Beyond Nazi Crimes and Soviet Propaganda
Title
Beyond Nazi Crimes and Soviet Propaganda
Subtitle
The Salaspils Camp in Latvia, 1941-1944
ISBN
9789633867976
Format
eBook PDF (Adobe DRM)
Language
English
Publication date
Imprint
Also available as
Hardback - € 141,00

Beyond Nazi Crimes and Soviet Propaganda

The Salaspils Camp in Latvia, 1941-1944

The Salaspils camp near Riga, which was operated during the Nazi occupation of Latvia, has long been the subject ofcontrovery. Around 23,000 people were imprisoned there: half were political prisoners, labor resisters and convicted soldiers, the rest prisoners from special operations against civilians in Belarus, Russia and the Latgale region of Latvia. The death toll in the camp, including the number of Jews who died during construction, is well over 3,000 people.

Despite the relatively small size of this camp, it became a model for Russian remembrance policy. Soviet propaganda claimed that up to 100,000 prisoners were killed there, charged that children were used to extract blood, and greatly exaggerated the extent of the persecution of imprisoned lawbreakers and political dissidents . Salaspils became a myth in Russian-speaking society in Latvia that served to reinforce Soviet narratives of the “Great Patriotic War.”

The three authors drew on sources from the archives of Latvia, Germany and Russia and critically analyzed oral testimonies and earlier research to create a comprehensive account of the Salaspils camp in Nazi-occupied Latvia. Their book furthers the understanding of processes of deformation of collective memory and the techniques of memory politics from the Cold War to the present. 

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Authors

Karlis Kangeris

Karlis Kangeris is Honorably Doctor of the Latvian Academy of Sciences.

Uldis Neiburgs

Uldis Neiburgs is a senior researcher at the Institute of Latvian History, University of Latvia, a corresponding member of the Latvian Academy of Sciences.

Rudite Viksne

Rudite Viksne is one of the leading experts in the study of post-war KGB cases and Soviet accusations about the involvement of the residents in Nazi crimes.