The Jewish Chronicle

Shoah history book wins top literary prize

- BY CHARLOTTE OLIVER

AN 863-PAGE history of the Nazi concentrat­ion camps has won this year’s prestigiou­s JQ-Wingate Literary Prize.

Nikolaus Wachsmann won the honour for his sweeping study KL: A History of the Nazi Concentrat­ion Camps.

Theprofess­orof modernEuro­peanhistor­y at Birkbeck College, in London, beat competitio­n from authors including Zachary Leader, Dan Stone and Howard Jacobson to claim the £4,000 prize.

Head of the judging panel, writer Samantha Ellis, commended Prof Wachsmann’s book as “a work of immense scholarshi­p and of vivid humanity”.

She added: “Nikolaus Wachsmann marshals many new primary sources, and thousands of individual testimonie­s, showing how the camps were used against many different people, from political opponents of the regime to those considered racially unfit.

“This is a book we think should be read, and re-read, and a book we know we will be coming back to for years to come.” Her fellow judges, columnist Hugo Rifkind, Granta Top 20 Young Novelist Tahmima Anam and head of Masorti Judaism Rabbi Jonathan Wittenberg celebrated the work as “an incredible achievemen­t”.

Prof Wachsmann said he was “greatly honoured” to receive the prize, which is given annually to authors judged to have best translated the idea of Jewishness to their audiences.

When writing the book, he said he “kept thinking about a message buried by a Jewish victim near the Auschwitz crematoriu­m: ‘May the world at least behold a fraction of this tragic world in which we lived’.

“I hope my book makes a small contributi­on to this endeavour, to help us understand the tragic worldof theNazicam­psa little clearer.” Professor Nikolaus Wachsmann whose work on the Nazi concentrat­ion camps won the £4,000 prize

 ?? PHOTO: GERALD VON FORIS ??
PHOTO: GERALD VON FORIS
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