ushmm.org
What are you looking for?
Search
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Museum Education Research History Remembrance Genocide Support
Find ID cards FIND ID CARDS
FIND ARTICLES Find articles
Holocaust Encyclopedia
CONTENTS COMMENTS PRINT E-MAIL THIS PAGE
E-MAIL UPDATES
   
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
  Lion Feuchtwanger in New York, November 17, 1932.
See more photographs

LION FEUCHTWANGER
RELATED ARTICLESRELATED LINKS

 

EXCERPT
The Book; yes, their Book. They had no state, holding them together, no country, no soil, no king, no form of life in common. If, in spite of this, they were one, more one than all the other peoples of the world, it was the Book that sweated them into unity. Brown, white, black, yellow Jews, large and small, splendid and in rags, godless and pious, they might crouch and dream all their lives in a quiet room, or fare splendidly in a radiant, golden whirlwind over the earth, but sunk deep in all of them was the lesson of the Book. Manifold is the world, but it is vain and fleeting as wind; but one and only is the God of Israel, the everlasting, the infinite, the Jehovah.
-Jud Süss, 1925

WORKS BURNED
All works published before May 1933

 

 

SUMMARY
Best-selling author Lion Feuchtwanger (1884-1958), born in Munich, was raised in an observant Jewish and patriotic German household. He studied German history and began writing plays and stories at age 19. Most of his novels took historical themes.

After serving in the German army during World War I, Feuchtwanger's writing took a leftist political turn. His 1930 novel Erfolg (Success) provided a thinly veiled criticism of the Beer Hall Putsch and Hitler's rise to leadership in the Nazi Party. Feuchtwanger's Jewishness, the Jewish themes of his early fiction, and his close association with Bertolt Brecht were among the causes for his persecution. After the Nazi takeover on January 30, 1933, his house in Berlin was illegally searched and his invaluable library plundered by the Nazis during his lecture tour in the United States.

 

 

1933 was an eventful year for Feuchtwanger. All of his works were burned in the book burnings of May, and his anti-Nazi novel The Oppermans was published in Amsterdam and became a huge success. In the same year, Feuchtwanger moved to the south of France where he remained an adamant opponent of the Nazi regime. His popular 1925 work Jud Süss, about an eighteenth-century court Jew, was used by the Nazis for a 1939 antisemitic propaganda film of the same name. After the Germans invaded France in 1940, Feuchtwanger was detained in the Les Milles internment camp. His wife organized his escape with the help of U.S. Consuls Hiram Bingham and Miles Standish as well as U.S. citizens Varian Fry and the Reverend Waitstill Sharp. Feuchtwanger ultimately found asylum in the United States. In 1941he settled in southern California, where he continued to write until his death in 1958.

 


Related Links
Fighting the Fires of Hate: America and the Nazi Book Burnings (USHMM online exhibition)
Targeted Authors and Burned Works (from USHMM online exhibition)
Related Articles
Book Burning
Varian Fry
Nazi Terror Begins




Copyright © United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington, D.C.
Encyclopedia Last Updated: May 4, 2009

Citations

About the Museum    |    Accessibility    |    Legal    |    Contact Us