The Jews of Switzerland by Dr. Willy Guggenheim

Identifier
9933020399904146
Language of Description
English
Languages
  • German
Source
EHRI Partner

Creator(s)

Scope and Content

The file contains an essay written by Dr. Willy Guggenheim, published by the Swiss Federation of Jewish Communities, entitled as 'The Jews of Switzerland'. It deals with the history of Jews in Switzerland, in detail the history before the World War I, between the two Wars, during World War II and after the War is described. Switzerland was for example the last country of all Western Europe which grant Jews full civic rights (1866) and only under strong foreign pressure. The fight for emancipation started from the canton of Aargau. From there the Jews fanned out to other places in Switzerland. The Jewish population rose from 3,000 in 1850 to 20,000 at the beginning of World War I, due to immigration from the neighboring regions. The modern history of Swiss Jews started after the first World War. The community structures were set, the Jews considered themselves as Swiss, although two thirds of them did not have Swiss citizenship. During World War II the Swiss refugee policy is a controversial chapter of the Swiss history. Already in the thirties the influx from Germany and Austria had greatly increased and during the War the refugee policy was not one of the most glorious chapter in Swiss history.The borders were closed, and for some time in 1942 the head of the Swiss federal police department, Heinrich Rothmund, even gave orders to sent Jews, who succeeded in entering Switzerland, back to where they came from. Guggenheim describes the Swiss Jewry community today as small, but rather well organized, like the country itself.

Conditions Governing Access

Access may be restricted to TAU community via Automatic Proxy

Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements

Mode of Access : WWW

Note(s)

  • Electronic access only

  • Electronic text and image data Jerusalem Yad Vashem 2015

  • Title viewed 08.12.2019

People

Subjects

Places

This description is derived directly from structured data provided to EHRI by a partner institution. This collection holding institution considers this description as an accurate reflection of the archival holdings to which it refers at the moment of data transfer.