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Documentation from various German and Jewish sources regarding anti-Jewish legislation in Germany, 1936-1939

Documentation from various German and Jewish sources regarding anti-Jewish legislation in Germany, 1936-1939 - Nuremberg Laws: racial pollution, economic antisemitism, addition of Jewish names, and more; - Article published in a Dutch newspaper regarding a mass trial conducted against the Jews in Wuppertal concerning labor matters, pp. 1119-1120; - Article published in the "Berliner Tageblatt" newspaper regarding the Magdeburg Labor Court decision concerning the prohibition on Jews working as lawyers, 02 February 1937, p. 1121; - Law prohibiting ritual slaughter in Oberschlesien, p. 1122; - Article published in the "Frankfurter Zeitung" regarding the Berlin High Court decision concerning the prohibition on Jews serving as executors of wills for Aryan heirs, pp. 1123-1124; - Materials and verdicts for Jews and Mischlinge regarding racial pollution, pp. 1125-1152; - The Jewish marriage ceremony of an Aryan woman, a Mischling who converted, with a Jew in the city of Berlin in 1937, pp. 1128-1152; - Excerpts from a Suedost (southeast) situation report regarding the Jews of Oberschlesien just before the expiration of the validity of an international agreement in which Germany obligated itself to protect the rights of national minorities in Upper Silesia: the reaction of the Jews, plans for emigration, anti-Jewish laws which will go into effect, and so on, 1933-1937, pp. 1153-1180; - Racial pollution, 1181, 1204; - Article published in the "Voelkischer Beobachter", regarding the prohibition of employment of Jews as clerks in Gau Baden (the Baden District), 03 July 1937, p. 1183; - Article published in rhe "Juedische Rundschau" regarding a labor court decision that Jewish origins alone are not a reason for dismissal, 08 October 1937, p. 1184; - Instructions for a statistical analysis of verdicts regarding racial pollution, pp. 1189-1196; - Article published in the "Frankfurter Zeitung" newspaper regarding the prohibition on the employment of Aryan women below the age of 45 in Jewish households, 10 October 1937; - Article published in the "Juedische Rundschau" regarding rhe Racial Pollution Law", p. 1198; - The Nuremberg Laws, definition of terms such as: "Mischling" and "racial pollution", pp. 1181-1216; - Law against Jewish commercial agents, p. 1200; - Prohibition on the employment of Aryans in a Jewish household, p. 1197; - Nullification of their portion in an inheritance of Aryans married to Jews or Mischlinge after 16 September 1935; p. 1199; - Meldeblatt der Kriminalpolizeileitstelle in Berlin (Report of the Criminal Police Office in Berlin), pp. 1216-1299. Names to enter: - Fritz Wolf, accused of currency crimes in Zweibruecken, 1936, and acquitted, pp. 1117-1118; - Max Hoch, arrested for racial pollution in the city of Danzig, and released on giving a security, pp. 1126-1127; - Moritz Goldmann, arrest for racial pollution in the city of Insterburg, and sentenced to two years detention and four years' shame, p. 1127; - Gerda Lea Kohn (Ruth), a Jewish convert, the daughter of a Jewish father and a non-Jewish mother; who married a Jew in Berlin, pp. 1134-1152; - Moritz Kohn, Gerda's father, p. 1141; - Rabbi Dr. Julius Yakobovits, p. 1139; - Dr. Moritz Winter, p. 1142.
details.fullDetails.itemId
10899488
details.fullDetails.materialType
Booklet(s)
Newspaper clippings
Official documentation
details.fullDetails.fileNumber
details.fullDetails.language
Dutch
German
details.fullDetails.recordGroup
M.88 - Osoby Collection - Captured German and Other Nations' Documents in the Osoby (Special) Archive, Moscow, 1933-1945
details.fullDetails.earliestDate
20/05/1936
details.fullDetails.latestDate
12/07/1939
details.fullDetails.original
NO
details.fullDetails.numOfPages
186
details.fullDetails.signature
500-1-403
details.fullDetails.originalLocation
TSENTR KHRANENIYA ISTORIKO-DOKUMENTALNYKH KOLLEKTSIY (TSKHIDK) - RUSSIA, MOSKVA
details.fullDetails.belongsTo
Documentation from the Reichssicherheitshauptamt (Reich Security Head Office [RSHA]), 1939-1945