Literatura académica sobre el tema "Jewish holocaust (1933-1945)"

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Artículos de revistas sobre el tema "Jewish holocaust (1933-1945)"

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Cohen, G. Daniel. "Ruth Gay. Safe Among The Germans: Liberated Jews After World War Two. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2002. 330 pp.; Zeev Mankowitz. Life Between Memory and Hope: The Survivors of the Holocaust in Occupied Germany. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2002. 348 pp." AJS Review 28, n.º 2 (noviembre de 2004): 378–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0364009404320210.

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In the last decade or so, new research on Jewish displaced persons in occupied Germany has pushed the traditional boundaries of “Holocaust studies” (1933–1945) toward the postwar period. Indeed, the displaced persons or “DP” experience—the temporary settlement in Germany of the Sheءerith Hapleitah (“Surviving Remnant”) from the liberation of concentration camps in the spring of 1945 to the late 1940s—provides important insights into post-Holocaust Jewish life. The impact of trauma and loss, the final divorce between Jews and East-Central Europe through migration to Israel and the New World, the rise of Zionist consciousness, the shaping of a Jewish national collective in transit, the regeneration of Jewish demography and culture in the DP camps, and the relationships between Jews and Germans in occupied Germany are some of the many themes explored by recent DP historiography—by now a subfield of postwar Jewish history.
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Potap, Olga, Marc Cohen y Grigori Nekritch. "Society for the Protection of the Health of the Jewish Population (OSE): Jewish Humanitarian Mission for over 100 Years". Changing Societies & Personalities 5, n.º 2 (9 de julio de 2021): 175. http://dx.doi.org/10.15826/csp.2021.5.2.128.

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The essay's primary purpose is to bring to the attention of readers interested in the history of the Jewish people that the dramatic 20th century is not only the victims of the Holocaust–and not only the heroism of the military on the battlefields. It is active resistance to barbarism–the rescue of defenseless people through daily civilian activities, nevertheless associated with a constant risk to life. This paper examines non-political and non-religious secular Jewish welfare society within Jewish political and national movements. This essay considers five historical periods of the activity of OSE. These periods are: 1912–1922; 1922–1933; 1933–1945; 1945–1950; 1950–present time. This chronological classification is somewhat imperfect; however, each period reflects the dynamic of functional changes in the initial tasks of the society to review the goals of the organization to satisfy the urgent needs of the European Jewish community in a debatable circumstance of the 20th–21st centuries.
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WENDEHORST, STEPHAN. "LIBERALISM, NATIONALISM AND RACISM: AMBIVALENT SIGNATURES OF MODERNITY". Historical Journal 40, n.º 2 (junio de 1997): 557–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x96007133.

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Nazism and German society. 1933–1945. Edited by David F. Crew. (Rewriting Histories.) London/New York: Routledge, 1994. Pp. xi + 316. £11.99.The Holocaust and the liberal imagination. A social and cultural history. By Tony Kushner. (Jewish Society and Culture.) Oxford/Cambridge: Blackwell, 1994. Pp. xx + 366. £14.99.The Zionist ideology. By Gideon Shimoni. (The Tauber Institute for the Study of European Jewry Series, 21.) Hanover/London: University Press of New England for Brandeis University Press, 1995. Pp. xvi + 506. £46.95.American Zionism from Herzl to the Holocaust. By Melvin I. Urofsky. Lincoln/London: University of Nebraska Press, 1995. Pp. xv + 538. $15.00.
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Ahlheim, H. "Robbing the Jews: The Confiscation of Jewish Property in the Holocaust, 1933-1945". German History 28, n.º 3 (26 de marzo de 2010): 384–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gerhis/ghq038.

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Berkowitz, Michael. ":Robbing the Jews: The Confiscation of Jewish Property in the Holocaust, 1933–1945". American Historical Review 114, n.º 3 (junio de 2009): 853–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/ahr.114.3.853.

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Stone, Dan. "Robbing the Jews: The Confiscation of Jewish Property in the Holocaust, 1933–1945". Journal of Genocide Research 12, n.º 3-4 (diciembre de 2010): 287–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14623528.2010.483060.

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Schuchalter, Jerry. "Representing the unrepresentable: Victor Klemperer's Holocaust diaries". Nordisk Judaistik/Scandinavian Jewish Studies 19, n.º 1-2 (1 de septiembre de 1998): 7–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.30752/nj.69547.

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The purpose of this article is to explore how memory is constructed in Victor Klemperer’s diaries. In the diaries, Klemperer describes his fate as well as the fate of other Jews who did not emigrate during the years 1933–1945. The concrete details of everyday life in the Third Reich only serve to highlight the plight of the besieged poet writing at the end of the days, not knowing whether he will complete his masterpiece or whether he will be executed beforehand. In Klemperer’s diaries normality and horror are continually juxtaposed with one another. The holocaust is thus transformed from a small repertoire of horrifying narratives to a seemingly countless number of actions and movements, some conforming to the principal narratives and others, curiously enough, defying the well known narratives of Auschwitz and extermination. These narratives constitute important source material describing the mentality of the Jewish identity in Germany.
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COLE, TIM. "Robbing the Jews: the confiscation of Jewish property in the Holocaust, 1933-1945 - By Martin Dean". Economic History Review 63, n.º 1 (febrero de 2010): 266–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0289.2009.00511_24.x.

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Tarnowska, Magdalena. "Zagłada i odrodzenie w twórczości ocalonej – łódzkiej malarki Sary Gliksman-Fajtlowicz (1909–2005)". Studia Judaica, n.º 2 (48) (2021): 437–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.4467/24500100stj.21.018.15073.

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The Holocaust and Rebirth in the Works of Sara Gliksman-Fajtlowicz, a Painter From Łódź, 1909–2005 Sara Gliksman-Fajtlowicz, a painter, came from a well-off family of Majerowiczs, the owners of opticians’ shops in Łódź. She studied at private painting and drawing schools in Łódźand Warsaw. Before the outbreak of World War II, she was active in the Polish art milieu. In 1933, she became a member of the Trade Union of Polish Artists (Związek Zawodowy Polskich Artystów Plastyków, ZZPAP) and participated in its exhibitions in Łódź, Warsaw, Kraków,and Lviv. She painted mainly landscapes, still lifes, and—less frequently—portraits. She published her works in the union magazine Forma. In 1940, she was displaced to the Łódźghetto where she worked as a graphic artist at the Statistics Department. Thanks to this she could obtain art materials. Her clandestine activity was documenting life in the ghetto in paintings and drawings. She survived the liquidation of the ghetto and then was forced to work on cleaning that area. Liberated on 19 January 1945, she returned to her house where some of her prewar works had survived. After 1945 she continued her artistic career and exhibited with the ZZPAP, as well as with the Jewish Society for the Encouragement of Fine Arts. In 1957, she emigrated to Israel. Gliksman died in Tel Aviv in 2005. The aim of this article is to verify and describe Sara Gliksman’s biography, to present her activities in the Polish-Jewish artistic community of postwar Poland, as well as to place her works in the context of issues concerning survivors’ memory and artistic attitudes toward the Holocaust, and art as a manifestation of hope for the rebirth of Jewish life and culture in postwar Poland in the second half of the 1940s and the beginning of the 1950s.
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Kaplan, Thomas Pegelow. "Robbing the Jew: The Confiscation of Jewish Property in the Holocaust, 1933-1945, by Martin Dean.Robbing the Jew: The Confiscation of Jewish Property in the Holocaust, 1933-1945, by Martin Dean. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press. 2008. x, 437 pp. $60.00 US (cloth)." Canadian Journal of History 44, n.º 2 (septiembre de 2009): 320–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/cjh.44.2.320.

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Tesis sobre el tema "Jewish holocaust (1933-1945)"

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Groot, Heinrich de. "Judenverdrängung, Judenverfolgung und Judendeportation auf dem Land unter den Bedingungen der nationalsozialistischen Herrschaft 1933 - 1945 /". Frankfurt am Main [u.a.] : Lang, 2003. http://www.gbv.de/dms/bs/toc/385616481.pdf.

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Veeder, Stacy Renee. "The Republican Race| Identity, Persecution, and Resistance in Jewish Correspondence from the Concentration Camps of Occupied France, 1933-1945". Thesis, State University of New York at Albany, 2018. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10815654.

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An examination of the wartime correspondence of hundreds of Jewish individuals living or interned in France, citizens who denounced or advocated for them, and the response of French officials to these petitions reveals a multifarious discourse regarding who was capable of belonging to the French state. Letters from the camps of France offer an exceptionally rare window into the perceptions and self-conception of the interned as they engaged with friends, family, and colleagues, petitioned officials, demanded the restoration of their legal status, and endeavored to disprove accusations that they constituted a separate and unassimilable group. France experienced an immigration crisis and a period of intense political friction directly prior to the Second World War. These factors stirred anxiety over moral ‘degeneration’ and a perceived loss of socio-economic control, inspiring exclusionary policy and policing of immigrant and refugee communities.

This correspondence requested recognition and release, the provision of aid for the interned and their families, and for French and Jewish organizations to explain anti-Jewish measures. Within their letters and entreaties Jews in France consistently confirmed their loyalty and patriotism while decrying the abhorrent nature of the classification, ‘aryanization,’ arrest, and deportation measures. Within correspondence from the concentration camps traumatic violence, extreme deprivation, and the fervent need to acquire resources for survival (provisions, medicine, news) frequently took precedence. Internees pursued petition as part of their multi-pronged survival strategies. Although it is difficult to gauge intention within such a complex and controlled medium, the sense of shock present in the letters implies authors were often convinced their citizenship, service, or in the perilous case of the ‘ juifs étrangers’ their motivation to assimilate, held emancipatory power. While officials of the French State rarely responded directly to personal letters, these demands were taken up by leaders of Jewish organizations, the Union générale des Israélites de France, the Consistoire central, aid societies, and delegations of veterans and wives of prisoners, in their meetings with Vichy and Commissariat général aux questions juives officials. These petitions mobilized familial, friendship, and professional networks in their defense, and give insight into how strategies of adaptation and perceptions of the persecution shifted over time.

Hundreds of letters of personal correspondence and petition between camp internees and Jewish and French officials from the Drancy, Beaune-la-Rolande, Compiègne, and Pithiviers camps are primarily found in Centre de Documentation Juive Contemporaine collections in Paris, the USHMM camp collections, and Yad Vashem. Dozens of letters written by Jewish and non-Jewish individuals and organizations advocating for the rights of the Jewish community can be found in the Archives Nationales- Commissariat général aux questions juives collections.

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Abrahams-Sprod, Michael E. "Life under Siege: The Jews of Magdeburg under Nazi Rule". Thesis, The University of Sydney, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/1627.

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This regional study documents the life and the destruction of the Jewish community of Magdeburg, in the Prussian province of Saxony, between 1933 and 1945. As this is the first comprehensive and academic study of this community during the Nazi period, it has contributed to both the regional historiography of German Jewry and the historiography of the Shoah in Germany. In both respects it affords a further understanding of Jewish life in Nazi Germany. Commencing this study at the beginning of 1933 enables a comprehensive view to emerge of the community as it was on the eve of the Nazi assault. The study then analyses the spiralling events that led to its eventual destruction. The story of the Magdeburg Jewish community in both the public and private domains has been explored from the Nazi accession to power in 1933 up until April 1945, when only a handful of Jews in the city witnessed liberation. This study has combined both archival material and oral history to reconstruct the period. Secondary literature has largely been incorporated and used in a comparative sense and as reference material. This study has interpreted and viewed the period from an essentially Jewish perspective. That is to say, in documenting the experiences of the Jews of Magdeburg, this study has focused almost exclusively on how this population simultaneously lived and grappled with the deteriorating situation. Much attention has been placed on how it reacted and responded at key junctures in the processes of disenfranchisement, exclusion and finally destruction. This discussion also includes how and why Jews reached decisions to abandon their Heimat and what their experiences with departure were. In the final chapter of the community’s story, an exploration has been made of how the majority of those Jews who remained endured the final years of humiliation and stigmatisation. All but a few perished once the implementation of the ‘Final Solution’ reached Magdeburg in April 1942. The epilogue of this study charts the experiences of those who remained in the city, some of whom survived to tell their story.
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Abrahams-Sprod, Michael E. "Life under Siege: The Jews of Magdeburg under Nazi Rule". University of Sydney, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/1627.

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Doctor of Philosophy
This regional study documents the life and the destruction of the Jewish community of Magdeburg, in the Prussian province of Saxony, between 1933 and 1945. As this is the first comprehensive and academic study of this community during the Nazi period, it has contributed to both the regional historiography of German Jewry and the historiography of the Shoah in Germany. In both respects it affords a further understanding of Jewish life in Nazi Germany. Commencing this study at the beginning of 1933 enables a comprehensive view to emerge of the community as it was on the eve of the Nazi assault. The study then analyses the spiralling events that led to its eventual destruction. The story of the Magdeburg Jewish community in both the public and private domains has been explored from the Nazi accession to power in 1933 up until April 1945, when only a handful of Jews in the city witnessed liberation. This study has combined both archival material and oral history to reconstruct the period. Secondary literature has largely been incorporated and used in a comparative sense and as reference material. This study has interpreted and viewed the period from an essentially Jewish perspective. That is to say, in documenting the experiences of the Jews of Magdeburg, this study has focused almost exclusively on how this population simultaneously lived and grappled with the deteriorating situation. Much attention has been placed on how it reacted and responded at key junctures in the processes of disenfranchisement, exclusion and finally destruction. This discussion also includes how and why Jews reached decisions to abandon their Heimat and what their experiences with departure were. In the final chapter of the community’s story, an exploration has been made of how the majority of those Jews who remained endured the final years of humiliation and stigmatisation. All but a few perished once the implementation of the ‘Final Solution’ reached Magdeburg in April 1942. The epilogue of this study charts the experiences of those who remained in the city, some of whom survived to tell their story.
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Comartin, Justin. "Humanitarian Ambitions - International Barriers: Canadian Governmental Response to the Plight of the Jewish Refugees (1933-1945)". Thèse, Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/23992.

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From 1933 to 1945, thousands of European Jews attempted to gain access to Canada in order to escape Nazi oppression. This thesis examines Canada’s immigration records and policies during this period. In addition to bringing light to key issues concerning popular Canadian perceptions of Jewish immigrants and refugees in the thirties and forties, this history raises important questions about the Canadian government and ethical responsibility in a time of war; about the relationship between government policy and provincial politics; and about the position taken by Canada’s longest serving Prime Minister, William Lyon Mackenzie King, and his Cabinet. The author’s research brings attention to Irving Abella and Harold Troper’s work, None is too Many, which, since its publication in 1982, has stood as the authoritative work on the subject. A variety of important issues which are not treated in detail in this earlier monograph are examined in depth in this analysis: The prevalence of anti-Semitism in French and English Canada, and the Canadian immigration record are treated in Chapter 2. Chapter 3 and 4 investigate accusations that William Lyon Mackenzie King, Ernest Lapointe, Frederick Charles Blair, and Vincent Massey harboured anti-Semitic views. It is found that such charges suffer from a serious lack of evidence. Although sometimes the language used by these men in their correspondence and letters can be shocking to the modern reader, it was the colloquial language during their lives. Furthermore, their personal documents often exhibit evidence of sincere sympathy for the Jews of Europe, and frustration with Canadian popular opinion. The author concludes that collective memory of the Holocaust has affected perceptions concerning the Canadian immigration record during the period in question. Anti-immigration sentiment was strong in Canada during the Depression. Nevertheless, as the Canadian Government became increasingly aware of the persecution of Jews within the Reich, particularly following the events of Kristallnacht in November of 1938, measures were put into place to ease Jewish immigration to Canada, such as including refugees among the admissible classes of immigrants. The Canadian Government did not begin to receive information concerning the extermination of European Jewry until 1942. By this time, there was hardly anything Canada could do. Heinrich Himmler had forbidden Jewish emigration from the Reich in October of 1941, the war was in full swing by 1942, and ships carrying refugees and PoWs were not safe from U-boat attacks. From 1933 to 1945 Canada allowed 8,787 Jews into the country. However, all immigration to Canada was slowed during this time. Consequently, Jews, in actuality, represented a higher percentage of immigrants arriving in Canada, at this time, than they had from 1923 to 1932. This illustrates Canada’s doors we not closed specifically to Jewish refugees during the Depression and Second World War.
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Gutberlet, Anja. "Das Schicksal der jüdischen Gemeinde in Fulda nach 1933 /". [Giessen : A. Gutberlet], 1994. http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/fy0710/2006502599.html.

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"Wissenschaftliche Hausarbeit im Rahmen der Ersten Staatsprüfung für das Lehramt an Grundschulden bzw. Haupt- und Realschulen im Fach katholischer Theologie, eingereicht dem Wiss. Prüfungsamt für das Lehramt an Grundschulen und an Haput- und Realschulen in Giessen" --T.p.
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 92-95).
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Porges, Reingard. "Theodor Wolff, the Writer in Exile 1933-1943". Thesis, The University of Sydney, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/1515.

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Abstract This study examines the effect of exile on Theodor Wolff’s writings from 1933 to 1943. Wolff, a highly assimilated German Jew and renowned journalist and editor-in-chief of the ‘Berliner Tageblatt’ from 1906-1933, was one of the most influential cultural and liberal political commentators during World War I and the Weimar Republic. His political life and influence has been extensively researched, whereas his life in exile has not been explored. Enforced sudden exile in 1933 represented a turning point in Wolff’s life. Following the temporal sequence of Wolff’s ten years in exile, this study is divided into four chapters, starting with the early exile years from 1933 to 1936, followed by the immediate pre World War II period. The third chapter covers the German invasion and occupation of France in 1940. The last chapter sheds light on the two final years from 1942 to 1943. These four periods reflect his exile experience and gradual decline in living conditions, mood, and fundamental changes in his approach to writing. In exile Wolff devotes his time and effort to historical accounts and fiction – a difficult genre for a publicist and journalistic writer. He also embarks on autobiographical writings and during his final years in exile deals with the Jewish catastrophe unfolding in Nazi controlled Europe, raising issues concerning the so called ‘Jewish Problem’. This study draws attention to the effect exile had on an important German- Jewish writer, who in 1943 fell victim to the Holocaust. Wolff’s works, especially his exile writings survived the war and remain relevant today. The findings of this research provide some insight into a turbulent period in German and European history that drastically changed many lives. It also makes a significant contribution to the study of Theodor Wolff and to exile studies in general.
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Porges, Reingard. "Theodor Wolff, the Writer in Exile 1933-1943". University of Sydney, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/1515.

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Abstract This study examines the effect of exile on Theodor Wolff’s writings from 1933 to 1943. Wolff, a highly assimilated German Jew and renowned journalist and editor-in-chief of the ‘Berliner Tageblatt’ from 1906-1933, was one of the most influential cultural and liberal political commentators during World War I and the Weimar Republic. His political life and influence has been extensively researched, whereas his life in exile has not been explored. Enforced sudden exile in 1933 represented a turning point in Wolff’s life. Following the temporal sequence of Wolff’s ten years in exile, this study is divided into four chapters, starting with the early exile years from 1933 to 1936, followed by the immediate pre World War II period. The third chapter covers the German invasion and occupation of France in 1940. The last chapter sheds light on the two final years from 1942 to 1943. These four periods reflect his exile experience and gradual decline in living conditions, mood, and fundamental changes in his approach to writing. In exile Wolff devotes his time and effort to historical accounts and fiction – a difficult genre for a publicist and journalistic writer. He also embarks on autobiographical writings and during his final years in exile deals with the Jewish catastrophe unfolding in Nazi controlled Europe, raising issues concerning the so called ‘Jewish Problem’. This study draws attention to the effect exile had on an important German- Jewish writer, who in 1943 fell victim to the Holocaust. Wolff’s works, especially his exile writings survived the war and remain relevant today. The findings of this research provide some insight into a turbulent period in German and European history that drastically changed many lives. It also makes a significant contribution to the study of Theodor Wolff and to exile studies in general.
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Greear, Wesley P. "American immigration policies and public opinion on European Jews from 1933 to 1945". [Johnson City, Tenn. : East Tennessee State University], 2002. http://etd-submit.etsu.edu/etd/theses/available/etd-0322102-113418/unrestricted/Greear040102.pdf.

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Libros sobre el tema "Jewish holocaust (1933-1945)"

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Seidler, Eduard. Kinderärzte, 1933-1945: Entrechtet, geflohen, ermordet = Pediatricians : victims of persecution, 1933-1945. Bonn: Bouvier, 2000.

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Cuxhaven, Förderverein, ed. Cuxhavener Juden: 1933 bis 1945. Cuxhaven: Rauschenplat, 2011.

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Chaikin, Miriam. A nightmare in history: The Holocaust, 1933-1945. New York: Clarion Books, 1987.

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Hilberg, Raul. Perpetrators, victims, bystanders: The Jewish catastrophe 1933-1945. London: Secker & Warburg, 1995.

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Hilberg, Raul. Perpetrators, victims, bystanders: The Jewish catastrophe 1933-1945. London: Lime Tree, 1993.

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Perpetrators victims bystanders: The Jewish catastrophe, 1933-1945. New York, NY: HarperPerennial, 1993.

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Perpetrators, victims, bystanders: The Jewish catastrophe, 1933-1945. New York, NY: Aaron Asher Books, 1992.

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Klijn, Margo. De stille slag: Joodse Arnhemmers, 1933-1945. Westervoort: Van Gruting, 2003.

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Pfeifer, Monika Ilona. Hanauer Juden 1933-1945: Entrechtung, Verfolgung, Deportation. Hanau: CoCon, 1998.

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Klijn, Margo. De stille slag: Joodse Arnhemmers, 1933-1945. Utrecht: Van Gruting, 2014.

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Capítulos de libros sobre el tema "Jewish holocaust (1933-1945)"

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Pan, Guang. "History of Jewish Refugees Before the Holocaust". En A Study of Jewish Refugees in China (1933–1945), 235–42. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-9483-6_14.

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Pan, Guang. "The International Background: The Impact of the Holocaust on Jews". En A Study of Jewish Refugees in China (1933–1945), 107–21. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-9483-6_8.

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Shaw, Stanford J. "Turkey and the Jews, 1933–1945". En Turkey and the Holocaust, 1–45. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-13041-2_1.

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Bazyler, Michael J., Kathryn Lee Boyd, Kristen L. Nelson y Rajika L. Shah. "Germany". En Searching for Justice After the Holocaust, 151–70. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190923068.003.0018.

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Within months of becoming Chancellor in 1933, Adolf Hitler and his Nazi Party began to implement legal and extralegal measures to dispossess German Jews of their civil rights and their property. During the following 12 years, the regime systematically dispossessed Jews, Roma, and other targeted groups (in Germany and in other territories occupied by the Nazis and other Axis powers) of their dignity, jobs, homes, and businesses. By 1943, the German Reich was declared “free of Jews.” In the years since the end of World War II (under Allied occupation beginning in 1945, during the division of the country into East and West Germany, and finally after unification in 1990) various laws and other measures have been enacted to address restitution of confiscated immovable private, communal, and heirless property. This includes settlement agreements with foreign countries, national legislation, as well as the establishment of so-called Jewish “successor organizations” to claim heirless property and communal property. Germany’s restitution laws for Jewish stolen property have been the most comprehensive in Europe. Germany endorsed the Terezin Declaration in 2009 and the Guidelines and Best Practices in 2010.
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Boyer, John W. "The Catholic Dictatorship and the Nazi Occupation, 1933‒1945". En Austria 1867–1955, 759–860. Oxford University PressOxford, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198221296.003.0010.

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Abstract This chapter focuses on the collapse of the Republic and the imposition of an authoritarian regime by Catholic conservatives led by Dollfuß in 1933‒4 and the subsequent conquest and occupation of Austria by Hitler and the Nazis in 1938. Following the implosion of parliament on March 4, 1933 Dollfuß began to undermine key facets of the existing political order. The record before us leads inescapably to the conclusion that Dollfuß was in full control of his Cabinet, and he was only too willing to follow the urgings of those who wanted a swift attack on the Social Democrats, not simply to protect Austria against Nazi Germany but to destroy the hated “Marxist” experiment in Vienna that epitomized all that was wrong with the modern world after 1918. The chapter provides a detailed account of the civil war of February 1934 that empowered Dollfuß’s final victory over the left, his subsequent murder by Nazi thugs in July 1934, and the haphazard efforts of his successor, Kurt von Schuschnigg, to salvage the Catholic dictatorship in the face of the massive popularity of the Nazi menace. The chapter then provides a detailed account of the Nazi takeover in 1938, including a description of the destruction of the Viennese Jewish community and an evaluation of the extent to which ordinary Austrians were involved in or supported the Nazi terror state and the Holocaust from 1938 to 1945. It concludes with the conquest of Vienna by the Red Army in April 1945.
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"Project: The Persecution and Murder of the European Jews by National Socialist Germany, 1933–1945". En Holocaust and Memory in Europe, 191–94. De Gruyter Oldenbourg, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110472547-010.

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Guttstadt, Corry. "Chapter 2 TURKISH RESPONSES TO THE HOLOCAUST Ankara’s Policy toward the Jews, 1933–1945". En Nazism, the Holocaust, and the Middle East, 42–76. Berghahn Books, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781785337857-006.

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