Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Encyclopedia of Jewish and Israeli history, politics and culture, with biographies, statistics, articles and documents on topics from anti-Semitism to Zionism.

  2. 13 de sept. de 2014 · Alternate Title: Nazi Concentration and Prison Camps. This film is the official Documentary report compiled from over 80,000 feet of film shot by Allied military photographers in the German concentration camps immediately after liberation. The footage is a camp-by-camp record taken in order to provide lasting objective proof of the Horrors the ...

    • 59 min
    • 985
    • Film Gorillas
  3. Ravensbrueck, Germany, Female prisoners performing forced labor. On March 9, 1933, several weeks after Hitler assumed power, the first organized attacks on German opponents of the regime and on Jews broke out across Germany. Less than two weeks later, Dachau, the first Nazi concentration camp, was opened. Situated near Munich, Dachau became a ...

  4. By 1939, six large concentration camps had been established. Besides Dachau, they were Sachsenhausen (1936), Buchenwald (1937), Flossenbürg (1938), Mauthausen (1938), and to house women prisoners, Ravensbrück (1939). Nazi persecution of political opponents exacted a terrible price in human suffering. Between 1933 and 1939, the criminal courts ...

  5. The early camps. This is a page torn from the prisoner book at Esterwegen by a Polish soldier following the camp’s liberation in 1945. Prisoner books listed the prisoners kept at the camp, as well as other biographical details. Esterwegen was one of the earliest concentration camps to be established under Nazi rule and was opened in August 1933.

  6. 30 de mar. de 2015 · Photograph from Akg-Images. One night in the autumn of 1944, two Frenchwomen—Loulou Le Porz, a doctor, and Violette Lecoq, a nurse—watched as a truck drove in through the main gates of ...

  7. 30 de jul. de 2018 · In early 1945, when the tide of war was clearly turning against the Third Reich, several pregnant Jewish women managed to survive in the concentration camps, together with their newborns. 4, 16 – 19. A very special example was the “Pregnancy Unit” ( Schwanger Kommando) in the Kaufering sub-camp of Dachau.