Although Roma and Sinti (often referred to by the derogatory label “Gypsies”) have lived in Europe for hundreds of years, they have often faced discrimination, cultural stereotypes, and racial prejudice from non-Romani peoples. Jews and Romani peoples were the only racially defined groups that the Nazi regime targeted for annihilation. Hundreds of thousands of Roma and Sinti were murdered during the Holocaust.
Roma & Sinti
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Everyday Life: Roles, Motives, and Choices During the Holocaust
Criminal Complaint against Douglas Bamberger
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Belonging and Exclusion: Reshaping Society under Nazi Rule
Electrical Insulator from Auschwitz
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Belonging and Exclusion: Reshaping Society under Nazi Rule
Film of Sinti Children at Catholic Children's Home
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Americans and the Holocaust
International Refugee Organization Questionnaire of Bela Berkes
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Jewish Perspectives on the Holocaust
Letter from Hilda Dajč to Nada Novak
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Belonging and Exclusion: Reshaping Society under Nazi Rule
Letter from Otto Rosenberg
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Belonging and Exclusion: Reshaping Society under Nazi Rule
Oral History with Karl Stojka
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Everyday Life: Roles, Motives, and Choices During the Holocaust
Oral History with Marie Ondrášová
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Belonging and Exclusion: Reshaping Society under Nazi Rule
Oral History with Rita Prigmore
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Belonging and Exclusion: Reshaping Society under Nazi Rule
Photo of Deportation of Sinti People in Asperg, Germany
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Belonging and Exclusion: Reshaping Society under Nazi Rule
Photo of Johann Rukeli Trollmann with His Teammates
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Belonging and Exclusion: Reshaping Society under Nazi Rule
Photograph of Romani Section of Lodz Ghetto
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Belonging and Exclusion: Reshaping Society under Nazi Rule
Photograph of Romani Women at Bergen-Belsen
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Belonging and Exclusion: Reshaping Society under Nazi Rule
Photograph of Theresia Winterstein and Gabriel Reinhardt
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Belonging and Exclusion: Reshaping Society under Nazi Rule
Postwar Testimony of the Hodoschi Family
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Jewish Perspectives on the Holocaust
Werner Breslauer, Westerbork Deportation Footage