Learn how to bring the story of Anne Frank into your classroom using a new PBS documentary that integrates fresh information about Anne's family, life, and death.
This is the only propaganda film known to be made by the Nazis inside an operating concentration camp to prove to the world that Jews were being well-treated in camps.
This resource draws on autobiographies, diaries, official documents, and literary works to explore how Jews and non-Jews living in Poland throughout history have responded to questions about identity.
African American soldiers in WWII combated racism both in the segregated military and on the home front, and were among the first liberators to enter concentration camps.
This 6-part series from The History Channel explores the history of the Third Reich, using recently discovered documents and archival footage from former Soviet-Bloc nations.
This film depicts the daily lives of Jews within the Warsaw Ghetto and their struggle to maintain culture, religion, and dignity in the face of atrocity and starvation.
Leni Riefenstahl was a German film director notorious for making the most effective Nazi propaganda films. In this documentary, she addresses her past for the first time on camera.
Filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl's controversial masterwork is an artful work of propaganda showcasing German chancellor and Nazi Party leader Adolf Hitler at the 1934 Nuremberg Rally.
In 1939, Waitstill and Martha Sharp left behind the safety of their Massachusetts home and flew to war-torn Europe to help feed, shelter, and rescue thousands of refugees.