
The following web pages will be of interest to both student and educators of the Holocaust. However, please be aware that these links may change at any time, and that the Law Projects Center Int’l is not responsible for maintenance of them.
Please remember to set a bookmark, to use this page again in the
future.
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RECOMMENDED
INTERNET RESOURCES
·
The Cybrary of the Holocaust: A valuable collection of resources on
the Holocaust.
·
The Nizkor Project: A vast collection of Holocaust
documents primarily available by FTP.
·
The Holocaust / Shoah Page: Includes important information
regarding the Nuremberg Laws, the Final Solution, Homosexuals, the Nuremberg
Trials and more.
·
About.com: This site offers additional links to
many other Holocaust sites, current events, and weekly electronic newsletters.
·
Women and the
Holocaust: An outstanding
collection of articles dealing with the many gender-specific issues associated
with the Holocaust often overlooked.
HOLOCAUST VICTIMS
·
Anne Frank: Site
portrays both her life and times along with a photographical
scrapbook and the story of her journal.
·
Children: The Holocaust documented by children
hosted by the Weisenthal Center.
·
Jewish Women: Jewish women portrayed as double
victims of the Holocaust by their existing within a misogynist racist male
orientated society.
·
Handicapped Persons: Discusses the disabled as the victims
of the Nazi T-4 Euthanasia Program, a Nazi plan to commit genocide against all
physically and mentally disabled people.
·
The Handicapped: Additional information on Hitler’s
Euthanasia T4 and 14f13 killing projects against the disabled.
·
Handicapped
Persons: More information on
Nazi Euthanasia and the disabled.
·
Roma Gypsies
as Holocaust Victims: Site discusses the pre-meditate2d Nazi
genocide policy against them.
·
Romany / Gypsy Mistreatment: Discusses the Roma population and Nazi abuse against them
within the Third Reich.
·
Nazi Genocide
Against the Roma / Gypsies:
Discusses the Nazi genocide against the Romany within the Third Reich.
·
The Roma
Legal Status: Discusses the
legal status of the Romany population and the Third Reich.
·
Homosexuals and
the Holocaust: Discusses the
genocide committed against the Homosexual population during WW I.I. and
explicates their maltreatment in Germany before and during the Third Reich.
·
Homosexuals as Torture
Victims: Discusses why
homosexuals were subject to torture in the concentration camps using excerpts
from the book edited by Vera Laska.
·
The Five Million Forgotten: The five million non-Jewish victims of
the Holocaust are remembered.
·
Reinhard
Heydrich: His biography is available.
·
Rudolf Hess: His biography is available.
·
Heinrich
Himmler: His biography is portrayed
from the book entitled, Who's Who in Nazi
Germany.
·
Adolf Hitler: His early life is examined.
·
Adolf Hitler: Hitler’s use of language is discussed.
·
The Einsatzgruppen:
Their role in the Holocaust is discussed in detail.
·
Einsatzgruppen
Documents: The documents are posted.
·
Operation
Reinhard: Guide to the Belzec,
Sobibor, and Treblinka camps by K. N. McVay.
·
Kristallnacht: Discussion by Ben S.
Austin.
HOLOCAUST RESCUERS
·
Joseph Andre: Summarizes the life of this Belgian
abbot who helped rescue hundreds of Jewish children.
·
Germaine Belline and
Liliane Gaffney: Explains how
they hid 30 Jews in Belgium.
·
Ivan Beltrami: He used his position as an intern to
protect Jews in a hospital infirmary.
·
Esther Bem:
Tells about how her family was hidden in an Italian village.
·
Marie Benoit: Tells how this French Capuchin monk
rescued of thousands of Jews.
·
Bert
Bochove: Describes how he and
wife Annie saved many Jewish lives in Holland during the war.
·
Anna
and Jaruslav Chlup: Tells how they cared for Herman Feder, a Jewish man
escaping death on a train on its way to a death camp.
·
John
Damski: Tells how he barely escaped
execution while being a Polish political prisoner. When released he helped Jews in Poland escape the ghetto and
obtain false documents to obtain work.
·
Jean Deffaugt,
mayor of a French town on the Swiss border, aided Jews caught crossing the border.
·
Marc Donadille was
a Protestant minister who rescued about 80 Jewish children in France.
·
Varian Fry helped to save thousands
of endangered refugees including prominent artists.
·
Miep Gies
was one of those who attempted to hide Anne Frank and her family.
·
Marie-Rose Gineste
harbored Jews in Montauben, France.
·
The Gorniak Family hid
Jews in their hayloft.
·
Marian Halicki hid a group
of Jews in his workroom.
·
Hermann Friedrich Grabe
used his position as a foreman to employ and protect many Jews.
·
Paul Gruninger was
a Swiss official who disobeyed his government by allowing some thirty-six
hundred Jews to cross illegally into Switzerland.
·
Emilie Guth and Ermine
Orsi were French Protestants who hid Jews in the Le Chambon area of France.
·
Franciska Halamajowa
hid Jews in her hayloft and cellar.
·
Adelaide Hautval
was a French physician who defied the Nazis and assisted those in need at
Auschwitz and Birkenau.
·
Esta Heiber tells
how she was able to rescue 20 jewish children in Belgium.
·
Father Jacques de Jésus was a
Carmelite friar and headmaster of the Petit Collège Sainte-Thérse de l '
Enfant-Jésus His attempt to rescue four Jewish boys is remembered in the film Au Revoir les Enfants.
·
Father Jacques' stay
in Mauthausen and Gusen camps is remembered at this site.
·
Antonin Kalina, a
Communist political prisoner, was able to protect 1,300 children in Buchenwald.
·
Helen L. tells how an
older Russian soldier's compassion helped save her life.
·
Barbara
Szymanska Makuch chronicles her aid to Jews in Nazi-occupied Poland. The
Nazis imprisoned her for her work in the underground.
·
Laura Margolis' relief
efforts among the Jewish refugees in the Shanghai ghetto saved many lives.
·
Mihael Michaelov
explains how he helped Jews in Bulgaria during the Holocaust.
·
Yvonne Neyejean was
the head of a Belgian agency responsible for the rescue of as many as 4,000
Jewish children.
·
Ellen Nielsen tells
how she helped Jews escape by boat to Sweden.
·
Marion P.,
a Dutch rescuer, hid a number of Dutch Jews. (Photo, video, audio, and text)
·
Dimitar Peshev helped to rescue
Jews in Bulgaria.
·
Mirjam
Pinkhof worked with Joop Westerweel in Holland, finding refuge for German
children who had been sent there by their parents for safety after Kristallnacht.
·
An Oskar
Schindler bibliography is available at the Wiesenthal Center site.
·
An Oskar Schindler's
rescued 1,200 Jews who worked in his factory.
·
Aristides de
Sousa Mendes, the Portuguese consul general in Bordeaux, disobeyed his
government's orders and issued thousands of special transit visas allowing
refugees to cross Spain into Portugal.
·
Tina
Strobos tells the story of an active member of the Dutch underground.
·
Pastor Andre Trocme
lead an effort in the French Protestant village of Le Chambon to save some
3,000-5,000 Jews.
·
Varian Fry was an American who
went to France on behalf of the Emergency Rescue Committee with the mission of
rescuing artists, writers, academics, and others at risk.
·
Jan Zwartendijk, the
acting Dutch consul in Kovno, stamped passports of Lithuanian Jews allowing them
to emigrate to Japan.
·
Five
rescuer interviews from Rescuers:
Portraits of Moral Courage in the Holocaust by Gay Block and Malka
Drucker appear on this site.
·
Five
rescue accounts from The Path of
Righteous: Gentile Rescuers of Jews During the Holocaust by Mordecai
Paldiel are available here.
·
Stories of Moral Courage:
profiles of 17 rescuers.
·
Righteous Gentiles:
dozens of rescuers are identified.
·
A
comprehensive bibliography about rescuers.
·
Jewish prisoner uprisings
in the Treblinka and Sobibór extermination camps are discussed at this site.
·
The fate of women within the
partisan groups is discussed in this essay.
·
Dietrich
Bonhoeffer, a patriotic German and theologian, opposed Nazism and even
participated in a plot to kill Hitler.
·
The Dietrich Bonhoeffer Home Page offers
a biography, bibliography, and links to on-line resources.
·
Aida Brydbord
recounts how she joined a partisan unit and became its nurse.
·
Fruma
Gulkowitz-Berger was the first girl to obtain a rifle and stand guard in
her Jewish partisan unit.
·
Anna Heilman was
one of a small group of young women who obtained gunpowder used to blow up a
crematorium at Auschwitz.
·
Evelyn Kahn
relates what it was like to be a child living among the partisans.
·
The Janusz
Korczak site tells the story of the teacher who resisted by continuing with
his work in a ghetto orphanage even when the end was clear.
·
Zenia Malecki
describes her role in the United Partisan Organization in the Vilna ghetto.
·
Rose Meth smuggled
gunpowder for the resistance at Auschwitz.
·
Hannah Szenes
was captured, tortured, and executed after parachuting into Yugoslavia and crossing
the border into Hungary in an attempt to rescue Allied prisoners and her
mother.
·
Rosa Robota
organized the smuggling of explosive powder at Auschwitz.
·
Biographical sketches
of eight female resisters are available at this site.
·
The
White Rose was a group of students who produced pamphlets urging
resistance, and paid for it with their lives.
·
The White Rose: A
Lesson in Dissent by Jacob G. Hornberger is featured at this site.
·
Memories of the
White Rose by George J. Wittenstein, a surviving member of this resistance
group.
·
The White Rose site
presented by Beauty for Ashes.
·
Life in the Warsaw ghetto is
described in excerpts from Courage
Under Siege: Disease, Starvation and Death in the Warsaw Ghetto by
Charles G. Roland.
LIBERATORS
·
Glenn Edward
Belcher writes his daughter about the conditions in Dachau upon liberation.
·
Sergeant Ragene
Farries who served in the 329th Medical Battalion describes conditions in
the "Boelcke Kazerne" in Nordhausen concentration camp.
·
Chuck Ferree gives his
account of the liberation of Dachau concentration camp.
·
Chuck Ferree offers
first hand observations of Dachau and Buchenwald concentration camps. This site
also has information about displaced persons camps.
·
Harry J. Herder, Jr.
shares a personal and in-depth account of the liberation of Buchenwald.
·
Staff Sgt. Albert J. Kosiek
describes the liberation of Mauthausen and Gusen camps.
·
Colonel
Edmund M. of the United States Army describes Mauthausen shortly after its
liberation. (Photo, video, audio, and text)
·
Edward R. Murrow,
famous reporter describes the scene at Buchenwald when he entered the camp
after liberation.
·
Bruce Nickols
reports on the surrender of the German concentration camp at Ohrdruf.
·
Abram Sachar
describes his experience in the liberation of Dachau.
·
Bill Sarnoff recalls
interviewing survivors of Buchenwald.
·
General Felix Sparks recalls
the liberation of Dachau in a speech made at the United States Holocaust
Memorial Museum.
·
General Felix Sparks adds
more details on the liberation of Dachau.
·
Alicia Appleman-Jurman:
survived by hiding in the countryside.
·
Inge Auerbacher
spent the years 1942-45 in the Terezín concentration camp in Czechoslovakia.
·
Sonia
Bar survived by escaping to Russia and living in an unsettled area for five
years.
·
Bronia Beker
tells how her family hid in caves they dug themselves.
·
Oskar Blechner sailed on
the ill-fated SS St. Louis, but was granted refuge in Great Britain when the
ship was returned to Europe.
·
Isak
Borenstein was a prisoner of war.
·
Valie Borsky
spent four years in Theresienstadt.
·
Jeannine
Burk was a hidden child.
·
Ernest and
Elisabeth Cassutto's story of survival is told by their son George.
·
Boris Chartan
survived with the help of a Polish couple.
·
Judy Cohen tells
of her life from the time the Nazis occupied her home country of Hungary to her
liberation from a death march.
·
Irene Csillag
recalls her life in Auschwitz-Birkenau and Stutthof camps.
·
Christine
Damski was a journalism student in Poland in the late 1930s. She moved
throughout eastern Europe eluding the Germans.
·
Krystyna
Chiger and her family survived 14 months in a sewer.
·
Geoffroy de
Clercq tells his story of surviving Buchenwald.
·
Elisabeth De Jong
describes the so-called medical experiments inflicted upon her and other women
at Auschwitz-Birkenau.
·
Michel
Depierre survived Buchenwald and Nordhausen where he worked in an underground
rocket factory.
·
Lucille E. gives a
lengthy, detailed, and personal account of her life before the war in Germany,
during the war, living in several concentration camps, and in her life in America,
after liberation.
·
Howard Edelstein tells
the story of his family's survival thanks to a non-Jew who hid them under her
house.
·
Alexander Ehrmann
tells of life in Auschwitz and other camps. He was also sent to Warsaw after
the uprising to help with clean up and salvage operations. (Acrobat and
RealAudio files)
·
Walter F. describes
in great detail life in Germany during the rise of Nazism. He was arrested
during Kristallnacht and went
to Buchenwald. He tells of his time in Shanghai, China.
·
Herman
Feder was in several concentration camps before being rescued by the Chlups
in Czechoslovakia.
·
Felicia Fuksman, worked
as a nurse in the Lodz ghetto and then was sent to the Ravensbrück concentration
camp.
·
Rabbi
Baruch G., a Polish survivor, describes forced labor in Mlawa.
·
Rachel G.,
a Belgian child survivor, was hidden in convents.
·
Eva Galler was the oldest of
eight children and is the only survivor of her family.
·
Henry Galler joined the
Polish Army in the Soviet Union and fought the Germans from Lenino to the
Reichstag in Berlin.
·
Bluma
Goldberg describes working two years in a bullet factory, being moved to
Bergen-Belsen, and finally working in an airplane factory.
·
Harold Gordon's story, The Last Sunrise, now includes an
interactive map.
·
Gladys Halpern went
into hiding with the help of a Ukrainian farmer.
·
Sam Halpern describes
camp life in this extended excerpt from Darkness
and Hope.
·
Erna Blitzer Gorman
tells of her experiences in various ghettos and of being hidden in a barn by a
Ukrainian farmer for two years. (Acrobat and RealAudio files)
·
Ibi Grossman
survived in a Budapest ghetto thanks in part to the intervention of Raoul
Wallenberg.
·
Joseph
Heinrich was born in Germany. Soon after Kristallnacht he left for Holland, where he lived in hiding. He
traveled from Holland to Spain, much of the way on foot.
·
Gabor Hirsch was born in
Hungary. In his brief account he tells of his time in Birkenau and his
liberation there.
·
Benjamin Jacobs shares his
experiences as a Dentist in Auschwitz.
·
Judith Jagermann
describes in detail her experience in several concentration camps.
·
Henny
Juliard was living in The Hague in Holland at the beginning of World War
II. She lived under the care of the Bochoves, a Dutch couple, for almost three
years.
·
Abram Korn's story is told in
excerpts from his book and by means of an interactive map.
·
Jay Kuperman
survived Hirshberg and Buchenwald concentration camps.
·
Helen L. tells the
story of how she and her sister survived as two young girls living in the woods
of eastern Europe.
·
Dori Laub is a
child survivor from Romania.
·
Alfred Lessing
recalls childhood memories of hiding in the Netherlands. (Acrobat and RealAudio
files)
·
Primo Levi, Auschwitz survivor,
gave this interview upon his return visit to the camp in 1982.
·
Anne Levy's family
pretended to be Catholic while living on the so-called Aryan side of Warsaw.
·
Dr. Olga
Lilien was born in 1904 in Lvov, Poland. She lived through the war with the
help of Barbara Szymanska Makuch's family.
·
Semen
Isaak Lipets was imprisoned, but was then released to burn bodies of
Holocaust victims.
·
Thomas
Mandl was one of the young faces in the Nazi propaganda film, "The
Führer Presents the Jews with a City." After the filming, he was
transported from Terezín to Auschwitz and then to Dachau.
·
Yettie
Mendels was born in Holland and lived underground for the duration of the
war.
·
Paul
Meyers was able to escape to Spain and then join the British Army.
·
Ralph Moratz
narrowly escaped being gassed in a synagogue as a child.
·
Filip Muller was born
in Slovakia and survived the Auschwitz camp. His brief, but detailed account
tells about the crematorium in Auschwitz.
·
Edith P.,
a Dutch survivor, was deported to Auschwitz. (Photo, video, audio, and text)
·
Bram
Pais describes his years of hiding in the Dutch underground. Near the end
of the war he was arrested and imprisoned.
·
Abraham Pasternak
describes life in Romania during the occupation and his experiences in
Auschwitz and Buchenwald. (Acrobat and RealAudio files)
·
Evelyn
Pike-Rubin was able to escape to Shanghai.
·
Pincus
survived both the Bochnia ghetto and forced labor at Auschwitz.
·
Helen R.
is a Polish survivor who was deported to Auschwitz.
·
Solomon
Radasky survived the Warsaw Ghetto, Majdanek, and Auschwitz-Birkenau.
·
Dr. Jakob Rosenfeld escaped
to Shanghai and then became a general in Mao Zedong's Liberation Army.
·
Judith Rubinstein
describes the selection process at Auschwitz-Birkenau.
·
Rudy
describes being sent from Theresienstadt to Auschwitz-Birkenau.
·
Peter S.,
a German child survivor, describes a selection at Ravensbrück. (Photo, video,
audio, and text)
·
Leo Scher managed to save
both himself and many other Jews by outwitting the Nazis time and again.
·
Joseph
Sher survived labor camps.
·
Lili
Silberman was hidden first in a Protestant orphanage and then a convent.
·
Gabriele Silten
describes survival in Westerbork Camp.
·
Ben Stem
spent six months in the Kielce ghetto and then was taken to a forced labor
camp.
·
Richard Sufit's
story of his captivity in Auschwitz and Buchenwald contains many details of
camp life.
·
Agnes Vadas
describes losing her father to injuries incurred during an air raid in
Budapest.
·
Erika
Van Hesteren, a Dutch woman, recounts the years she lived in hiding during
the war.
·
Anna W.
is a Gypsy survivor who was deported to Ravensbrück. (Photo, audio and video in
German, text in English and German)
·
Cyla Wiener
recalls her experiences in the Krakow ghetto and working as a seamstress in
Plaszow, Auschwitz, and Bergen-Belsen. (Acrobat and RealAudio files)
·
Sophie
Yaari, born in Germany, tells about life in Germany in the 1930s. She
remembers Kristallnacht. She
and her sister went to Holland, where they survived by living in hiding for
years.
·
Shep
Zitler was a soldier and prisoner of war.
·
A virtual tour of Auschwitz
by Stuart C. Nichols contains extensive text and many photos.
·
The List of the
Camps. Hundreds of camps and sub-camps listed with links to information on
many of the major camps.
·
"Tunnel and Shelter
Researching." These underground factories used forced labor to produce
military materiel.
·
Slideshow of Auschwitz and
Birkenau camps by Richard Hitchens.
·
Map of Birkenau with links
to 35 contemporary color photos by Alan Jacobs.
·
17 color photographs of
Auschwitz/Birkenau taken by Alan Jacobs in the years 1979-1981.
·
Photographs of
Auschwitz/Birkenau by Stuart C. Nichols.
·
Auschwitz Revisited by
Chuck Ferree.
·
An Auschwitz Alphabet by Jonathan
Blumen contains text and photos of the camp.
·
The Memorial
Museums in Germany site gives a short history of each camp and includes
photographs and other information.
·
Mauthausen site
includes information about camp life, the SS, and forced labor as well as
excerpts from reports by former prisoners. Satellite camps include: Ebensee,
Gusen,
Melk,
and Wiener
Neustadt.
·
Mauthausen and Gusen camps
are thoroughly described at this large site.
·
The Shoah Museum is located on
the site of a former transit camp in Belgium.
·
Bergen-Belsen
trial excerpts from Nizkor Archives.
·
Buchenwald documents
are available in this Nizkor directory.
·
Majdanek Camp
information is available at this site created by Philip Trauring.
·
Camp medical experiments are
described on this Web page.
·
The
"Forgotten Camps" site by Vincent Châtel and Gord McFee offers
information about many of the large and a few of the smaller camps:
|
o
Belzec o
Chelmno o
Drancy o
Ebensee |
o
Gusen o
Majdanek o
Melk o
Ommen o
Plaszow |
o
Pustkow o
Radogosz o
Sobibór o
Stutthof o
Vught |
·
Moshe Rynecki was a Jewish artist whose work
survived the Holocaust.
·
Josef Nassy: Images of Internment
is an online exhibit at the US Holocaust Memorial Museum.
·
The Arts and KZ Gusen site
includes separate sections about music, poetry, drawing, painting, and
sculpture.
·
David Olre
drawings and paintings, a few of which do not duplicate those in A Teacher's Guide to the Holocaust.
·
Fernand Van Horen
tells how his drawing ability helped him to survive the concentration camp.
·
Inmate art from the
painting room at the Dossin Military Barracks in Belgium.
·
Propaganda
poster collection at the Bronx High School of Science.
·
Picasso and the occupation
of France is the topic of this site.
·
A short biography of
Nelly Sachs is available at the "Women and the Holocaust" site.
·
Holocaust poetry by
David Graham, Trish McAllister, Maryl Winningham, and others.
·
The Terezín Chamber Music Foundation is
dedicated to assuring the permanence of the music written by composers who
perished in the Holocaust.
·
The United
States Holocaust Memorial Museum maintains a searchable photo archive.
·
The Ghetto Fighter's House also maintains a
searchable photo archive. Click on "English" and then "Search
Archives."
·
The National Archives
section on WWII contains many useful Holocaust-era photographs. Warning: the
average file size in this archive is 500KB.
·
The Cybrary of the Holocaust
hosts a number of photo collections. Don't miss Alan Jacob's photographic
portrait of Birkenau.
·
The Holocaust History
Project has a large collection of photographs documenting the Holocaust in
Hungary.
·
The
College of the Holy Cross Archives has posted 16 photographs from their
collection taken by Major Orval C. Clark at Buchenwald in May of 1945.
·
The Southern Institute Photo
Gallery includes photos of both WWII and the Holocaust.
·
Shamash, the Jewish Internet
Consortium, maintains a site that includes Holocaust photos.
·
Franois Schmitz
maintains an exhibit of 37 Holocaust photographs with captions in French and
English.
·
Polish
Synagogue photographs are available at this site.
·
The Cybrary maintains a
collection of Holocaust photos.
·
Images for Reflection by Scott L
Sakansky offers haunting images of over a dozen camps and other locations.
·
Teaching about
the Holocaust is a 136 page PDF book is available at the United States
Holocaust Memorial Museum site.
·
The Holocaust: A Learning Site
for Students presented by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
·
A packet of 37 identification
cards is also available at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
site.
·
The State of Florida Commissioner's
Task Force on Holocaust Education Web Site includes a message from the
Commissioner, links to affiliated centers, a list of district coordinators, and
an order form for the statewide high school curriculum, "The Holocaust:
Can It Happen to Me?"
·
The Holocaust--A Guide for Teachers
is an excellent teacher's guide to many important Holocaust topics such as
prejudice, antisemitism, and Fascism. Each chapter includes objectives,
activities, discussion questions, and other aids for the teacher.
·
The Trial of Adolf Eichmann
is a PBS video. This site includes a teacher's guide.
·
Education...A Legacy Forum for
Teachers at the Cybrary has links to many interesting pages.
·
The Truth About Anne Frank is
a twelve hour class outline available at the Cybrary.
·
Deathly Silence: Everyday
People in the Holocaust is a Holocaust education manual produced by the
Southern Institute for Education and Research, Tulane University.
·
The Schindler's List
Teaching Guide is available at the Southern Institute for Education and
Research site.
·
The Holocaust/Genocide Project (HGP) is an
international, nonprofit, telecommunications project focusing on study of the
Holocaust and other genocides.
·
The Beast Within
is an interdisciplinary unit for ninth graders.
·
Remembering Our
Faces is an ERIC Digest discussing rationales, curriculum placement, and resources
for Holocaust education.
·
Yad Vashem
produces teaching resources.
·
The Holocaust Teacher Resource Center offers
many teaching resources.
·
An annual essay contest for Florida
high school students is sponsored by the Holland & Knight Charitable
Foundation, Inc.
·
A teacher's guide for
visiting the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Available in PDF format.
·
The H-NET List for History of the
Holocaust is a listserve geared to Holocaust scholars. The archives are
searchable by non-members. To begin a search, go to this link and select
"H-Holocaust" as the list to view.
·
Many important Holocaust era
documents are available from the Avelon Project at the Yale Law School.
·
The Werner H. and Anne Von
Rosenstiel Collection of Holocaust materials at the University of South
Florida Library.
·
Al
Filreis' List of Links to other Holocaust-related Web sites includes many
current events items.
·
An extensive
timeline of WWII is available at The History Place.
·
A chronology of the Holocaust
by Ben S. Austin.
·
The deportation and
"resettlement" of Jews and the structure of the ghetto are
thoroughly described.
·
The
full Nuremberg Laws are listed here.
·
Holland under the Third
Reich is a transcript of a lecture which was presented by Anthony Anderson
at The University of Southern California on October 17, 1995.
·
"Nazi
Gold," a PBS Frontline site explores Switzerland's wartime actions and
role as banker and financial broker for Nazi Germany.
Please
send comments about broken or changed links to the Project Manager. If you know
of a site that should be included, please send us the address.
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A
Teacher's Guide to the Holocaust
Produced by the Florida Center for Instructional Technology,
College of Education, University of South Florida © 2000.
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