Results from all areas to Concentrationcamp Auschwitz

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The project presented here is a contribution to a history competition organised by the Stefan-Bathory-Foundation and the Karta Centre in 1999 under the title "The Most Important Event in the H

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High –school students, with the help of their teachers, translate the memoirs or interviews of Hungarian Holocaust survivors.

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Spain has launched a pioneering project to bring students to various sites of Holocaust remembrance around Europe.

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Since 1990 and the reorientation of the BuchenwaldA concentration camp opened in 1937 on the Ettersberg hillside overlooking Weimar, Germany. The first German and Austrian Jewish prisoners arrived in 1938, German and Austrian Gypsy prisoners were deported there after July 1938. During the war, nearly 65,000 of Buchenwald's 250,000 prisoners perished, others died in its more than 130 satellite labor camps. Buchenwald was one of the few major camps where prisoners rebelled in the days preceding liberation by units of the U.S. Army on April 11, 1945. memorial site after German unification, the former train station there has been the focus of many youth projects.

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In Potsdam, graduating seniors had the chance to produce a video instead of taking an exam.

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In Potsdam, graduating seniors had the chance to produce a video instead of taking an exam.

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Anna Smulowitz, a daughter of survivors of TerezinThe Little Fortress was a police prison created by the Prague Gestapo in June 1940, located across the Ohre River from the Theresienstadt ghetto. More than 32,000 political prisoners were held there between 1940 and 1945. Jews held in the Theresienstadt ghetto were at times also transferred to the Little Fortress for infractions of ghetto rules. who emigrated to the United States, wrote "TerezinThe German name for the Czech town of Terezin, located about 40 miles from Prague. In mid-October 1941, Theresienstadt was converted into a ghetto for Jewish deportees en route to killing centers in the East. More than 140,000 European Jews (73,000 from Bohemia and Moravia, 42,000 from Germany, 16,000 from Austria, 5,000 from the Netherlands, and a small number from Denmark) were imprisoned in Theresienstadt. Approximately 35,000 Jews died in the ghetto and 88,000 were redeported to the East. Barely 2,000 of the 15,000 children survived. The Soviet Army liberated Theresienstadt on May 8, 1945., Children of the Holocaust" and performed the play with young Americans.

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