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Review: Bitter Reckoning

Porat’s book carefully traces, in close detail, eight landmark cases which, he says, mark important milestones in the development of the kapo trials

December 18, 2019 18:15
Dan Porat
2 min read

Bitter Reckoning by Dan Porat (Harvard University Press, £23.95)

Those familiar with present-day Israel and its diverse population are in for a shock when reading Dan Porat’s masterful Bitter Reckoning (sub-titled, Israel Tries Holocaust Survivors as Nazi Collaborators) the inside and almost forgotten story of Israel in the aftermath of the Holocaust.

For, as well as having no financial resources and facing enmity from Arab countries on all sides, the new state was struggling with making new laws — and the most painful and difficult of such laws were those dealing with alleged Jewish “collaborators”.

Perhaps the best known of such cases is that of Rudolf Kastner, accused of being hand-in-glove with the Nazis in order to secure escape for himself, his family and his friends. 
But early Israel was consumed, we learn, with Holocaust survivors recognising former hated persecutors in the street and denouncing them to the authorities.