The Quantum Exodus: Jewish Fugitives, the Atomic Bomb, and the Holocaust

Front Cover
OUP Oxford, Feb 23, 2012 - History - 267 pages
It was no accident that the Holocaust and the Atomic Bomb happened at the same time. When the Nazis came into power in 1933, their initial objective was not to get rid of Jews. Rather, their aim was to refine German culture: Jewish professors and teachers at fine universities were sacked. Atomic science had attracted a lot of Jewish talent, and as Albert Einstein and other quantum exiles scattered, they realized that they held the key to a weapon of unimaginable power. Convinced that their gentile counterparts in Germany had come to the same conclusion, and having witnessed what the Nazis were prepared to do, the exiles were afraid. They had to get to the Atomic Bomb first. The Nazis meanwhile had acquired a more pressing objective: their persecution of the Jews had evolved into extermination. Two dreadful projects - the Bomb and the Holocaust - became locked in a grisly race.

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About the author (2012)

Gordon Fraser was educated at Imperial College, London where he took his PhD in the theory of elementary particles in 1967. He became a reporter for Computer Weekly, and later returned to science as an in-house writer and editor at major laboratories. From 1980 to 2002 he was editor of CERN Courier, the monthly magazine of the international high energy physics community. He has given talks at university science departments, in a mosque, and contributed to TV programmes.