Skip to content
Flyout Menu
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
)
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
Poster announcing the general mobilization order of September 2, 1939.
Back to the literature search
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
View all venues
Salle 2 - Against Fascism | Outbreak of War
1934 - 1939
Poster announcing the general mobilization order of September 2, 1939.
Poster, Sept. 2, 1939 © National Archives _1939AE/II/3598
Room
2.2 The German-Soviet Pact
Period
1939
Document Type
Posters
Keywords
NC
Geographic area
NC
Source
NC
Download
visit the hall 2 - Against Fascism | Outbreak of War
Documents from the same period
Newspapers
Paris-Soir
, September 18, 1939: The USSR carries out the Occupation of the eastern part of Poland.
Newspapers
The
August 26, 1939, issue
of *L’Humanité*
—which was seized and banned—called for the “unity of the French nation against Hitler’s aggression.”
Newspapers
The
September 30, 1938, issue
of *L’Humanité*
reports on the Munich Conference and points out that Czechoslovakia and the USSR were not invited.
Audio
A Yiddish reading of Adam Rayski’s editorial in
*Naïe Presse*
from September 4, 1939.
Notes
Communist International (CI)
Notes
Édouard Daladier