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  • Public display of newspapers and propaganda posters

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    A group of young German boys view Der Stuermer, Die Woche, and other propaganda posters that are posted on a fence in Berlin, Germany, 1937.

    Public display of newspapers and propaganda posters
  • Japanese American relocation

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    American residents of Japanese ancestry wait with their luggage for transportation during relocation, San Francisco, California, April 6, 1942.  

    Japanese American relocation
  • Sign hung in storefront of a Japanese American family's business

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    Tatsuro Matsuda, whose family owned the Wanto Co. grocery store, hung this sign in front of the store, Oakland, California, March 1942. The store was closed following orders for the evacuation of Americans of Japanese ancestry. Evacuees were forcibly deported to relocation centers.

    Sign hung in storefront of a Japanese American family's business
  • Japanese Americans in line to register with the War Relocation Authority

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    Japanese Americans wait in line to register with the War Relocation Authority, San Francisco, California, April 1942. A government agency, the War Relocation Authority was tasked with removing “enemy aliens” from designated zones. Local authorities on the West Coast forced all “persons of Japanese ancestry” to register. They were then deported, first to temporary “assembly centers” and from there to relocation centers.   

    Japanese Americans in line to register with the War Relocation Authority
  • Group portrait of students in an English language class for deaf immigrants

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    Hilda Rattner (born Hilda Wiener ) was born into a Jewish family in Vienna on June 14, 1904. Not long after her birth, Hilda’s parents realized that she was deaf. Two years later, their fourth child, Richard, was born, and he was also deaf. Vienna in particular had a very vibrant deaf community where Jews and non-Jews mixed freely. Hilda and her brother Richard attended a Jewish school, where they learned to sign, and it was through these associations and activities that Hilda met Isadore Rattner, a…

    Group portrait of students in an English language class for deaf immigrants
  • Portrait of Helen Keller

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    Portrait of Helen Keller, seated, reading Braille. September 1907.  In 1933, Nazi students at more than 30 German universities pillaged libraries in search of books they considered to be "un-German." Among the literary and political writings they threw into the flames during the book burning were the works of Helen Keller.

    Portrait of Helen Keller
  • S-21 (Tuol Sleng) Prison, Cambodia

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    The most notorious of the 189 known interrogation centers in Cambodia was S-21, housed in a former school and now called Tuol Sleng for the hill on which it stands. Between 14,000 and 17,000 prisoners were detained there, often in primitive brick cells built in former classrooms. Only 12 prisoners are believed to have survived.

    Tags: genocide camps
    S-21 (Tuol Sleng) Prison, Cambodia
  • Frances Perkins

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    Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins testifies before the House Committee on migrant workers. Washington D.C., December 1940.   

    Frances Perkins
  • Lois Gunden and staff of the Ville St. Christophe refugee children’s home

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    Lois Gunden (center right) with other members of the Ville St. Christophe staff in Canet-Plage, France.  At the age of 26, Lois Gunden, a Mennonite and French teacher from Goshen, Indiana, sailed to Europe to head the Ville St. Christophe refugee children’s home in Canet-Plage, France. She had not been involved with overseas relief work before, and had never been to Europe. But she spoke French, and the Mennonite Central Committee needed someone willing to place herself in danger to help others.…

    Lois Gunden and staff of the Ville St. Christophe refugee children’s home
  • Instructions posted during Japanese American relocation

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    A notice posted on a wall in San Francisco, California, lists “evacuation” instructions for the area’s Japanese American residents, 1942. They were deported, first to temporary “assembly centers,” and from there to relocation centers in remote areas of the United States.

    Instructions posted during Japanese American relocation

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