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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
Posters
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
Posters
Posters
Poster for the anti-Semitic exhibition “The Jew and France” at the Palais Berlitz in Paris, September 5, 1941, to January 15, 1942, organized by the Institute for the Study of Jewish Issues.
Posters
An anti-Gaullist and anti-Semitic poster published in November 1941 by the Institute for the Study of Jewish Issues. At the time, the IEQJ was funded by the German embassy.
Posters
A Vichy propaganda poster designed to encourage French workers to voluntarily leave for Germany in exchange for the return of prisoners of war.
Posters
A German poster announcing the first convictions for strike-related offenses, signed by General Niehoff, June 3, 1941.
Posters
“Reserved for Germans” sign to be posted in first-class subway cars starting Oct. 27. 1940.
Posters
German poster announcing the arrest of 31 communist activists following a series of acts of sabotage, July 18, 1941.
Posters
Following the attack at the Barbès-Rochechouart station, von Stülpnagel, commander-in-chief of the Occupation forces in France, announced the execution of hostages.
Posters
German poster announcing the execution of Szmul (Samuel) Tyszelman and Henry Gautherot on August 19, 1941.
Posters
German Labor poster. Below the drawing: “Free Germany. Germany must live. That is why Hitler must fall.”
Posters
Poster for the anti-Semitic exhibition “The Jew and France” at the Palais Berlitz in Paris, September 5, 1941, to January 15, 1942, organized by the Institute for the Study of Jewish Issues and funded by German propaganda.
Posters
German propaganda poster encouraging workers to go to Germany to work (1943).
Posters
Poster displaying Colonel Rol-Tanguy’s call for an uprising; he was the FFI commander for the Paris region and a member of the PCF (August 17, 1944).
Posters
Poster of the French Militia, established on January 30, 1943, and led by Joseph Darnand, a Waffen-SS officer, to combat the Resistance, hunt down Jews, and track down those evading the STO.
Posters
Poster from the Dordogne Prefecture announcing the requirement for men aged 20 to 22 to register for compulsory labor service (STO). Feb. 24 1943.
Posters
Nazi propaganda poster from the ORAFF (Office for the Allocation of Poster Space), established by the German authorities in 1941.
Posters
Handcrafted butterfly encouraging people to fight against the German invaders.
Posters
A German propaganda poster, widely displayed throughout France, denouncing the 23 members of the FTP-M.O.I. from the “Manouchian Group,” known as “the Red Poster.”
Posters
A small poster denouncing the deportation of Jewish children from Drancy.
Posters
“One struggle for one homeland”: a “Free France” propaganda poster, printed in Great Britain.
Posters
Vichy regime propaganda poster: “After Algeria and Corsica, tomorrow it will be France.”
Posters
Propaganda poster against the Resistance published by the General Secretariat for Information and Propaganda of the Vichy government.
Posters
FFI-FTPF poster announcing the general mobilization order issued by the GPRF (August 1944). Resistance fighters in the interior are now considered combatants of the French army.
Posters
UJRE poster in Yiddish commemorating the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. “Zi hobn geqempft for undzere kavod un freiheit”: They fought for our dignity and freedom. (1945).
Posters
A 1936 CGT poster promoting the 40-hour workweek.
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