Tuesday,
February 07, 2012
14 Shevat, 5772
News
France
UK
Germany
Western Europe
Eastern Europe
EU-Israel affairs
US 2008 ELECTION
Iran - Holocaust
Conflict in Gaza
Voices
Culture
In Depth
Mideast Crisis
World Cup
On Anglo Jewry
Week at a glance
France Election
EU and Annapolis Summit
News from outside of Europe
Holocaust Remembrance Day
Mumbai Terror
DURBAN II
WILLIAMSON
Stories from our Readers
The Calendar
Links
advertisement
advertisement
wagerworks software

Hitler's Nuremberg Laws transferred to US National Archives
Updated: 26/Aug/2010 10:26
Page tools
Email to friend
Print this page
Bookmark this page
Add your view

LOS ANGELES (AFP)---The Nuremberg Laws signed by Adolf Hitler that set the legal groundwork for the Holocaust will be transferred from California's Huntington Museum to the Washington-based National Archives, the institutions said Wednesday.   

The typewritten pages bearing Hitler's signature and dated September 15, 1935 were whisked out of Germany after World War II by US General George Patton, who donated them to the Huntington Museum, in San Marino, near Los Angeles, in 1945.   

"The National Archives is the appropriate permanent home for this material," Huntington Museum president Steven Koblik said in a statement.   

"The Archives is the repository for an abundance of US Army records from World War II, including those related to war crimes. These documents comprise an extremely important part of that narrative," he added.   

"We are very grateful that the Huntington Library is now providing these historically important documents to the National Archives, where they will join other original documents relating to horrors of the Third Reich," US Archivist David Ferriero said in turn.    

The only copies of the Nuremberg Laws believed to exist in the United States were loaned by the Huntington to the Skirball Cultural Center, an educational institution on Jewish heritage, where they were exhibited from 1999-2009.   

The documents were drawn up by the Nazis to provide the legal underpinnings for persecuting the Jews up to their near extermination in death camps during what became known as the Holocaust, which killed an estimated six million Jews in Europe.   

Divided into three areas, one of the Nuremberg Laws titled "Law for the Safeguard of German Blood and German Honor," prohibited marriage, cohabitation or sexual relations between Germans and Jews.   

Jews were also banned from hiring Germans as domestic help and raising the flag of the Third Reich in their homes.   

Another law titled "The Reich's Citizen Law," defined German, Jewish and mixed-blood heritage.


Add Your View Email to friend Print this page Bookmark this page
Daily quote
If you shut up truth and bury it under the ground, it will but grow, and gather to itself such explosive power that the day it bursts through it will blow up everything in its way.

Emile Zola, French writer, who was brought to trial for libel for publishing J’Accuse on 7 February 1898
 
Day in history

1992: Europe

Signing of the Maastricht Treaty on February 7, 1992, which paved the way for the euro and the common foreign and security policy.
The treaty entered into force on  November 1, 1993 during the Delors Commission.
The European Union is formed.
 
Latest Articles
ADL welcomes US decision to close its embassy in Damascus
French President Nicolas Sarkozy guest of honor at Wednesday’s Jewish representative body annual dinner
Stop Iran 'blabber,' Israel PM tells officials
Israel Prime Minister to visit US in March, will address AIPAC
Ehud Barak: ‘Time is urgently running out to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons’
French railways hand over papers on WWII deportations
Nazi-hunters say 'lack of will' hampers search