Holocaust Digital Library
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See also our Holocaust Museum Exhibits page.
Fred R. Crawford Witness to the Holocaust Project Files
"The collection includes audio and video recordings of oral histories with liberators, survivors and others; transcriptions of oral history interviews [60% will be digitized]; photographs [30% will be digitized], slides and films donated by liberators; Project publications; and television programs produced by the Project.
Part of SAGE : Selected Archives at Georgia Tech and Emory
The Hannah Arendt Papers at the Library of Congress
"The papers of the author, educator, and political philosopher Hannah Arendt (1906-1975) are one of the principal sources for the study of modern intellectual life. Located in the Manuscript Division at the Library of Congress, they constitute a large and diverse collection reflecting a complex career. With over 25,000 items (about 75,000 digital images), the papers contain correspondence, articles, lectures, speeches, book manuscripts, transcripts of Adolf Eichmannís trial proceedings, notes, and printed matter pertaining to Arendt's writings and academic career ... Parts of the collection will be made available for public access on the Internet. The current preview of selections from Arendt's writings also includes an essay on Arendt's intellectual history, a chronology of her life, and an index of all folders in the Arendt Papers."
American Memory, Library of Congress
The Holocaust Chronicle
"...the bookís companion project, a detailed, cross-referenced Holocaust Chronicle Web site that will include the bookís complete text and a revolving selection of images. Because Holocaust-related developments cross news wires daily, the Web site will be updated continually."
Holocaust Denial on Trial
David Irving v. Penguin Books and Deborah Lipstadt
"This site is built around the defense's groundbreaking research, the riveting trial-room testimony, and the judge's historic opinion which found Irving to be a 'right-wing pro-Nazi polemicist' who 'deliberately misrepresented and manipulated historical evidence.'"
Includes trial transcripts and extensive secondary documentation.
By Witness to the Holocaust Program and Institute for Jewish Studies, Emory University
HOLOCAUST: The Untold Story
"...Although major American newspapers had been receiving reports of the mass extermination of Jews in Europe, the stories rarely reached the front pages, except in the Jewish press. Could a more aggressive press in the United States during World War II have saved lives? This exhibit dispels the myth that the Holocaust was a secret and explores the reasons why America's newspapers downplayed the horrifying reports from Europe."
Online exhibit from Newsuem.
Nazi and East German Propaganda - Anti-Semitism
"Propaganda was central to Nazi Germany and the German Democratic Republic. The German Propaganda Archive includes both propaganda itself and material produced for the guidance of propagandists. The goal is to help people understand the two great totalitarian systems of the 20th Century by giving them access to the primary material."
Maintained by Randall Bytwerk, Calvin College
Labor & The Holocaust: The Jewish Labor Committee And The Anti-Nazi Struggle
"This exhibit [from 1997] presents a portfolio of a hundred photographs and documents from the JLC Collection. The text has been adapted from an article by JLC archivist Gail Malmgreen, originally published in Labor's Heritage (October 1991). The exhibit's seven pictorial sections take the viewer on a chronological journey, from the origins of the JLC, through its anti-Nazi activity of the 1930s, to early rescue efforts and wartime assistance to the anti-Nazi Underground, and then examines three aspects of postwar aid and reconstruction. A final section offers a bibliography of resources for further study."
The Nuremberg War Crimes Trials
The International Military Tribunal for Germany
Trial of the Major War Criminals before the International Military Tribunal, Nuremberg, 14 November 1945-1 October 1946.
"Trial against H.W. Gˆring, R. Hess, J. von Ribbentrop, R. Ley, W. Keitel, E. Kaltenbrunner, A. Rosenberg, H. Frank, W. Frick, J. Streicher, W. Funk, H. Schacht, G. Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach, K. Dˆnitz, E. Raeder, B. von Schirach, F. Sauckel, A. Jodl, M. Bormann, F. von Papen, A. Seyss- Inquart, A. Speer, C. von Neurath, and H. Fritzsche, individually and as members of any groups or organizations to which they belonged."
"The proceedings are published in English, French, Russian, and German ... The documents admitted in evidence are printed only in their original language..."
- The Avalon Project at the Yale Law School
Responses to the Holocaust
A Hypermedia Archive for the Humanities
"...is intended to introduce the viewer/reader to the various discourses, disciplines, media and institutions that have produced significant critical and theoretical positions and discussions concerning the Nazi Genocide of the Jews of Europe, 1933-45."
A very well done and thought provoking multimedia presentation.
By Rob Leventhal
Voices of the Holocaust
A Documentary Project by the Illinois Institute of Technology
"During the summer of 1998, Galvin Library staff uncovered a 16-volume set of typescripts that detail first-hand accounts of horrible brutality, incredible survival, and liberation of Holocaust victims. The set includes 70 of the original 109 interviews that were conducted in 1946 and transcribed into English by Dr. David Boder...This site will integrate, in the near future, the transcriptions of the interviews, reproductions of the original wire recordings, maps, essays by scholars and survivors, papers of Dr. Boder, and other information from our archives, into a seamless, searchable, multimedia Web site."
See also our Holocaust Museum Exhibits page.
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