Demonstrators at the Battle of Cable Street gathered to protest against Fascist leader Oswald Mosley and the Blackshirts.
At the Nuernberger Tor, an entrance to the University of Erlangen, hang two banners from the archway. The top banner reads “Jews are not wanted here,” and below that is a Nazi recruitment banner that reads, “The USD Helps. Help Yourself as Well. Become a Member."
From the 1938 antisemitic children’s book The Poisonous Mushroom. The boy is drawing a nose on the chalkboard, and the caption reads: “The Jewish nose is crooked at its tip. It looks like a 6.” See full-sized image for analysis.
Women examining a display at the Der Ewige Jude (The Eternal Jew) exhibition in the Reichstag building in November 1938.
Fans display a "Yid Army" flag at an England vs. Italy match at the 2013 UEFA U21 Championship.
This Weimar campaign poster (“The Wire Puller,” 1924) depicts an antisemitic caricature of a Jew with a manipulative personality, urging workers to vote for the Nationalist Party.
The Reservation of Separate Amenities Act (passed in 1953) led to signs such as the one shown above. The Act prohibited people of different races from using the same public amenities.
Photograph of the apartment at 1 Pikar Street in Brussels, Belgium, where Moshe Flinker and his family lived from July 1942 to April 1944.
Standing at the edge of a cliff labeled ‘Truth,’ Archbishop Desmond Tutu clutches a blank map. Behind him stand a perpetrator, a victim, and members of the media. A deep chasm separates them from the cliff labeled ‘Reconciliation.’
A white student passes through an Arkansas National Guard line as Elizabeth Eckford is turned away.
A woman holds a small Armenian bible during a service at the Holy Mother of God church in Vakifli, Turkey. Less than 30 Armenian families populate the small town and surrounding area, which is located near the Turkish border with Syria. Although Armenians are allowed to celebrate their traditions in Turkey, many fear asserting their ethnic origins, which means living in near silence to avoid trouble.