
The seventh million
the Israelis and the Holocaust
Panoramica di The seventh million
Tom Segev's controversial masterpiece reveals how the Holocaust shaped Israel's identity through newly declassified documents. First to expose secret Nazi reparation negotiations and survivor treatment, it challenges conventional narratives, sparking fierce debate among historians. How does trauma become national identity?
Temi chiave in The seventh million
- israeli national identity
- holocaust collective memory
- zionist political pragmatism
- german jewish immigration
- post-war social integration
Citazioni da The seventh million
Auschwitz was not on another planet but in this world; it was the work of man.
Hitler's policy puts the entire Jewish people in danger.
The streets are paved with more money than we have ever dreamed of.
To a large extent we are the yishuv.
Personaggi di The seventh million
- Tom SegevAuthor and historian exploring Israeli identity
- Yehiel De-NurHolocaust survivor and writer known as Ka-Tzetnik
- David Ben-GurionZionist leader who prioritized rescue and immigration
- Jan BastiaansProfessor who treated survivors with LSD therapy
- Berl KatznelsonLabor Zionist leader who questioned integration
Sull'autore
Sull'autore di The seventh million
Tom Segev, acclaimed Israeli historian and author of The Seventh Million: The Israelis and the Holocaust, is a leading figure among Israel’s New Historians, known for his critical yet nuanced examinations of the nation’s complex past.
Born in Jerusalem in 1945 to German-Jewish refugees, Segev combines rigorous archival research with journalistic clarity, honed through decades as a columnist for Haaretz.
His works, including One Palestine, Complete (winner of the National Jewish Book Award) and 1967: Israel, the War, and the Year That Transformed the Middle East, explore themes of identity, conflict, and memory. The Seventh Million, praised by Elie Wiesel as a seminal exploration of the Holocaust’s impact on Israeli society, established Segev’s reputation for challenging historical narratives.
His biography A State at Any Cost: The Life of David Ben-Gurion further solidified his authority in modern Middle Eastern history. Segev’s books, translated into 14 languages, are celebrated for bridging academic scholarship and public discourse, offering fresh perspectives on Israel’s formative struggles and contradictions.
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FAQ su questo libro
The Seventh Million by Tom Segev examines how the Holocaust shaped Israel’s national identity, politics, and societal attitudes. It traces the Jewish leadership’s struggles during the British Mandate to rescue European Jews, postwar perceptions of survivors as “lambs led to slaughter,” and the political instrumentalization of Holocaust memory in later decades. The book highlights pivotal moments like the Eichmann trial and German reparations negotiations.
This book is essential for historians, students of Israeli society, and readers interested in Holocaust studies. It appeals to those exploring how trauma influences national identity, policymakers analyzing historical memory, and anyone seeking a critical perspective on Zionism’s intersection with Holocaust narratives.
Yes—it’s praised for its rigorous research, nuanced analysis, and accessibility. Awarded a National Jewish Book Award and lauded by Elie Wiesel, it offers a groundbreaking critique of Israel’s Holocaust discourse while humanizing survivor experiences. Critics note its unflinching examination of political exploitation of trauma.
Segev argues that Israel’s early leadership marginalized Holocaust survivors, viewing them as passive victims, until the Eichmann trial reframed their stories as resistance. He critiques how postwar politics weaponized Holocaust memory to justify military actions and national policies, such as sidelining survivor testimonies until the 1960s.
The trial is depicted as a turning point that forced Israel to confront survivor narratives publicly. Segev shows how it shifted perceptions from shame to valorization of resistance, catalyzing national debates about accountability and Jewish agency during the Holocaust.
Survivors faced pressure to assimilate silently, with children encouraged to “forget” their trauma. Many were stigmatized as symbols of weakness until the Eichmann trial reshaped their status. Segev highlights the psychological toll of this erasure and later attempts at reparations.
He documents how politicians in the 1970s–1980s co-opted Holocaust imagery to justify military actions and settlement policies. This manipulation, Segev argues, distorted historical lessons and deepened societal divisions.
Reparations sparked fierce debates, with critics likening acceptance to “blood money.” Segev details how negotiations exposed tensions between economic pragmatism and moral objections, ultimately reshaping Israel’s relationship with postwar Germany.
Elie Wiesel praised it as “a masterpiece of historical reconstruction.” The book also references survivors being told to “bury their past” and politicians declaring, “The Holocaust is ours to wield as a shield.”
Like One Palestine, Complete and 1967, it combines archival rigor with narrative flair. However, this book uniquely centers Holocaust memory rather than geopolitical events, offering a cultural counterpart to his political histories.
Some accuse Segev of overemphasizing Israeli leadership’s failures toward survivors and downplaying early rescue efforts. Others argue his focus on political exploitation oversimplifies complex societal attitudes.
Its themes—exploitation of collective trauma, immigration ethics, and national identity crises—resonate amid modern debates about conflict, memory, and human rights. The book remains a cautionary tale about history’s politicization.

















