The Architecture of Doom examines Hitler's eccentric cultural ambitions for the Third Reich, and the profound influence his obsession--and personal failures--with art played in the development of the Nazi party.
The people of Chabannes, a small village in unoccupied France, chose action over indifference and saved the lives of 400 Jewish refugee children, including filmmaker Lisa Gossels’s father and uncle.
In this memoir, concert pianist Mona Golabek shares the story of her mother’s journey through World War II and the enduring legacy of music that her mother passed along to her.
Bill Moyers traces the childhoods and early careers of Franklin D. Roosevelt and Adolf Hitler, illustrating the paths by which they rose to respective pinnacles of power.
This news segment reviews Nazi war criminal Adolph Eichmann’s career and subsequent trial in an attempt to examine the nature of his character, raising fundamental questions about judgment and responsibility.
This accurate adaptation of the revered memoir brings to life a tangible and remarkable record of a young woman's first-hand observations of the Holocaust.
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.