2011
November 2011
Tuesday 1 November 2011
Tue 1 Nov to Sat 7 Jan 2012. September 15, 2011 - January 7, 2012 PLACE Museum of Jewish Heritage: A Living Memorial to the Holocaust 36 Battery Place Battery Park City New York, NY 10280, USA Details Deadly Medicine: Creating THE Master RACE Deadly Medicine: Creating the Master Race From 1933 to 1945, Nazi Germany carried out a campaign to “cleanse” German society of individuals viewed as biological threats to the nation's “health.” Enlisting the help of physicians and medically trained geneticists, psychiatrists, and anthropologists, the Nazis developed racial health policies that began with the mass sterilization of “genetically diseased” persons and ended with the near annihilation of European Jewry. 100 Rauol Wallenberg Place, SW, Washington, D.C., 20024-2126. Andrea Lewis, 202-314-7810, alewis@ushmm.org. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum - [more][events]
Thursday 17 November 2011
Thu 17 Nov. September 22, 2011 - November 17, 2011 PLACE The College of Wooster Libraries 1140 Beall Ave. Wooster, OH 44691, USA Details Fighting THE FIRES OF HATE: America AND THE NAZI BOOK Burnings On May 10, 1933, just a few months after Adolf Hitler came to power in Nazi Germany and a full six years before World War II, German university students launched an action “Against the Un-German Spirit" targeting authors ranging from Helen Keller and Ernest Hemingway to Albert Einstein and Sigmund Freud. 100 Rauol Wallenberg Place, SW, Washington, D.C., 20024-2126. Andrea Lewis, 202-314-7810, alewis@ushmm.org. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum - [more][events]
Monday 28 November 2011
Mon 28 Nov. September 19, 2011 - November 28, 2011 PLACE University of Louisville William F. Ekstrom Library 2301 South 3rd St. Louisville, KY 40203, USA Details NAZI Persecution OF Homosexuals 1933 - 1945 Between 1933 and 1945, Nazi Germany sought domination over Europe and, in what is now called the Holocaust, the total annihilation of Europe's Jews. As part of its effort to create a "master Aryan race," the Nazi government persecuted other groups, including Germany's homosexual men. Believing them to be carriers of a "degeneracy" that threatened the nation's "disciplined masculinity" and hindered population growth, the Nazi state incarcerated in prisons and concentration camps tens of thousands of men as a means of terrorizing German homosexuals into social confor. 100 Rauol Wallenberg Place, SW, Washington, D.C., 20024-2126. Andrea Lewis, 202-314-7810, alewis@ushmm.org. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum - [events]