Nazi Germany

A new Holocaust Museum shows how three-quarters of Dutch Jews were deported and killed

By Associated Press — March 6, 2024
AMSTERDAM (AP) — Three-quarters of the prewar Dutch Jews were among the six million Jews murdered by the Nazis, the largest proportion of any country in Europe.

Nazi genocides of Jews and Roma were entangled from the start – and so are their efforts at Holocaust remembrance today

By Ari Joskowicz — January 29, 2024
(The Conversation) — Many young people today know little about the murder of European Jews during the Holocaust, and even less about the murder of Romani communities.

Nazi death camp survivors mark 79th anniversary of Auschwitz liberation on Holocaust Remembrance Day

By Czarek Sokolowski — January 29, 2024
OSWIECIM, Poland (AP) — About 20 survivors from various camps set up by Nazi Germany around Europe laid wreaths and flowers and lit candles at the Death Wall in Auschwitz.

Almost 80 years after the Holocaust, 245,000 Jewish survivors are still alive

By Kirsten Grieshaber — January 23, 2024
BERLIN (AP) — Their numbers are quickly dwindling, as most are very old and often of frail health, with a median age of 86.

New memoir by Anne Frank’s girlhood friend reveals ‘life outside the attic’

By Michele Chabin — June 14, 2023
JERUSALEM (RNS) — 'My Friend Anne Frank,' by Hannah Pick-Goslar, details the girls' friendship before the Holocaust and their brief reunion inside a Nazi concentration camp.

German curator on a mission to return silver heirlooms stolen from Jewish families by the Nazis

By Kirsten Grieshaber — June 13, 2023
(RNS) — The Bavarian National Museum is returning 111 silver objects at the that the Nazis stole from Jews during the Third Reich in 1939.

Hitler became German chancellor 90 years ago. The world is still recovering.

By A. James Rudin — January 30, 2023
(RNS) — The events of January 30, 1933, instilled a still-persistent yearning for xenophobic totalitarian rule.

Vatican cardinal cites Nazi theology in German reform

By Nicole Winfield — October 5, 2022
(AP) — A Swiss cardinal compared German Catholics' ideas to pro-Nazi Protestants when they "saw God’s new revelation in blood and soil and in the rise of Hitler.”

Unknown Holocaust photos – found in attics and archives – are helping researchers recover lost stories and providing a tool against denial

By Wolf Gruner — September 23, 2022
(The Conversation) — Holocaust scholars long relied on documents and survivor testimonies to help reconstruct the history of that tragic event. Now, they’re turning to wordless witnesses to learn more: pictures.

Ken Burns’ documentary busts myth that Americans didn’t know about Nazi atrocities

By Yonat Shimron — September 16, 2022
(RNS) — The series, which debuts Sunday (Sept. 18), shows Americans heard on the radio and read in the newspapers about Nazis' rising hostility to Jews, culminating in the Final Solution.

Warnock, Sewell discuss ‘sacred’ voting rights — and whether God is Black

By Jack Jenkins — November 18, 2021
(RNS) — Sen. Raphael Warnock described voting as ‘a kind of prayer for the world we desire, for ourselves and our children.’

Holocaust survivors use social media to fight anti-Semitism

By David Rising — April 8, 2021
(AP) — The #ItStartedWithWords campaign educates people about how the Nazis dehumanized Jews years before death camps were established.

German teens go to Israel to atone for their families’ Holocaust history

By Michele Chabin — January 22, 2021
(RNS) — March of Life, a German movement that actively atones for the Holocaust through volunteerism, fights anti-Semitism through activism.

Science, facts and truth matter most when human lives are at stake

By Thomas Reese — August 21, 2019
(RNS) — When the facts are uncertain, when the research is incomplete, we must lean toward the solution that is safest for the people affected. Gambling with people's lives is not acceptable.

A grim anniversary for Dietrich Bonhoeffer marks what might have been

By A. James Rudin — January 18, 2019
(RNS) — Eighty years ago, the anti-Nazi activist Dietrich Bonhoeffer traveled back to Germany. Had he survived World War II, he might have become a global leader in fostering respect between Christians and Jews.
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