The book is divided into two distinct parts to provide a comprehensive view of the era:
This section shifts focus to the Jewish experience. It examines the internal life of the ghettos, the moral dilemmas faced by Jewish Councils (Judenräte), and the various forms of resistance and spiritual endurance. Key Themes and Insights The War Against the Jews: 1933-1945
She describes how the Nazi state transformed into a "dual state," where traditional legal structures existed alongside a "Prerogative State" that operated outside the law to carry out the genocide. The book is divided into two distinct parts
This section details the Nazi rise to power, the legislative stripping of Jewish rights, and the bureaucratic machinery of the state that facilitated mass murder. This section details the Nazi rise to power,
Upon its release, the book was praised for its exhaustive research and its ability to synthesize complex political history with deeply personal narratives. While later "Functionalist" historians argued that the Holocaust evolved through bureaucratic momentum, Dawidowicz’s work remains the definitive defense of the idea that the genocide was a deliberate, planned "war" against a specific people.
Unlike some historians who focused solely on the killers, Dawidowicz meticulously reconstructed the social and political life within the ghettos, showing that Jews were not passive victims but active agents trying to survive within an impossible system. Historical Impact
Dawidowicz highlights how the Nazis prioritized the transport of Jews to death camps even when those resources (trains and personnel) were desperately needed for the German war effort on the Eastern Front.