Tag: Nazi

81 Leonard Gallery in Tribeca is hosting an exhibition titled "Artists on Antisemitism," featuring 38 pieces by 21 artists exploring contemporary and historical hatred of Jews.
"Freud's Last Session" is a film that portrays a fictional meeting between Sigmund Freud and C.S. Lewis, exploring their contrasting views on religion amidst the backdrop of World War II.
The essay discusses the issue of equating hatred of Jews with Nazism, focusing on the anti-Semitic nature of hating Zionists and Israel.
The essay by Michael Oren, a former Israeli ambassador, argues that the legacy of the Holocaust continues through the persistent antisemitism that dehumanizes Jews, particularly in the media's coverage of Israel.
Karen Frostig, an artist and descendant of Holocaust victims from the Jungfernhof camp in Latvia, has been on a mission to establish a memorial for the nearly 4,000 Jews who perished there, including her grandparents.
A new dark comedy play explores the complex relationship between Bulgaria's King Boris III and the Jewish population in his country during World War II.
In this article, Paul Shaviv discusses the current global wave of antisemitism and highlights the historical waves of antisemitism that have shaped our understanding of this phenomenon.
In a recent article, writer Shalom Auslander explores the misuse and dilution of the term "Nazi" in current discourse, cautioning against labeling individuals with nationalist or extreme right-wing beliefs as such.
This article discusses the overuse and degradation of the word "Nazi" in contemporary discourse.
During an official ceremony in the Canadian House of Commons, lawmakers gave two standing ovations to a 98-year-old former Ukrainian soldier who had served with a Nazi unit during World War II, causing scandal and outrage.
Moyra Turkington, a Canadian designer from Toronto, has created a role-playing game called Rosenstrasse, shedding light on the little-known but significant protest that took place in Berlin in 1943.
The article discusses the problematic nature of society's admiration for stories of forgiveness, particularly when the forgiver is a victim with less power forgiving someone with more power.
In "Revolution, the Jews, and Hitler's Munich," Michael Brenner explores the role of Jews in revolutionary movements and the impact it had on the rise of Hitler and antisemitism in Munich.
The author reflects on her experience visiting Auschwitz and the challenges of confronting the evil of the Holocaust.
The Forward has covered the Babyn Yar massacre in Ukraine, where Nazis killed over 33,000 Jews, since 1941.
During a visit to a Ford factory in Michigan, President Trump praised the "good bloodlines" of Henry Ford, founder of Ford Motor Company, sparking criticism from Jewish leaders due to Ford's history as a notorious anti-Semite and supporter of eugenics.
"The Plot Against America" by Philip Roth, both the novel and the subsequent HBO miniseries, explores an alternate history where Charles Lindbergh, a sympathizer with Nazis, becomes President of the United States in 1940.
The recently discovered collection of 361 photographs, including 62 from the Sobibor death camp, sheds light on the complicity of Nazi guards, particularly non-German auxiliaries from the Trawniki SS training camp, in the atrocities committed during the Holocaust.
"Morituri" is a lesser-known film from Marlon Brando's career where he plays a German engineer during World War II coerced by British intelligence into a spy mission aboard a German cargo ship filled with Nazi zealots.
Orson Welles' 1946 film "The Stranger" is a classic noir thriller that delves into post-war paranoia by portraying a former Nazi hiding in an American town.
Dr. Hillel Seidman, a Chassidic Jew, documented daily life in the Warsaw Ghetto in his diary from July 1942 to January 1943.
The author, through exploring family memorabilia and historical documents, uncovers the story of their Sephardic great-great-grandmother, Rivca Alhadeff, who was born in 1870 on the Isle of Rhodes and perished in Auschwitz in 1944.
TLV1's The Tel Aviv Review podcast, hosted by Noah and Gilad Halpern, along with Times of Israel's Miriam Herschlag, delves into the corruption charges against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the extent of their significance.
The iron gate with the infamous message "Arbeit macht frei" from the Dachau Nazi camp, which was stolen over two years ago, has been returned and welcomed back to Dachau.
Dr. Josef Mengele, infamous for his cruel experiments on prisoners during the Holocaust, now has his remains utilized for teaching medical students at a Brazilian university.