A bearded neo-Nazi thrown behind bars in Germany for inciting hatred has legally changed his name and gender in an apparent bid to be transferred to a women’s prison — because he’s afraid of “discrimination.
This week marks 80 years since the liberation of Auschwitz. Now Etan Smallman is looking back over a 15-year journey to uncover what happened to his Jewish family
EXCLUSIVE: Greenwich Entertainment has acquired North American rights to UnBroken, the award-winning documentary that tells an extraordinary story of survival from Nazi Germany. The distributor plans a February 21 theatrical release of the film from first-time director Beth Lane (watch the film’s trailer below).
One day in March 1932, in his imposing Renaissance castle in Silesia, Wilhelm Hohenzollern, the 49-year-old German former crown prince, received three men by his bedside...
The Federal Cabinet of Germany has approved a plan to reform the processes for the restitution of Nazi-looted art.
The new body will be easier to access and its decisions will be legally binding. But some lawyers and Jewish heirs are not happy with the reform.
The names of some 425,000 suspected Dutch collaborators went online 80 years after the Holocaust ended, making them accessible to historians and descendants as the country grapples with its past.
The German government on Wednesday signed off on a reform plan for the process of returning art looted by the Nazis, despite criticism from victims' families and lawyers.
Germany wants to thank you for choosing, despite your childhood trauma, to share your story with students, sports clubs, and parliaments to foster reconciliation and understanding."
All these did not satisfy Hitler and on September 1, 1939, he invaded Poland, and this action led to the debilitating Second World War with attendant horrendous loss of lives. The war consumed more than 50 million lives which included six million Jews lost in the Holocaust perpetrated by Nazi Germany.
Nazi Germany banned Bauhaus as ‘degenerate art’. Germany’s far-right party attacks it for ‘architectural sins’. Bauhaus defenders push back.