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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Nazi Propaganda and National Unity
Belonging and Exclusion: Reshaping Society under Nazi RulePropaganda Film on Community Welfare
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Nazi Propaganda and National Unity
Belonging and Exclusion: Reshaping Society under Nazi RulePropaganda Film: "Radio in War"
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Nazi Propaganda and National Unity
Belonging and Exclusion: Reshaping Society under Nazi RulePropaganda Film: Triumph of the Will
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Everyday Encounters with Fascism
Everyday Life: Roles, Motives, and Choices During the HolocaustPublic Humiliation of a Young Couple
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Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust
Jewish Perspectives on the HolocaustRabbi Shimon Huberband, "On Religious Life"
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The Holocaust in Yugoslavia
Jewish Perspectives on the HolocaustReport of the Communist Party Committee in the Jewish Camp at Rab
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Higher Education in Nazi Germany
Everyday Life: Roles, Motives, and Choices During the HolocaustReport on the Camaraderie House for Female Students of Göttingen
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American Christians, Nazi Germany, and the Holocaust
Americans and the HolocaustRobert Durr: “Oh, Church Wake Up, For the Sake of Peace”
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Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust
Jewish Perspectives on the HolocaustSermon for Chanukah 1941
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Targets of Eugenics
Belonging and Exclusion: Reshaping Society under Nazi RuleSign Language Testimony of Helga Gross
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Jewish Displaced Persons in Postwar Europe
Jewish Perspectives on the HolocaustSong from Deggendorf DP camp
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Postwar Justice
Jewish Perspectives on the HolocaustTestimony of Fiszl Kuszner
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Jewish Displaced Persons in Postwar Europe
Jewish Perspectives on the HolocaustZvi Gurvits, "The Book of Life in the Zeilsheim Camp"