Skip to main content

Home/ History Teachers/ Group items tagged deportation

Rss Feed Group items tagged

spoutnik ogik

The Holocaust by bullets - Shoah Memorial - Paris - 10 views

  •  
    Between 1941 and 1944, almost one and a half million Ukrainian Jews were assassinated when Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union. The immense majority was killed by Einsatzgruppen firing squads (mobile execution units in the East), Waffen SS units, the German police and local collaborators. Only a small minority was assassinated after having been deported to extermination camps. Since 2004, Father Patrick Desbois and the Yahad-In Unum research team regularly travel across the regions of Ukraine, intent on identifying and assessing every site in eastern and western Ukraine in which Jews were exterminated by mobile Nazi units during World War II.The exhibition at the Shoah Memorial, from the 20th of June, 2007 to the 6th of January, 2008, presents their ongoing research. By reconstituting the assassins' procedural methods, it provides one with a better understanding of how the genocide of Eastern European Jews was actually put into practice. It has finally become possible to preserve and respect the victims' burial places
spoutnik ogik

Homepage | Mémoires européennes DU GOULAG - 5 views

  •  
    From 1939 to 1953, nearly one million people were deported to the Gulag from the European territories annexed by the USSR at the start of the Second World War and those that came under Soviet influence after the War: some to work camps but most as forced settlers in villages in Siberia and Central Asia. An international team of researchers has collected 160 statements from former deportees, photographs of their lives, documents from private and public archives and films. Many of these witnesses had never spoken out before. In these statements and these documents, the Museum invites you to explore a neglected chapter of the history of Europe.
Bob Maloy

resourcesforhistoryteachers - Mexican Immigration to the United States - 5 views

  •  
    A page on the resourcesforhistoryteachers wiki dealing with Mexican immigration. Includes material on Mexican Repatriation in the 1930s and Operation Wetback in 1954 as well as other materials for classroom study
1 - 3 of 3
Showing 20 items per page