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  • The leader of the Austrian populist Freedom Party (FPO), Heinz-Christian Strache gives a speech during a party meeting in 2011.((HANS KLAUS TECHT/AFP/Getty Images))
    The leader of the Austrian populist Freedom Party (FPO), Heinz-Christian Strache gives a speech during a party meeting in 2011.((HANS KLAUS TECHT/AFP/Getty Images))
    News section icon
    Leader Of Viennese Jewish Community Will Not Attend Holocaust Ceremony If Far-Right Party Is Present

    “If there will be ministers there for the Freedom Party, and I’m sure there will be, I will not be able to shake their hands,” Oskar Deutsch told Makor Rishon

    byJesse Bernstein
  • Tom Bird, 1966.
    Tom Bird, 1966.
    Arts & Letters section icon
    Tom Bird Bears Witness to Two Wars and the Holocaust

    A Vietnam veteran wanted to bring to the theater a story about his father, a veteran of World War II. It meant facing the horrors of war with brutal honesty and love.

    bySamuel G. Freedman
  • Arts & Letters section icon
    The Nazi Doctor Who Got Away With Mass Murder, Fled to Cairo, and Became a Muslim

    ‘The Eternal Nazi’ tells the gripping story of the hunt for Aribert Heim, and the German detective who relentlessly pursued him

    byDavid Mikics
  • Mauthausen survivors cheer the soldiers of the Eleventh Armored Division of the U.S. Third Army one day after their actual liberation.(USHMM, courtesy of National Archives and Records Administration, College Park)
    Mauthausen survivors cheer the soldiers of the Eleventh Armored Division of the U.S. Third Army one day after their actual liberation.(USHMM, courtesy of National Archives and Records Administration, College Park)
    News section icon
    Holocaust Survivor Meets U.S. Soldier Who Liberated Her

    Nearly 70 years later, Marsha Kreuzman, 90, tracked down Joe Barbella, 93

    byStephanie Butnick
  • Johanna Adorján.(Peter von Felbert)
    Johanna Adorján.(Peter von Felbert)
    Arts & Letters section icon
    Love and Death

    In An Exclusive Love, Johanna Adorján tries to make sense of how her Hungarian Jewish grandparents took their own lives—together—decades after having survived the Holocaust

    byDaphne Merkin
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