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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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Newspapers
Naïe Presse, January 1, 1934: headline in the center: “New Decrees on Foreign Workers.”
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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
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Salle 1 - La section juive de la M.O.I.
Before 1934
Naïe Presse
, January 1, 1934: headline in the center: “New Decrees on Foreign Workers.”
Naïe Presse newspaper, Feb. 10, 1934 © BNF, Gallica
Salle
1.3 From the Jewish Section of the M.O.I. to the Yiddish-language newspaper *Naïe Presse*
Période
1934
Type de document
Newspapers
Mots-clés
Naïe Presse
Zone géographique
NC
Source
NC
Télécharger
visiter la salle 1 - La section juive de la M.O.I.
Documents de la même période
Notes
Naïe Presse
Posters
A poster in Warsaw announcing a performance of “The Dibbuk,” a play by Shalom Anski (1863–1920), in Yiddish.
Notes
Fascism
Notes
Immigrant Labor Force (M.O.I.)
Photos
In Paris, 1934, soccer players from the Yiddish Arbeter Klub (YASK), a Jewish workers’ sports club founded in 1929 and affiliated with the FSGT.
Photos
Isaac Leib Peretz (1852–1915), a Yiddish writer and playwright.