False Havens The British Empire and the Holocaust
During the Holocaust period, the countries of the British Empire were viewed as safe havens for the persecuted Jews of Europe. As this collection of essays shows, however, they proved to be false havens. For the first time, the response of these countries of the British Empire to the Jewish refugee crisis of the 1930s and 1940s is addressed. False Havens discusses the essential problems presented by the crisis and demonstrates the tragedy of racism and bureaucratic tight-fistedness at a time when tolerance and imagination were essential. Contents: The British Colonial Empire and Jewish Refugees During the Holocaust Period: An Overview, Paul R. Bartrop; The Press Reports: Toronto Learns About Nazi Atrocities in 1933, Cyril Levitt and William Shaffir; The Dominions and the Evian Conference, 1938: A Lost Chance or a Golden Opportunity?, Paul R. Bartrop; No Northern Option: Canada and Refugees from Nazism before the Second World War, Lois Foster; The Shut Door of Mercy: Attitudes Among the Canadian Churches to the Refugee Crisis During the Nazi Era, Marilyn F. Nefsky; Indifference and Inconvenience: Jewish Refugees and Australia, 1933-45, Paul R. Bartrop; The Catholic and Anglican Church Press of New South Wales and the Jews, 1933-45, Rachael L.E. Kohn; Jewish Refugee Immigration to New Zealand, 1933-52, Ann Beaglehole; The Irish Free State and the Refugee Crisis, 1933-45, Dermot Keogh; South African Policy and Jewish Refugee Immigration in the 1930s, Edna Bradlow; 'We should first look to British stock': The Refugee Experience in Newfoundland, Gerhard P. Bassler.