Stalag II D, located in western Poland, began operations in 1939 and held up to 6,000 prisoners, including Red Army soldiers.
Poland, a nation with a tumultuous past, spares no effort in maintaining its war memorials worldwide, including those in Asia ...
During the invasion of Poland in 1939, it is said that Polish cavalry units charged at the German tanks with sabres and ...
The son of a Holocaust survivor has fulfilled a yearslong personal mission with the unveiling of memorials to hundreds of ...
In the 1930s, the area housed the bulk of Warsaw's Jewish population. By late 1940, the Nazis (who occupied Poland at the ...
Czerwień once consisted of the primary hill fort, an ancillary settlement immediately adjacent to the fort and burial grounds located slightly further away, among other constructions. It was likely ...
The Polin Museum sought to tell the story of the country's Jews even as a right-wing government sought to stifle discussions of antisemitism and complicity.
Genealogists Jennifer Mendelsohn and Dr. Adina Newman have helped Holocaust survivors find long-lost family members.
London was both an integral cog in the Allies' Second World War victory, and a prime target — battered by some 20,000 bombs ...
Discover WXCA's innovative museum design honoring Greater Poland's 1918-1919 uprising, blending history and modern public ...
When I swore allegiance to the U.S. flag and began my career in international relations, the rose-colored glasses came off.
(MENAFN) Poland has officially abandoned its demand for reparations from Germany for the atrocities committed by the Nazis during World War II, according to Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski.