Holocaust
-
Under rules of US-managed and French-financed fund victims transported by French rail during Holocaust and their descendants entitled to up to $100k
-
Brunner, who was born in 1912 and topped most-wanted lists for his role in the Holocaust, said to have died four years ago in Damascus
-
Jonathan Jones: Hated by the Nazis for their freedom and humanity, the paintings are neither poisoned gifts nor spoils of war but vital works of art
-
Triumph, tragedy, inspiration, innovation and despair all feature in a list of the most momentous events of the past eight decades, chosen by thousands of people around the globe
-
Pawel Pawlikowski never learned the rules of film-making and says he’s a film financier’s nightmare – here he explains how he battled industry conventions, as well as Poland’s ‘winter of the century’, to make his award-winning drama
-
-
Sukhdev Sandhu: A new film tells the unlikely story of Mohamed Husen, the African former child soldier who emigrated to Germany and appeared alongside the biggest film stars of the Nazi era
-
Cheap rents, creative culture and tolerance of German city prove attractive, but some Israelis have questioned emigres’ choice
-
Stephen Moss: Now 105, the man who helped more than 600 Jewish children escape the Nazis before the second war war has been hailed as a hero around the world. He tells a different story …
-
Hadley Freeman: Being the object of adoration and envy is yet another burden we Jews have to bear
-
-
Jonathan Jones on art The British Museum shows off Germany's technical brilliance – and its hard-won soul
Jonathan Jones: As the 25th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall arrives, a British Museum exhibition is a reminder of the incredible richness of German arts and crafts – and shows us how history can have a happy ending
-
Timothy Garton Ash: In Warsaw, the opening of the Museum of the History of Polish Jews is an occasion for real hope
-
A young writer in New York finds himself fabricating Holocaust narratives in a story that explores the nature of truth, justice and suffering
-
A video installation of images smuggled out from Syria puts them in the context of the 20th century’s greatest atrocity, and the impact is profound, reports Raya Jalabi
-
Seven years after fleeing the Nazis on the kindertransport, Siegfried Ramler made his way to Nuremberg – where he became an interpreter in the trials of Germany’s major war criminals
-
-
Leading British Jewish group criticises Ukip’s fund saving tie-up with Congress of the New Right MEP Robert Iwaszkiewicz
-
Bettina Stangneth's disturbing account of Adolf Eichmann's years in exile reveals the full extent of his cynicism, inhumanity and moral self-deception. By Richard J Evans
-
Somehow this shocking book turns genocide into pulp fiction – and gets away with it. By Adam Roberts
-
Lilit Marcus: Even when concentration camps and other sites are presented with respect and dignity, not everyone acts accordingly
-
-
Documentaries, new dramas and films will mark 70 years since the liberation of Auschwitz death camp
-
-
In Boris Fishman’s first novel, a writer makes false claims against Germany on behalf of Russian-Jewish Holocaust survivors, writes Edward Docx
-
André Singer has produced a worthy companion piece to Sidney Bernstein’s 1945 suppressed footage of the German death camps, writes Mark Kermode
-
Overseen by Hitchcock and completed by the Imperial War Museum, an astonishing British record of the liberation of Nazi death camps exposes the obscenity of Holocaust denial, writes Peter Bradshaw
-
-
After the sudden death of his wife, director Pawel Pawlikowski hit a midlife crisis. So he returned to his native Warsaw – and made Ida the film of his career. He talks to Tom Seymour
-
With only 50 out of 6,500 SS guards at Auschwitz convicted, critics say German law has been too slow to seek justice
-
Prosecutors say Oskar Groening, now 93, dealt with belongings and counted money of Hungarian Jews sent to their deaths
-
Letters: Antisemites and defenders of Israel seem united in the delusion that opposition to Israel means hatred of Jews. Most people, I hope, can see the difference
-
Tory chief whip attacks protesters response to Gaza conflict and comparisons between Israel's actions and Nazi war crimes
-
Martin Amis's new novel, an attempt to grapple with the horrors of the concentration camps, may be his best in a quarter century, writes Alex Preston
-
Leaders of Greek-Australian community, unions and lobby groups condemn Golden Dawn’s policies and ‘hateful attitudes’
-
Watch the trailer for the documentary about the making of a remarkable and harrowing film: the 1945 study of the Nazi death camps as they were liberated by Allied forces
-
-
The Zone of Interest, set in Auschwitz, declined by the author's publishers in Germany and France, although alternative French house picks up novel
-
News: Chris Columbus is to co-produce the drama, centered around the 1947 voyage of the SS Exodus from France to Palestine that was intercepted by the British navy
-
Tireless campaigner for human rights who fought for the victims of torture and cruelty
The moral philosopher Is the Gurlitt collection so precious we forget its dubious heritage?