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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
)
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Photos
The boundary between the two areas, here at the Régémortes Bridge in Moulins-sur-Allier.
Documents
The census of Jews who had entered France since January 1, 1936, in the Nice region (January 29, 1942).
Photos
The Choisel camp, also known as the Châteaubriant camp (Loire-Atlantique), where mainly political prisoners are interned.
Photos
The clandestine printing press of the Francs Tireurs and Partisans Français (FTP) in the Lot
Newspapers
The collaborationist newspaper
*Le Matin*
, in its June 23, 1941, edition, described the invasion of the USSR as “a war against Bolshevism.”
Newspapers
The collaborationist newspaper
*Le Matin*
, in its March 5, 1942, edition, reported on the “trial” at the Palais-Bourbon of the young Communist Resistance fighters from the “Bataillons de la Jeunesse.”
Newspapers
The collaborationist newspaper
*Le Matin*
, in its Oct. 19 issue, welcomed the publication of the Statute for the Jews.
Newspapers
The Communist Party and Foreign Workers: “United Front of French and Immigrant Workers,”
L’Humanité
, January 3, 1931.
Newspapers
The December 16, 1941, issue of
*La Croix*
reported on the retaliatory measures ordered by Otto von Stülpnagel in response to the attacks carried out by the Communist Resistance.
Newspapers
The December 20, 1939, issue of
*L’Humanité
clandestine* denounced the repression carried out in workplaces by the Daladier government.
Newspapers
The December 20, 1942, issue of
*Unzer Wort*
warns: “Laval and the occupying forces are preparing to deport French Jews.”
Newspapers
The December 6, 1941, issue of
*Unzer Wort*
denounced the new anti-Jewish laws and called for a boycott of companies working for Germany.
Newspapers
The December 9, 1941, edition of
*La Croix*
reports on the Japanese attacks in the Far East.
Notes
The Dreyfus Affair
Notes
The Emancipation of the Jews in France
Notes
The End of the Jewish Presence in Poland
Photos
The entrance to the Auschwitz-Birkenau extermination camp.
Photos
The entrance to the Łódź Ghetto (Poland), established by the Germans in February 1940. More than 160,000 Jews—more than one-third of the city’s population—were confined there.
Documents
The Estates-General of the French Renaissance, organized by the CNR (July 10–14, 1945).
Newspapers
The February 10, 1934, issue of
*Naïe Presse*
reports on the anti-fascist actions of the previous day, in response to the far-right demonstrations on February 6.
Newspapers
The February 10, 1941, issue of
*L’Humanité
clandestine* calls for unity against the collaborationist government.
Newspapers
The February 11, 1934, issue of
*L’Humanité*
calls for a strike against the fascist threat.
Newspapers
The February 15, 1943, issue of
*Notre Voix*
condemns the deportation of Jews from Marseille to the Compiègne camp and to “an unknown destination.”
Newspapers
The February 17, 1943, issue
of *Paris-Soir*
announced the second law on the SOT (February 16), which, one week later, became the STO (Compulsory Labor Service).
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