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  2. Karl Nessler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Nessler

    Karl Ludwig Nessler was born on 2 May 1872 in Todtnau. He was the son of Rosina (née Laitner) and Bartholomäus Nessler, a cobbler in Todtnau, a small town located high in the Black Forest, just beneath the Feldberg. He reportedly conceived the idea of a permanent wave early on.

  3. Children's propaganda in Nazi Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Children's_propaganda_in...

    These children were instructed in Nazi ideology from a very young age, and through this and mandatory membership in the youth organizations, children were taught to hate Jews. The youth of Nazi Germany came of age in the 1920s, 1930s, and early 1940s listening to racist and anti-Semitic lectures, reciting Nazi-inspired slogans, reading ...

  4. Rescue of Jews by Catholics during the Holocaust - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rescue_of_Jews_by...

    Jewish children were often placed in church orphanages and convents. [177] Poland was the only country in occupied Europe where such an organization was established. [177] Some of its members had been involved in Polish nationalist movements which were themselves anti-Jewish but were appalled by the barbarity of the Nazi mass murders.

  5. Rescue of Jews during the Holocaust - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rescue_of_Jews_during_the...

    He provided a temporary home for exiled Jewish children in his own official residence. Dietrich Bonhoeffer – a German Lutheran pastor who joined the Abwehr (a German military intelligence organization) which was also the center of the anti-Hitler resistance, and was involved in operations to help German Jews escape to Switzerland. Arrested by ...

  6. Themes in Nazi propaganda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Themes_in_Nazi_propaganda

    A propaganda poster supporting the boycott declared that "in Paris, London, and New York German businesses were destroyed by the Jews, German men and women were attacked in the streets and beaten, German children were tortured and defiled by Jewish sadists", and called on Germans to "do to the Jews in Germany what they are doing to Germans abroad."

  7. Children in the Holocaust - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Children_in_the_Holocaust

    On April 25, 1933, the Nazi regime enacted the "Law Against Overcrowding in German Schools and Universities" which began school segregation for Jewish children and young adults. [46] This law restricted the number of Jewish children who could enroll in public schools to 1.5 percent of the total school population. However, when the Jewish ...

  8. Jewish collaboration with Nazi Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_collaboration_with...

    In most cases, Jews who chose to collaborate did so to guarantee their personal survival, as did other ethnic groups who collaborated with Nazi Germany. [22] The phenomenon of Jewish collaboration was often exploited by nationalist apologists from groups deeply implicated in the Holocaust, who used it to minimize their own groups' role in the ...

  9. Kindertransport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kindertransport

    In Germany, a network of organisers was established, and these volunteers worked around the clock to make priority lists of those most in peril: teenagers who were in concentration camps or in danger of arrest, Polish children or teenagers threatened with deportation, children in Jewish orphanages, children whose parents were too impoverished ...