
DID THE TREATMENT VARY ACCORDING TO DIFFERENT TYPES OF PRISONERS?
My first camp was Sachsenhausen. I arrived there in January 1940. Most prisoners were German. They did hard labor, had extra food, and slept in bunks.
My first camp was Sachsenhausen. I arrived there in January 1940. Most prisoners were German. They did hard labor, had extra food, and slept in bunks.
In 1933, the year Hitler came to power, I was an 18-year-old Jewish lad living in Germany. I witnessed the dreadful rise of Nazism and
I have often had the privilege of talking to young people. Everywhere in the United States, Canada, France, Switzerland, and Germany, I sensed how young
Jehovah’s Witnesses tried again and again to tell the world about the terrible things happening in Nazi Germany. In 1938 the Witnesses published the book Crusade
A signature in exchange for freedom seems like a very simple choice. But to the Nazis and to the Witnesses, the declaration meant much more than a
Through special arrangement with the Arnold-Liebster Foundation, Simone Arnold Liebster is available to visit your classroom through a free interactive audio or video conference. Students