Yad Vashem International Book Prize for Holocaust Research awarded to Christoph Dieckmann
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                  Yad Vashem International Book Prize for Holocaust Research awarded to Christoph Dieckmann

                  Yad Vashem International Book Prize for Holocaust Research awarded to Christoph Dieckmann

                  13.12.2012, Holocaust

                  The International Institute for Holocaust Research of Yad Vashem awarded the Yad Vashem International Book Prize for Holocaust Research to Dr. Christoph Dieckmann, of Keele University, in the UK, for his 2-volume book "Deutsche Besatzungspolitik in Litauen 1941-1944" (German Occupation Policy in Lithuania 1941-1944).
                  The prize is awarded for path-breaking scholarly research on the Holocaust. The Prize Committee called Dieckmann’s work “a model for similar research to be done in other countries.”
                  Christoph Dieckmann's 1,652 pages-long comprehensive study of German occupation policies in Lithuania, of which the Holocaust of Lithuanian Jews is a major component (more than half of the entire study), "serves as a shining model for similar research to be done regarding other countries," the Prize Committee said.
                  "He succeeds in integrating the context of war and warfare – with their horrors and the needs for food, labor forces and the like – into the picture, yet he clearly and emphatically shows the centrality of antisemitism as both the driving force and framework for Nazi policies in general in this area, and consequently, for the entire Nazi project."
                  "This achievement is based not only on a vast amount of documentation assembled from archives in Germany, Lithuania, Latvia, Russia, Great Britain, the United States and Israel, and on an enormous body of printed sources and literature, as well as memoires and testimonies; it is also the result of the fact that the author was himself able to read first hand sources and literature in German, Lithuanian, Russian, English, Yiddish and Hebrew."
                  Dieckmann’s description of the actions and atrocities is not a dry account: while basing his narrative on German and local records in order to understand the initiatives and circumstances, the events themselves are usually described with the help of lengthy quotes from Jewish testimonies, whose names are mentioned.

                  EJP