Results 211 to 220 of about 30,034 (267)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

The holocaust of the disabled

Wiener Medizinische Wochenschrift, 2017
The Holocaust is commonly known as the genocide perpetrated by the Nazi regime which killed six million European Jews. Not many people know, however, that another holocaust took place at the same time: the holocaust of the disabled. As Hitler pursued a strategic vision of a dominant, pure Aryan race, any inferior and weak human being was exterminated ...
Massimo Fioranelli   +5 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Untouched in the Holocaust

AJN, American Journal of Nursing, 1968
The riot, which began on a Sunday morning on Detroit's northwest side, spread throughout the diffuse innercity ghetto. On the southeast side stood the storefront Mom and Tots Center. The Detroit Visiting Nurse Association had opened this center 18 months earlier in an attempt to involve ghetto people in the planning and provision of health services in ...
openaire   +3 more sources

The Holocaust is present: reenacting the Holocaust, then and now

Holocaust Studies, 2019
Reenactment has played a vital, albeit unacknowledged, role in what has been remembered of the Holocaust.
openaire   +2 more sources

The Second Holocaust

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1980
ABSTRACT I had the privilege of spending December and January in Khae-I-Dang, a camp for Cambodian refugees just inside Thailand that housed 115,000 and had a field hospital of 2,000. For me, as an individual and as a physician, this was the most rewarding experience of my life.
openaire   +2 more sources

Holocaust and theology

Exchange, 2004
AbstractHolocaust Theology, first developed by Jewish scholars, has had a definite impact on the Christian attitude with regard to Judaism. It made Christianity aware of its Anti-Judaist thinking and acting in the past, one of the root causes of Anti-Semitism and one of the factors that led to the Holocaust in Nazi-Germany during World War II.
openaire   +3 more sources

Holocaust Testimony and the Holocaust Witness

2001
Since the early 1980s, Israeli schools have customarily invited survivors on the eve of Holocaust Memorial Day, asking them to tell the students the ‘real story’ of what happened ‘there’. This interest also accompanies Bar mitzvah ceremonies held in Israeli secular culture, which focus upon the search for ‘roots’ as a tool for constructing communal and
openaire   +2 more sources

Memories of the Holocaust

Alpha Omegan, 2006
As Alpha Omegans, we are united not only by our profession but also by a mission to educate ourselves, and others, about preserving our Jewish heritage. It was with this mission in mind that the Alpha Omegan invited me to share with my fraters a very personal, and painful, account of my boyhood in Poland, where I survived the Holocaust.
openaire   +3 more sources

Medicine and the Holocaust

Clinics in Dermatology, 2010
If we associate medicine with the Holocaust at all, the name Mengele will probably come to mind. Josef Mengele, an MD and PhD, was known as the “angel of death of Auschwitz,” the Nazi's main extermination campwhere more than 2 million Jews were gassed and cremated.
openaire   +3 more sources

Disremembering the Holocaust

Patient Education and Counseling, 2012
The essay describes an elderly Holocaust survivor, who re-experiences the horrors of the Holocaust through his senile hallucinations. Although he is demented, telling and re-telling the story to a therapist helps him regain a sense of control and feel less frightened.
openaire   +3 more sources

Cannibal Holocaust

2016
This book is one of the most controversial horror films ever made. Despite not achieving huge success when it was first released, the Italian production found an audience on home video in the 1980s and became a 'must-see' for connoisseurs of extreme cinema.
openaire   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy