March First Thursday Book Discussion: The Unwanted

The Unwanted: America, Auschwitz, and a Village Caught In Between,” by Michael Dobbs will be the subject of the March First Thursday Book Discussion. This event is part of the programming related to “Americans and the Holocaust,” a traveling exhibition that examines the motives, pressures and fears that shaped Americans’ responses to Nazism, war and genocide in Europe during the 1930s and 1940s. This exhibit is an educational initiative of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and the American Library Association and will be on display at the Columbia Public Library from February 9 through March 16.

Dobbs’ account of Jewish families’ desperate efforts to leave Germany and the American response is chilling and accurate. He deftly teases apart the strands of American politics, culture and current events, explaining not only what actions were taken (or not taken) by the U.S. government and citizens, but also the strategies and arguments leading up to them. That analysis is juxtaposed with a detailed account of the Jewish residents’ of the German town of Kippenheim attempts to flee the Nazi regime, as well as a recounting of the escalation of violence against them.

Artfully including primary sources and narratives, Dobbs brings life to the horrifying bind German Jews faced. On the one side was rapidly escalating persecution and terror, on the other a nearly impassible bureaucratic maze. From a perspective that condemns the Holocaust, Dobbs objectively analyzes the U.S. response, what happened and why, leaving readers to make their own judgments on the history and its implications for today.

Join us to share your thoughts on the book and hear from other community members on Thursday, March 5 at noon in the Children’s Programming Room.

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