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FEFERMAN, KIRIL (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   135923


Jews war: attitudes of Soviet Jewish soldiers and officers toward the USSR in 1940–41 / Feferman, Kiril   Article
Feferman, Kiril Article
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Summary/Abstract Prior to the war, young Jewish soldiers turned out to be largely a loyal group within the Red Army toward the Bolshevik regime. However, akin to the general population, some Jewish soldiers and officers, whether in the ‘core’ Soviet Union or in the new territories, were dissatisfied with or even resentful of the regime. The German attack on the USSR promptly transformed all Jewish soldiers and officers into the staunchest anti-Nazi force and hence, probably one of the most reliable groups in the Red Army.
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2
ID:   088892


Soviet humanitarian action?: centre, periphery and the evacuation of refugees to the North Caucasus, 1941-1942 / Feferman, Kiril   Journal Article
Feferman, Kiril Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract In the first year of the Soviet-German war, hundreds of thousands of Soviet citizens were evacuated to the North Caucasus. Many of them were Jewish women, children and old men who arrived independently in the region. Their evacuation created serious frictions with the local authorities and population with the newcomers often being protected by the central Soviet government. The latter came to welcome the arrival of these refugees in the North Caucasus, despite its initial reluctance to promote the evacuation of those whose contribution to the country's war effort was not direct.
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