Local, ethnic, political, and religious communities played important roles for many people during the years of the Third Reich, World War II, and the Holocaust. A sense of community encouraged activism and resistance while providing material aid and psychological comfort to many people.
community
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Black Americans and World War II
Americans and the Holocaust"'Now We Think ----'"
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Propaganda and the American Public
Americans and the Holocaust"'Propaganda Kit' Made in Germany"
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Wartime Jewish Press
Jewish Perspectives on the Holocaust"Fifty Thousand Pesos Already Collected for the War Victims"
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Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust
Jewish Perspectives on the Holocaust"New-Kosher!"
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Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust
Jewish Perspectives on the Holocaust"On the Danger of Forced Conversion"
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Wartime Jewish Press
Jewish Perspectives on the Holocaust"Prayers for Victory by Mystics in Meron"
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Wartime Jewish Press
Jewish Perspectives on the Holocaust"Saxa loquuntur"
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Black Americans and World War II
Americans and the Holocaust"Should I Sacrifice to Live 'Half-American?'"
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Displaced Persons and Postwar America
Americans and the Holocaust"Sponsors Needed: New DPs Will Enter 'U'"
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Wartime Jewish Press
Jewish Perspectives on the Holocaust"The Program of the Ghetto Newspaper"
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Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust
Jewish Perspectives on the Holocaust"The US Army Talmud"
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Jewish Community Documents
Jewish Perspectives on the Holocaust"To the Jews of the World"
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Wartime Jewish Press
Jewish Perspectives on the Holocaust"To the Workers' Masses in Poland"
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American College Students and the Nazi Threat
Americans and the Holocaust"What War? it's Homecoming at Illinois!"
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Targets of Eugenics
Belonging and Exclusion: Reshaping Society under Nazi Rule"What You Inherit"