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French
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A visit to the museum
Literature Review
About the Museum
Our achievements
Our film
Our blog
Our database of Resistance fighters from the M.O.I.
Contact
English
Français
(
French
)
A visit to the museum
Literature Review
About the Museum
Our achievements
Our film
Our blog
Our database of Resistance fighters from the M.O.I.
Contact
English
Français
(
French
)
Search
Home
Documents
Toutes les salles
1.
Before 1934
The Jewish section of the M.O.I.
2.
1934 - 1939
Against Fascism | Outbreak of War
3.
Jan 1940 - Sept 1940
The Occupation | Creation of “Solidarity”
4.
Sept 1940 - June 1941
State Antisemitism | Responses
5.
June - August 1941
Armed resistance
6.
August - Oct 1941
Execution of hostages
7.
Oct - Dec 1941
Persecutions | The Resistance
8.
Jan–Jul 1942
Vel’ d’Hiv Roundup | The FTP-M.O.I.
9.
July 1942 - Feb 1943
Rescue of Jewish Children
10.
August 1942 - May 1943
Stalingrad | Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
11.
1943
Creation of the UJRE
12.
Jan 1943 - Mar 1944
Repression | The Major Surveillance Operations
13.
Apr 1943 - March 1944
Unification of the Resistance
14.
Apr - Sep 1944
Insurrection and Liberation
15.
Oct 1944 - Nov 1945
End of the War | Reconstruction
Voir toutes les salles
Documents
Documents
Copy of a telegram (Feb. 23, 1943) from the regional prefect of Limoges to the prefect of Périgueux regarding the “roundup” of foreign Jews and the procedures for their selection.
Documents
The General Intelligence Directorate announces the execution by the Germans of three “terrorists” and details their actions in Paris (March 16, 1943).
Documents
FTP-M.O.I. Report (Southern Zone) on the Development of the Armed Struggle: Establishment of the Union of Jewish Youth (UJJ) as a mass organization and recruitment base (late 1943).
Documents
A note dated Dec. 10, 1942, from the Polish government describing the reality of the “massacres of Jews in occupied Poland,” forwarded to the Allied governments.
Documents
Internal circular from the Movement for Defense and Solidarity Against Anti-Jewish Persecution and Deportations, analyzing antisemitism as a means of “preventing the unity of the Peuple de France” (1943).
Documents
Identity card (in German and Yiddish) issued by the German military administration of the Grodno region (present-day Belarus) on April 18, 1918. (front and back)
Documents
Lithograph following the first Kishinev pogrom (1903): U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt to Tsar Nicholas II of Russia: “Stop your cruel oppression of the Jews.”
Documents
A commemoration of the Odessa pogrom (October 18–21, 1905) in Russia, the deadliest in the city’s history. Russians, Ukrainians, and Greeks massacred more than 400 Jews.
Documents
Sheet music for a song composed in 1904 by Herman Schapiro of New York, based on the Kishinev pogrom (April 6 and 7, 1903).
Documents
Anti-Semitic propaganda by the White Armies in 1919 denouncing “Jewish-Bolshevism” as embodied by Leon Trotsky.
Documents
Program for the Yiddish theater production by the Paris Jewish Workers’ Theater (Parizer Yiddisher Arbeter Teater—PYAT), performed in Metz, 1935.
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