France's President Emmanuel Macron has paid tribute to former French Resistance activist ... the country’s World War II occupation by Nazi Germany, died Thursday in a care home in Saint-Aulaye ...
The French photographer Raoul Minot took clandestine photos of Nazi-occupied Paris. Now, his images serve as a reminder of the power of art.
Sniper Elite returns for a new outing, with the rifle passed from Karl Fairburne to Harry Hawker. Read our Sniper Elite Resistance PS5 Review to see how it shapes up.
PARIS (AP) — France's President Emmanuel Macron has paid tribute to former French Resistance activist and author Geneviève Callerot, who has died aged 108.
The Jewish former fashion photographer became a war correspondent after Paris was liberated, documenting the depravity of the Holocaust while on his deeply personal quest
Sniper Elite: Resistance ’s mechanics remain rooted in the past. While the action may have been enjoyable a decade ago, it’s certainly become more formulaic nowadays, made worse by a threadbare narrative, an unengaging romp across the fields of France, and the fact that it’s nearly devoid of new features.
The ceremony is widely regarded as the last major observance likely to see a significant number of survivors in attendance.
Despite their distance from European centers, the Jews of North Africa were forcefully displaced to detention and labor camps, subject to discriminatory legislation, and participated in armed groups.
The main observances take place at the site in southern Poland where Nazi Germany murdered over a million people
Democracies are vulnerable political systems. Democratic governments have frequently given way to authoritarian regimes, and most people have always lived in societies that deny the equality of human rights and the value of public participation in governing institutions.
Holocaust survivors, President Andrzej Duda and First Lady Agata Kornhauser–Duda and world leaders gathered in Poland on Monday to mark the 80th anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi German Auschwitz–Birkenau death camp, where more than 1.1 million people perished during World War II.
The solemn commemoration came amid a worldwide spike in antisemitism and new surveys suggesting basic knowledge of the Holocaust is eroding.