Daviborshch's cart : narrating the Holocaust in Australian war crimes trials / David Fraser.
2010
KU43 .F73 2010 (Map It)
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Author
Title
Daviborshch's cart : narrating the Holocaust in Australian war crimes trials / David Fraser.
Published
Lincoln, [Neb.] : University of Nebraska Press, [2010]
Copyright
©2010
Call Number
KU43 .F73 2010
ISBN
9780803234123 (cloth : alk. paper)
0803234120 (cloth : alk. paper)
0803234120 (cloth : alk. paper)
Description
xv, 371 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
System Control No.
(OCoLC)555650129
Summary
"In the spring of 1942, Nazi forces occupying the Ukraine launched a wave of executions targeting the region's remaining Jewish communities. These mass shootings were open, public, and intimate. Although the victims themselves could never testify against their killers, many eyewitnesses could and did identify the perpetrators.
Among these communities, three local men from the villages of Serniki, Israylovka, and Gnivan were intimately implicated in such killing operations: Ivan Polyukhovich, a forester in the German-controlled administration; Heinrich Wagner, a Volksdeutscher liaison officer; and Mikolay Berezowsky, a member of the local police force. More than fifty years later, these three men were arrested and brought to trial in Australia for their alleged war crimes.
Daviborshch's Cart is more than an account of Holocaust perpetrators who found a safe haven in postwar Australia. It is also the story of the Holocaust in the Ukraine, the War Crimes Act, Nazi policies, and the ways in which future generations translate history into law, archives into proof, and law into justice. Based on a review of previously unexamined historical and legal documents and transcripts, Daviborshch's Cart offers the first critical examination of Australian attempts to bring alleged Nazi criminals to justice."--pub. desc.
Among these communities, three local men from the villages of Serniki, Israylovka, and Gnivan were intimately implicated in such killing operations: Ivan Polyukhovich, a forester in the German-controlled administration; Heinrich Wagner, a Volksdeutscher liaison officer; and Mikolay Berezowsky, a member of the local police force. More than fifty years later, these three men were arrested and brought to trial in Australia for their alleged war crimes.
Daviborshch's Cart is more than an account of Holocaust perpetrators who found a safe haven in postwar Australia. It is also the story of the Holocaust in the Ukraine, the War Crimes Act, Nazi policies, and the ways in which future generations translate history into law, archives into proof, and law into justice. Based on a review of previously unexamined historical and legal documents and transcripts, Daviborshch's Cart offers the first critical examination of Australian attempts to bring alleged Nazi criminals to justice."--pub. desc.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 347-362) and index.
Record Appears in
Gift
Purchased from the income of the Rouse Fund
Gift

The Arthur W. Diamond Law Library
Purchased from the income of the Rouse Fund
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
ix
Acknowledgments
xi
A Note on Language
xiii
Introduction: The Long and Winding Road from Ukraine to Australia
1
1.
History, War Crimes, and Law in Ukraine
15
2.
A Brief Political and Legal History of Australia and Nazi War Criminals
50
3.
Law and History in Australian War Crimes Trials: Ukrainian Foresters, the Shoah, and the Polyukhovich Case
94
4.
Mikolay Berezowsky: The Case of "The Witness who Knew too Much"
146
5.
The Story of Daviborshch's Cart: Law, History, Truth, and the Holocaust in Ukraine
192
6.
Translating Law, Translating History, in Australian War Crimes Trials
242
7.
Telling Stories about the Shoah: Perpetrators, Victims, and the Politics of Australian Identity in the hand that Signed the Paper
263
8.
Law, Memory, and Justice: The Australian Experience
297
Notes
321
Bibliography
347
Index
363