This book documents the agreement between Nazi Germany and an organization of 
German Zionists in 1933 to salvage some German Jewish assets and the voluntary 
emigration of German Jews to Palestine before the Third Reich implemented 
expulsion and then extermination. The Transfer Agreement rescued some 60,000 
German Jews. A sweeping, worldwide economic boycott of Germany by Jews helped 
spur a deal between the Nazis and Zionists.
The book also documents the controversy within the Zionist movement and 
Jewish diaspora over the agreement, which Black shows "tore apart the 
Jewish world in the pre-World War II era". In particular, it describes 
the conflict between, on one side, German Zionists and German-descended 
communal leaders in the US, who argued for the agreement, and, on the other 
side, the mainstream Eastern European-descended American Jewish Zionist leaders 
(such as the American Jewish Committee and Jewish War Veterans) who opposed 
the agreement and argued instead for a full boycott of Nazi Germany.