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'''Fear - ] in ] after ]''' is a book by '']''. It was published by ] in 2006. '''Fear - ] in ] after ]''' is a book by '']''. It was published by ] in 2006.


Fear was written to explore the themes Gross introduced in '','' in it, he explores the question of how such a thing as the ] could have happened.
==Chapter 1: Poland Abandoned==


==Context==
In his first chapter, Gross lays out the horrors Poland suffered during ]: The initial division of the country between Stalin and Hitler, the subsequent Nazi conquest, the horror of the ] of Polish army officers by the Soviets, the ] of 1944 and the Soviet decision to postpone entering Warsaw until the German army had defeated the Polish ], the destruction of ], reduced, "to a pile of rubble," and the abandonment of Poland by Britain and America at the ].


==Chapter Two: The Unwelcoming of Jewish Survivors==


In his first chapter, Gross is at pains to lay out the horrors that Poland suffered during ]: The initial division of the country between Stalin and Hitler, the subsequent Nazi conquest, the] of Polish army officers by the Soviets, the ] of 1944 and the Soviet decision to postpone entering Warsaw until the German army had defeated the Polish ], the destruction of ( reduced, Gross tells us, "to a pile of rubble,"0 and the abandonment of Poland to half a century of Soviet Communist domination by Britain and America at the ].
Gross describes a situation in which the homes, property and businesses owned by Poland's Jews had been taken over by their neighbors with the result that Jews returning to their former homes in the hope of finding their relatives and rebuilding their lives were warned that they would be wise to leave and, in many cases, murdered. Property belonging to the Jewish community, including not only ]s, but office buildings and schools, became the property of local governments which could continue in possession only if no Jewish community was reestablished.


==The Unwelcoming of Jewish Survivors==
==Chapters 3 and 4 describe the ]==

Gross estimates that 250,000 Polish Jews attempted ot return home at the end of the war.

Gross describes a situation in which the homes, property, occupations and businesses of Polish Jews had been taken over by their neighbors during the Nazi occupation, with the result that Jews returning to their former homes in the hope of finding their relatives and rebuilding their lives were warned that they would be wise to leave and, in many cases, murdered. Property belonging to the Jewish community, including not only ]s, but office buildings and schools, became the property of local governments which could continue in possession only if no Jewish community was reestablished.

==]==

There were several pogroms, in addition to numerous more isolated murders of individuals and family gourps.


{{book-stub}} {{book-stub}}

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Fear - Anti-Semitism in Poland after Auschwitz is a book by Jan T. Gross. It was published by Random House in 2006.

Fear was written to explore the themes Gross introduced in , in it, he explores the question of how such a thing as the Jedwabne pogrom could have happened.

Context

In his first chapter, Gross is at pains to lay out the horrors that Poland suffered during WWII: The initial division of the country between Stalin and Hitler, the subsequent Nazi conquest, theKatyn massacre of Polish army officers by the Soviets, the Warsaw uprising of 1944 and the Soviet decision to postpone entering Warsaw until the German army had defeated the Polish Armia Krajowa, the destruction of ( reduced, Gross tells us, "to a pile of rubble,"0 and the abandonment of Poland to half a century of Soviet Communist domination by Britain and America at the Yalta Conference.

The Unwelcoming of Jewish Survivors

Gross estimates that 250,000 Polish Jews attempted ot return home at the end of the war.

Gross describes a situation in which the homes, property, occupations and businesses of Polish Jews had been taken over by their neighbors during the Nazi occupation, with the result that Jews returning to their former homes in the hope of finding their relatives and rebuilding their lives were warned that they would be wise to leave and, in many cases, murdered. Property belonging to the Jewish community, including not only synagogues, but office buildings and schools, became the property of local governments which could continue in possession only if no Jewish community was reestablished.

Kielce Pogrom

There were several pogroms, in addition to numerous more isolated murders of individuals and family gourps.

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