The Rescue: The Story of How Gentiles Saved Jews in the HolocaustA recounting drawn from historic source material of the many individual acts of heroism performed by righteous gentiles who sought to thwart the extermination of the Jews during the Holocaust....
Everything about the Holocaust was bad but there were somethings that were worse than others. There was a night called the Night of Broken Glass where a bunch of Nazi soldiers beat Jews arrested them and sometimes killed them. They also destroyed 815 Jewish stores and shops. They burned ...
How were Jews killed during the Holocaust? How did the policies of glasnost and perestroika impact Poland? How does Germany remember the Holocaust? How did the Warsaw Pact impact the Cold War? How were Jews treated before the Holocaust?
The writer is manager of the Holocaust Education Program of Sharaka, a nonprofit, nongovernmental initiative based in Israel, Bahrain, and Morocco that works to build people-to-people peace and engagement. She runs the Instagram page @mymissiontoremember....
How Did The Holocaust Affect The Lives Of Jewish People creating the start of the Holocaust. Once the homes of the Jews were destroyed, many of them went to concentration camps. The Jews were mostly forced into the camps and many Jews were killed in the process. The Holocaust had a large...
Although as a society we may wish for these events to be kept forever as a reminder to the future, things like the Yolocaust project, in which Shahak Shapira documented tourists being disrespectful at Eisenman’s Holocaust memorial, remind us that architecture cannot force people to reflect, ...
Importantly, Flax (Citation2021, 1317) emphasises how, “The Holocaust has particular Jewish significance: Jews were murdered because of their Jewishness’ and so it understandably holds “a deep imprint in the memory of Jews’. Consequently, the Holocaust and Nazi regime provides many with “a ...
away, literally and figuratively, from the death camps that would come to define the Holocaust in the popular consciousness. And yet it is because of the mass shootings that happened in these places — many of them long forgotten — that the course of events that followed happened as it did...
“I’m a first-generation American. My extended family was slaughtered in the Holocaust, and my parents were born in Europe shortly afterward. Therefore, on Shmini Atzeret, we can’t forget what happened and must make sure it will never happen again, but we also need to have Simchat Torah...
From 1937 to 1941, about 1,200 European Jews found refuge from the Holocaust in the Philippines. Their migration was part of an effort by the Philippines president, Manuel Quezon, the Jewish-American Frieder family, and an American official, Paul McNutt. Several of the Jewish refugees pose wi...