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Ruth Balint

Ruth Balint

Ruth Balint is a professor of history at UNSW. She is the author of Destination Elsewhere: Displaced persons and their quest to leave postwar Europe (2021) and the co-author of Smuggled: An illegal history of journeys to Australia (2021).

Ruth Balint reviews ‘The Holocaust and Australian Journalism: Reporting and reckoning’ by Fay Anderson

November 2024, no. 470 28 October 2024
‘The Nazis are coming, Hurrah! Hurrah!’ wrote an excited young journalist, Ronald Selkirk Panton, to his parents the same month that Adolf Hitler was elected chancellor of Germany, the same month that Dachau was created, and the same year that the racial laws against Jews and other minority groups were enacted. Panton was one of a small but enthusiastic cohort of Australian journalists who wen ... (read more)

Ruth Balint reviews 'After the Tampa: From Afghanistan to New Zealand' by Abbas Nazari

October 2021, no. 436 22 September 2021
In late August, it took only a few days for the Taliban to secure control of Kabul in the wake of the final withdrawal of Western troops from Afghanistan. The breakneck speed of the takeover was accompanied by images of mass terror, alongside a profound sense of betrayal. As in the closing days of the Vietnam War in 1975, the international airport quickly became the epicentre of scenes of chaos an ... (read more)

Ruth Balint reviews 'Statelessness: A modern history' by Mira L. Siegelberg

December 2020, no. 427 25 November 2020
‘Half a Jew’s life is consumed by the futile battle with papers,’ wrote Joseph Roth, in The Wandering Jews (1937), his little-known collection of essays written not long before the Holocaust. ‘The struggle for papers, the struggle against papers, is something an Eastern Jew gets free of only if he uses criminal methods to take on society.’ Faced with police demanding to see ‘exotic, im ... (read more)