Display: 376-400 of 673 Results

Members of the People’s Army [Volkssturm] with Weapons and a Battering Ram during an Exercise in Sanssouci in Potsdam (Fall 1944)

German Soldier after the Capitulation in Stalingrad (January/February 1943)

After the Battle – Surviving Members of the 6th Army (February 1943)

A Russian Village in Flames (January 10, 1944)

Female Survival in Berlin in April 1945 (Retrospective Account, 1950s)

The American Jewish Committee Assesses the Situation of the Jews in Germany (March 1, 1935, and June 1, 1937)

Jews in Public Bathing Areas: Letter from the NSDAP in Hesse to the Lord Mayor of Frankfurt (July 27, 1938)

Polish Jews Assemble in the Center of Nuremberg for Evacuation to the Polish Border (October 28, 1938)

Professor Robert Ritter, Head of the Racial Hygiene Research Center at the Reich Bureau for Health, Collects Data from Sinti and Roma [“Gypsies”] with the Help of the Police (1938)

Viennese Jews are Forced to Scour the Streets (March/April 1938)

Private Home Videos II: Jewish Life in Prewar Europe (1936–39)

Armaments Expenditures 1928-1943

The Holocaust

Statistical Report on the “Final Solution,” known as the Korherr Report (March 23, 1943)

The Persecution of Jews in Romania: Excerpts from Mihail Sebastian’s Journal (1938–1944)

A View from Paris: Excerpts from the Diary of Hélène Berr (1942-1944)

Excerpt from Himmler’s Speech to the SS-Gruppenführer at Posen (October 4, 1943)

The Experience of Torture: Excerpts from Jean Améry, At the Mind’s Limits (Retrospective Account, 1966)

Decoded Radio Messages between Ernst Kaltenbrunner (Berlin) and Herbert Kappler (Rome) (October 11, 1943)

Deportation to Theresienstadt: Air Mail Communication Sent through the Foreign Service of the German Red Cross (September 15, 1942)

Execution of Soviet “Partisans” (1942)

Mass Execution of Lithuanian Jews by Members of the Wehrmacht and the Lithuanian Self-Protection Unit [Selbstschutz] (1942)

Excerpts from the Diary of Captain Wilm Hosenfeld (1942)

Pastor Dietrich Bonhoeffer, “Who Can Resist Temptation?” (December 1942)

Siblings Hans and Sophie Scholl and Christoph Probst (left to right) of the Student Resistance Group “White Rose” (1942)