… local stores and continue to work under the protection of the Spanish Vice-Consul Salomon Ezratty, Jenny’s uncle. Growing antisemitic propaganda and…
… increasingly antisemitic laws. On November 9-10, 1938 Nazis attacked Jews and their property throughout Germany during the Night of Broken Glass, known as…
… antisemitism. Erich decided to visit his grandparents in Potsdam before meeting up with his family in Holland. He didn't want to move to Amsterdam because it…
… synagogue regularly. Though they encountered mild antisemitism, they had very few problems prior to Kristallnacht. However, everything changed in November…
…; Jewish partisans serving in Soviet partisan organizations also fell in with the Bielskis in an attempt to escape antisemitism in their units. The stream of…
… had to learn quickly how to milk cows and pray in church. Unlike in the cities, she did not notice any antisemitism, but tried her utmost not to give…
…'s respected position in the Grodno community ensured the family a relatively pleasant existence in spite of the ever present and growing antisemitism…
… student groups. It became evident to Anton that continued antisemitism and discrimination provided an unsafe future for his family under Soviet control. In…
… antisemitic persecution, the Nazis began deportations of Belgian Jews. The Grunsteins found shelter through the efforts of 22-year-old Alice Van Damme (later De…
… synagogue regularly. Though they encountered mild antisemitism, they had very few problems prior to Kristallnacht. However, everything changed in November…
… studied Jewish history, Polish literature, French and Latin. During the 1930s the family experienced both growing antisemitism and economic hardship and…
… antisemitic graffiti, and in the late thirties Ruth was no longer permitted to attend school. In November 1938, Ruth's father, Albert left on a business trip…
… local stores and continue to work under the protection of the Spanish Vice-Consul Salomon Ezratty, Jenny’s uncle. Growing antisemitic propaganda and…
These additional online resources from the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum will help you learn more about the Holocaust and research your family history.
Research family history relating to the Holocaust and explore the Museum's collections about individual survivors and victims of the Holocaust and Nazi persecution.
Learn about over 1,000 camps and ghettos in Volumes I-III of this encyclopedia, which are available as a free PDF download. This reference provides text, photographs, charts, maps, and extensive indexes.