The HolocaustResearchProject

365 Days with H.E.A.R.T  
The one year anniversary of the HolocaustResearchProject

 

 

 

Over the past century the date of  "October 8" has marked significant events in history that have managed a lasting impact on  the world stage, either for good, or for  bad.

 

On that same day in 1939, the armed forces of  Germany's "Third Reich" annexed Western Poland, sparking World War II and thereby enabling Adolf Hitler's much prophesied war and subsequent genocide against the Jews that later became known as the Holocaust.

 

Millions of souls were lost during those years of Nazi tyranny, and their passing has made the world a poorer place.

 

But what made the Holocaust unique is that an entire bureaucratic apparatus was created to define who and what the Jews were, where they should live or be forced to live, and eventually, to see that they would live no more.

Read more HERE

The HolocaustResearchProject

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Comments

  • 10/10/2007 9:36 AM Gwendolyn Martinez wrote:
    I want to thank you for your beautiful website on the Holocaust!

    I've read many of the articles covering the tragic fate of Jews and the murderous SS.

    The balanced approach use by the HolocaustResearchProject to cover such a vast subject is expertly done.

    I want to thank you on behalf of all men and women of the world!

    Gwendolyn Martinez (Madrid)
    Reply to this
  • 10/13/2007 8:37 AM Tsi Stennek wrote:
    Thank you for producing such a fabulous website about the Holocaust.

    www.holocaustresearchproejct.org is the defacto online resource relating to this period of history.

    Tsi Stennek
    Reply to this
  • 1/4/2009 12:24 PM Novalis wrote:
    Does there exist any archival material from the company Hasag (Hugo-Schneider-Aktiengesellschaft), Leipzig, Germany, specifically its armaments division at Skarzysko-Kamienna and affiliated plants, Werke A, B, C, located in Distrikt Radom, of the then Reich Generalgouvernement Polen? The main archive of Hasag no longer exists. The central office building in Leipzig, together with the business archive, was damaged through Allied bombs and then destroyed by self-detonation in early 1945.

    Any help is most welcome.
    Reply to this
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