Displaying: 1 25 of 113 matches for “jewish”
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1. Anti-Jewish Propaganda
Anti-Jewish Propaganda Anti-Jewish Propaganda Original 1928 German propaganda poster Translated ... -Jewish prejudice. It promoted old stereotypes of Jews as criminals, dishonest businessmen, and enemies of
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2. 2. Excluding Jewish Students
2. Excluding Jewish Students 2. Excluding Jewish Students
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3. Stigmatizing the Enemy: Jewish Badges
Stigmatizing the Enemy: Jewish Badges Stigmatizing the Enemy Jewish Badges The Nazis aimed to
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4. 6. Locals Loot Jewish Homes
6. Locals Loot Jewish Homes 6. Locals Loot Jewish Homes
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5. Anti-Jewish Propaganda and Nazi Policy
Anti-Jewish Propaganda and Nazi Policy Anti-Jewish Propaganda and Nazi Policy Beginning in 1933 ... the Nazi German government implemented far-reaching anti-Jewish policies that evolved from segregation
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6. The “Jewish Enemy”: Wartime Antisemitic Propaganda
The “Jewish Enemy”: Wartime Antisemitic Propaganda The “Jewish Enemy” Wartime ... context, the word Jewish. Jewish Bolshevism, Jewish plutocracy, Jewish murder. —German Jewish
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7. Showcasing Hate: Anti-Jewish Feature Films
Showcasing Hate: Anti-Jewish Feature Films Showcasing Hate Anti-Jewish Feature Films On Propaganda ... Oppenheimer, was a Jewish 18th-century court financier. The film transformed him into an ambitious conspirator
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8. 3. Local “Auxiliary Police” Shoot Jewish Civilians
3. Local “Auxiliary Police” Shoot Jewish Civilians 3. Local “Auxiliary Police” Shoot ... Jewish Civilians
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9. 3. Rising Anti-Jewish Hatred Destroys Friendships
3. Rising Anti-Jewish Hatred Destroys Friendships 3. Rising Anti-Jewish Hatred Destroys Friendships
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10. 4. A Non-Jewish Family Risks Everything
4. A Non-Jewish Family Risks Everything 4. A Non-Jewish Family Risks Everything
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11. The Evolution of Nazi Anti-Jewish Policy in Wartime
The Evolution of Nazi Anti-Jewish Policy in Wartime sVMmYE0qE0s The Evolution of Nazi Anti-Jewish ... The outbreak of World War II largely brought an end to mass Jewish emigration from Nazi Germany
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12. 3. A Town Gathers to See Jewish Neighbors Deported
3. A Town Gathers to See Jewish Neighbors Deported 3. A Town Gathers to See Jewish Neighbors
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13. 1. A Friend Joins an Anti-Jewish Mob
1. A Friend Joins an Anti-Jewish Mob 1. A Friend Joins an Anti-Jewish Mob
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14. 1. Enforcing Laws to Seize Jewish People’s Property
1. Enforcing Laws to Seize Jewish People’s Property 1. Enforcing Laws to Seize Jewish
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15. A Turn Towards Hate
Turn Towards Hate A Town Gathers to See Jewish Neighbors Deported A Turn Towards Hate As a child ... Manfred Wildmann played with both Jewish and non-Jewish friends in his hometown of Philippsburg, Germany ... He recalled that he was never the target of anti-Jewish racism until the attacks of Kristallnacht in ... —along with more than a dozen other Jewish Germans—was deported.
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16. Oral History: Ruth Rack
Oral History: Ruth Rack GroyLu7l_gw A Friend Joins an Anti-Jewish Mob Oral History: Ruth Rack We ... were friends, I thought. For years, Ruth Rack’s family was friendly with non-Jewish neighbors ... Ruth and her brother, Bob, attended a mostly non-Jewish school in Leipzig, Germany. Bob played sports ... with non-Jewish neighborhood friends. That all began to change in 1937, when Bob’s non-Jewish
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17. Solidarity and Defiance
to Nazi Germany in 1940, French authorities quickly passed anti-Jewish laws modeled on those in ... humiliated Jews and isolated them from non-Jewish people. French police also could harass Jewish people in ... some non-Jewish people in France made their own yellow stars out of paper. Wearing the stars in public ... June 1942, some non-Jewish teens who wore the star were arrested and held in internment camps in Paris
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18. From Friend to Outcast
From Friend to Outcast Excluding Jewish Students From Friend to Outcast Rosa had long been the only ... Jewish student in the class, but she had close friendships with her non-Jewish classmates. She saw Mrs ... Knauer as a trusted role model. At the end of 1938, she and other Jewish children in Germany were ... expelled from public schools. Like many other Jewish people in Germany, Rosa was terrified after
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19. Jews Face Growing Isolation in Germany
in the city of Bremen, Germany. He attended a public school with non-Jewish Germans. Both Jewish and ... non-Jewish friends gathered at the shop after class and took bike trips together. When Hitler ... came to power in 1933, Jacob at first noticed only gradual changes: fewer non-Jewish customers came to ... non-Jewish friends, Jacob later remembered: “Slowly, they stopped talking to us. Then, later on
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20. Her Sister's Needlepoint
Her Sister's Needlepoint Locals Loot Jewish Homes Her Sister's Needlepoint Locals in Zdzieciol ... non-Jewish people profited from the deportation and murder of Jewish populations in Poland. Often ... their Jewish neighbors.
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21. For “Our Little Ones”
introduced anti-Jewish laws, including a ban on Jewish children attending public schools. Although she was ... not Jewish, Jeanne took a job teaching at a kindergarten for Jewish children, Nos Petits [“Our ... disappearing. Near her school, she witnessed arrests of Jewish people in the street. Many were murdered or ... Jeanne started to hide students with non-Jewish Belgian families. She ferried children from place to
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22. “Here Are the Jews”
November 1938, Nazi leaders unleashed violent attacks on Jewish people across Germany. Local Nazis ... encouraged non-Jewish Germans to join them in burning synagogues and looting businesses owned by Jews ... Thousands of Jewish men across the country were arrested and dozens were killed. Brutality and terror ... recalled “embarrassed” non-Jewish Germans watching along the street. But they also remembered
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23. A Crime Of Opportunity?
do. Jewish doctors were barred from treating non-Jewish patients. Jewish professors were banned from ... teaching. Non-Jewish workers often took over the positions of Jews who were expelled or deported. A ... Hungarian doctor named Maria Madi describes in her diary taking a position opened after a Jewish colleague ... rounding up Hungarian Jewish people, deporting them to the Auschwitz killing center in occupied Poland. By
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24. Toys and Games as Propaganda Tools
rolled the dice, and if they landed on a circle that represented a Jewish business—they collected a ... cone with an anti-Jewish stereotype on it, which was then placed on top of the player’s token ... Germany’s policy of forced Jewish emigration. AJC Center for Jewish Research, NewYork (left photo by Michael
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25. Oral History: Walter Tick
’ store was one of many Jewish-owned businesses looted during a wave of violence targeting Jewish people ... November 1938 marked a turn toward anti-Jewish violence in Germany. The Tikotzkis decided to leave the ... country. Like thousands of other Jewish people in Germany, the family fled to the United States in 1939