Holocaust Survivors' First Moments of Liberation
In the later stages of the war, as the Germans were retreating on all fronts, they murdered some of the Jewish forced laborers who remained in the ghettos that had been converted into labor camps. The Germans deported the rest to the extermination centers that were still functioning, such as Chelmno and Auschwitz, or to labor and concentration camps in the Reich on death marches during which many of the inmates were either murdered or died of starvation and exhaustion.
Educational Videos
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Questions We Wanted to Ask – conversations with Holocaust Survivors
On the Holocaust - a Yad Vashem Podcast
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Online Exhibitions About the Holocaust
Articles
Ready2Print Exhibitions
"They Say There Is a Land": Longings for Eretz Israel during the Holocaust
For 2,000 years, Jews prayed and dreamed of their return to Zion. The affinity to Eretz Israel was expressed in prayer, philosophy, poem and song, in life-cycle events and on Jewish holidays – not in a political or active manner, but by individuals and groups who immigrated to Eretz Israel, and settled there. Others visited and wrote about the Land, and for hundreds of years, there was a consistent, albeit limited, Jewish presence in Eretz Israel.
The Anguish of Liberation as Reflected in Art
This exhibition features 11 artworks that were created immediately after the liberation and up until 1947. The exhibition attempts to investigate how survivors reacted to the liberation through art.