TY - BOOK AU - Brooks,Crispin AU - Feferman,Kiril TI - Beyond the Pale: : The Holocaust in the North Caucasus T2 - Rochester Studies in East and Central Europe SN - 9781648250033 PY - 2020/// CY - Rochester PB - Boydell & Brewer Ltd KW - gnd KW - Deutschland. Einsatzgruppe D KW - Judenvernichtung KW - Kollaboration KW - Juden KW - Besetzung KW - Weltkrieg <1939-1945> KW - Kaukasus (Nord) KW - Sowjetunion N1 - Introduction - Crispin Brooks and Kiril FefermanThe Caucasus: A Rock in the Grinding Wheels of World History - Georgi DerluguianDwelling at the Foot of a Volcano? Jewish Perspectives on the Holocaust in the North Caucasus - Kiril Feferman"Operation Blue," Einsatzgruppe D, and the Genocide in the Caucasus - Andrej AngrickThe Kaukasier Kompanie ("Caucasian Company"): Soviet Ethnic Minorities, Collaborators, and Mass Killers - Stephen TyasMass Executions in Krasnodar Krai: Cross-Checking Sources for the Holocaust in the North Caucasus - Andrej UmanskyIn the Shadow of "Mass Treason:" The Holocaust in the Karachai Region - Crispin BrooksRescue and Jewish-Muslim Relations in the North Caucasus - Sufian Zhemukhov and William Youmans"We were Saved because the Occupation Lasted only Six Months:" (Self-)Reflection on Survival Strategies during the Holocaust in the North Caucasus - Irina RebrovaThe Holocaust on Soviet Territory - Forgotten Story? Individual and Official Memorialization of the Holocaust in Rostov-on-Don - Christina WinklerBibliographyList of ContributorsIndex N2 - When war between the Soviet Union and Germany broke out in 1941, thousands of refugees - many of whom were Jews - poured from war-stricken Ukraine, Crimea, and other parts of Russia into the North Caucasus. Hoping to find safety, they came to a region the Soviets had struggled to pacify over the preceding 20 years of their rule. The Jewish refugees were in especially unfamiliar territory, as the North Caucasus had been mostly off-limits to Jews before the Soviets arrived, and most local Jewish communities were thus small. The region was not known as a hotbed of traditional antisemitism. Nevertheless, after occupying the North Caucasus in the summer and autumn of 1942, the Germans exterminated all the Jews they found - at least 30,000 - aided by local collaborators. While scholars have focused on local collaboration during the German occupation and on the subsequent Soviet deportations of entire North Caucasian ethnic groups, the region has largely escaped the attention of Holocaust researchers. This volume, the first book-length study devoted exclusively to the Holocaust in the North Caucasus, addresses that gap. Contributors present richly documented essays on such topics as German killing operations, decision-making by Jewish refugees, local collaboration, rescue, and memory, taking care to integrate their findings into the broader contexts of Holocaust, North Caucasian, Russian, and Soviet history. CRISPIN BROOKS is the curator at the University of Southern California Shoah Foundation's Visual History Archive. KIRIL FEFERMAN is a senior lecturer and the head of the Holocaust History Center at Ariel University ER -