Hapleita: November 1944-July 1945. 1991: Volume 22 (1 issue) Annual subscription (1991) DM 63.00 Two year subscription (1991/92) DM 119.70 (00803)