WEBLIOGRAPHY

WORLD WAR II and the HOLOCAUST

Assignment Rubric

 

These Web pages are good sources of information about the Holocaust. The phrase "The Holocaust" refers to the practice in Nazi Germany of gathering and eventually killing many Jews, and other people who were considered undesirable.

Gallery Of Achievers: Eli Weisel

http://www.achievement.org/autodoc/page/wie0bio-1

This website salutes a large array of Historians in our Society. Eli Weisel is one of the mentioned. A personal interview, profile and reflections are part of this in depth look at this holocaust survivor.

An Auschwitz Alphabet

http://www.spectacle.org/695/ausch.html

Compiled, and with commentary and original content by, Jonathan Wallace . The Alphabet represents a selection (macabre word) of the most significant facets of life and death in Auschwitz.

The Holocaust\Shoah Page

http://www.mtsu.edu/~baustin/holo.html                                

This Holocaust Page is maintained on behalf of six million victims of the Nazi Holocaust against the Jews. Includes summaries of Holocaust Vocabulary, Personal Narratives, Laws, Events and Questions!                                

·        The Holocaust: A Glossary of Terms

http://www.mtsu.edu/~baustin/glossary.html

 

 

Cybrary of the Holocaust

http://remember.org

This site has a wealth of information about the Holocaust. Their resources include articles, historical documents, excerpts from books, and photos and paintings.

 

Nizkor: a Holocaust Remembrance

http://www2.ca.nizkor.org/index.html

This site has a great deal of information about the Holocaust, and specific information refuting historic revisionists. Historic revisionists are people who say that the Holocaust did not happen. You can find out more about their arguments at Nizkor.

 

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

http://www.ushmm.org/
The US Holocaust Memorial Museum's Web site has information on the history of the Holocaust, as well as selections from current studies on the Holocaust. You can also search many of the Museum's archives on the Web.

 

The Jewish Student Online Resource Center (JSOURCE) :Concentration Camps

http://www.us-israel.org/jsource/Holocaust/cc.html

The Jewish Student Online Resource Center (JSOURCE) provides directories to many camps and testimonies of the victims.
 

The Holocaust Journey

http://www.webcom.com/penina/holocst1.html

This site is based on the journey of the creator to Germany and Holocaust in 1985 in a search for meaning to the tragedy of the Holocaust.