Institut d'étude des questions juives

Anti-Semitic propaganda organization in German-occupied France.
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The Institut d'étude des questions juives (IEQJ) (Institute for the Study of Jewish Questions) was an anti-Semitic propaganda organization created in France under the German occupation during World War II, with the support of the Propagandastaffel (German Propaganda Office) and under the regulation of the Gestapo.[1]

Terminology

Originally known as the Bureau d'information et d'étude des questions juives (Office of Information and Research on Jewish Affairs) it was soon renamed to Institut d'étude des questions juives and officially launched on 11 May 1941. The name of the organization is variously translated, with a majority using the literal rendering, Institute for the Study of Jewish Questions, while some sources in English use the more accurate Institute for the Study of Jewish Affairs.[2][3] In March 1943, the IEQJ became the Institut d'études des questions juives et ethnoraciales (Institute for Research on Jewish and Ethnoracial Affairs) (IEQJR).

It should not be confused with the Institute for Research on the Jewish Question, the Nazi party institute in Frankfurt.

Activities

The first Secretary General of the IEQJ was Paul Sézille. He remained in the post until 1942, and was succeeded by journalist René Gérard. The co-founder was Octave Bellet.

Anti-semitic, anti-Gaullist poster published by the Commissariat-General for Jewish Affairs in November 1941.

The IEQJ was based in Paris at 21 rue La Boétie in a building belonging to art dealer Paul Rosenberg, who was owner of a major art gallery in Paris that had been requisitioned by the Nazis. As a private organization under direct control of the German authority, the IEQJ had no formal link with the Vichy regime. Its main role was the spreading of anti-Semitic propaganda and the publication of the magazine Le Cahier jaune [fr] directed by André Chaumet which published 13 issues between November 1941 and February 1943. This was followed by a second magazine entitled Revivre (with the subtitle "The great illustrated magazine about race") published from March 1943 to 20 July 1944, this time in direct connection with Vichy, and this, too, directed by Chaumet. The IEQJ also published La Question juive en France ("The Jewish Question in France").

The most important action of the IEQJ was their sponsorship of the exhibition Le Juif et la France ("Jews and France") which began in September 1941.

Financing of the IEQJ was provided by the German intelligence service of the German Embassy and by Theodor Dannecker, head of the Amt IV J of the Gestapo, responsible for "the Jewish question". Funding was for 200,000 francs the first months, and 50,000 francs thereafter.

The IEQJ was absorbed into the propaganda department of the Commissariat-General for Jewish Affairs to be expanded, and replaced in March 1943 by Institut d'études des questions juives et ethnoraciales (IEQJR) ("Institute for the Study of Jewish and Ethno-Racial Issues") headed by George Montandon.

Sources

See also

References

  1. ^ Judaken, Jonathan (1 December 2006). Jean-Paul Sartre and the Jewish Question: Anti-antisemitism and the Politics of the French Intellectual. Lincoln and London: U of Nebraska Press. pp. 79–80. ISBN 978-0-8032-2612-8. OCLC 474199495. Retrieved 31 March 2017. ...a French organization with a large budget from the Germans, closely regulated by the Gestapo, and in close contact with Rosenberg's anti-Jewish institute in Frankfurt.
  2. ^ Poznanski, Renée (2001) [1st pub. Hachette:1997]. Jews in France During World War II. Translated by Bracher, Nathan. Hanover NH: University Press of New England. p. 211. ISBN 978-1-58465-144-4.
  3. ^ Bertin-Maghit, Jean-Pierre (9 November 2016) [1st pub. Nouveau Monde:2007]. Propaganda Documentaries in France: 1940-1944. Translated by Block, Marcelline. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 17. ISBN 978-1-4422-6102-0.
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