ISBN-13: 9783565203291 / Angielski / Miękka / 212 str.
The Third Reich's crimes unfolded in plain sight. Neighbors watched Jewish families deported from apartment buildings. Soldiers wrote letters home describing mass shootings. Office workers processed deportation paperwork during lunch breaks. Factory managers negotiated slave labor quotas. Housewives purchased furniture confiscated from murdered families. The regime depended on millions of individual decisions-to participate, to ignore, to profit, occasionally to resist.This book reconstructs Nazi Germany through personal documentary evidence. It draws on diaries kept by ordinary citizens recording daily life under dictatorship-initial enthusiasm for economic recovery, gradual normalization of exclusion and violence, private doubts never voiced publicly, and postwar claims of ignorance contradicted by their own earlier writing. It examines letters soldiers sent from occupied territories, revealing casual descriptions of atrocities alongside complaints about weather and requests for care packages.
She wrote in her diary about the Jewish family's empty apartment being reassigned. No surprise, no protest, just a neighbor's observation. Silence became documentation.