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#LastSeen: Holocaust researchers appeal for Nazi deportation images

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#LastSeen: Holocaust researchers appeal for Nazi deportation images

A global group of Holocaust researchers is asking for the general public’s assist to search out forgotten photographs of deportations from Nazi Germany.

Archives and museums all over the world home images of Nazi atrocities usually targeted on detention, labour, and extermination camps. However in a brand new initiative, the #LastSeen Undertaking: Photos of Nazi Deportations, historians intend to gather, analyse, and publish photographic proof of the compelled elimination of victims from German cities and cities effectively earlier than they reached a camp.

“We’ve got Holocaust imagery [from camps], the panorama of horrors. However that’s not the place it began,” Alina Bothe, a historian and undertaking supervisor of #LastSeen, instructed Euronews.  

“The place it really begins, no less than once we look into Germany, is in small cities and neighbourhoods in larger cities the place individuals are assembled underneath the eyes of their neighbours,” she defined.

The undertaking is a collaboration between 5 establishments in Germany and the US whose aim is to map as many deportation websites and establish as many individuals as doable – sufferer, bystander, and perpetrator – in photographs from archives in addition to people.

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Within the face of rising Holocaust denialism and antisemitism, public entry to deportation footage may help restore faces, names, and tales to Jewish, Gypsy, different ethnic minority, gay, and disabled victims. In any other case, they is perhaps represented in data solely as a quantity on a Nazi transport listing, Bothe mentioned.

‘This occurred some other place’

A grainy color {photograph} taken in Might 1940 within the German city of Asberg is all of the extra alarming for its mundane setting.

The picture reveals, underneath a transparent blue sky, residents watching as 500 of their neighbours from the ethnic Romani and Sinti minorities, together with young children, are marched via the city to be deported to rudimentary camps in occupied Japanese Europe.

“It tells you numerous concerning the breaking down of the essential nature of human solidarity. That’s actually what’s taking place, the genocidal society on full show,” Bothe mentioned.

The truth that these images doc locally-led deportations in the midst of cities in broad daylight can also be an argument in opposition to the once-dominant narrative that Nazi atrocities have been far faraway from German society, based on Wolf Gruner, founding director of the USC Dornsife Middle for Superior Genocide Analysis, one of many organisations engaged on #LastSeen.

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The pictures “join the crimes again to Germany,” Gruner instructed Euronews. “That’s a very powerful factor as a result of usually once we discuss concerning the Holocaust, individuals assume that this occurred some other place. A number of individuals did this.”

“However the mass deportations, they might not be hidden. Folks have been marched via the streets, they have been transported on vehicles, and everyone might see it,” he mentioned.

“And folks additionally needed to make decisions in these moments,” Gruner added. “Would they protest in opposition to this? Would they be silent? Would they assist with the deportations? From this attitude, it actually consists of the query concerning the particular person decisions concerning the persecution.”

‘A really most popular memento’

The undertaking has to date collected deportation stills from no less than 60 areas all through Germany, however there are some puzzling gaps. So far, the group has discovered no pictures from Berlin, the place roughly 200 deportations passed off.

“In fact somebody took photographs,” Bothe mentioned, “it was a contemporary, rich metropolis, individuals had cameras.”

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The query is would somebody as we speak recognise what was taking place within the footage? Are they in an archive, or have they been saved in somebody’s attic, forgotten for many years?

Even archive workers could not know they’ve deportation footage, and in Germany, researchers are assured that the majority pictures will likely be present in official establishments.

The story is totally different in the US, Britain, and different English-speaking nations the place photographs are more likely to be within the arms of people relatively than organisations.

Some pictures belong to Holocaust survivors or victims’ households, however, “after the warfare, liberators usually took souvenirs with them, and pictures have been a really most popular memento and trophy,” Gruner mentioned.

“[Soldiers] took picture albums from SS officers, they took albums from different officers, additionally particular person images,” he defined.

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Alina Bothe estimated about 70% of identified deportation footage have been taken by perpetrators together with Nazi officers, native police, and authorities.

As Holocaust survivors and navy veterans die of outdated age, their youngsters and grandchildren are discovering themselves clearing out closets, attics, garages, and storage rooms the place, Gruner mentioned, there’s a “window of alternative” to search out unknown pictures and protect historic reminiscence.

The #LastSeen Undertaking is trying to find footage from the primary mass expulsion of Polish Jews from Germany in 1938 to the mass deportations to camps that elevated in scope till the top of the warfare.

Researchers hope to develop the undertaking from Germany to the remainder of Europe within the coming years.

An interactive picture atlas for the general public to discover and an academic recreation for college students will likely be revealed on March 7 in German at lastseen.org.

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Cartier owner Richemont posts 10% increase in Q3 sales

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Cartier owner Richemont posts 10% increase in Q3 sales
Cartier jewellery owner Richemont on Thursday reported a 10% increase in constant currency sales during the three months to the end of December, a strong early indicator for the performance of European luxury companies over the all-important holiday season.
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Ancient Pompeii excavation uncovers lavish private bath complex

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Ancient Pompeii excavation uncovers lavish private bath complex

Archaeologists have unearthed a lavish private bath complex in Pompeii, highlighting the wealth and grandeur of the ancient Roman city before it was destroyed by Mount Vesuvius in AD 79, the site said on Friday.

The baths, featuring hot, warm and cold rooms, could host up to 30 guests, allowing them to relax before heading into an adjacent, black-walled banquet hall, decorated with scenes from Greek mythology.

ITALY’S ANCIENT POMPEII PARK CRACKS DOWN ON DAILY VISITORS TO COMBAT OVERTOURISM

The pleasure complex lies inside a grand residence that has been uncovered over the last two years during excavations that have revealed the opulent city’s multifaceted social life before Vesuvius buried it under a thick, suffocating blanket of ash.

A central courtyard with a large basin adds to the splendour of the house, which is believed to have been owned by a member of Pompeii’s elite in its final years.

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“This discovery underscores how Roman houses were more than private residences, they were stages for public life and self-promotion,” said Gabriel Zuchtriegel, director of the Pompeii Archaeological Park.

The private thermal baths complex discovered by archaeologists in a villa of the ancient city of Pompeii is seen in Pompeii, Italy, in this undated handout picture released on January 17, 2025.  (Pompeii Archeological Park/Ministry of Cultural Heritage and Activities and Tourism/Handout via REUTERS )

Zuchtriegel said the layout recalled scenes from the Roman novel “The Satyricon”, where banquets and baths were central to displays of wealth and status.

Decorated with frescoes, the complex draws inspiration from Greek culture, emphasizing themes of leisure and erudition.

“The homeowner sought to create a spectacle, transforming their home into a Greek-style palace and gymnasium,” Zuchtriegel said.

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The remains of more than 1,000 victims have been found during excavations in Pompeii, including two bodies inside the private residence with the bathhouse – a woman, aged between 35-50, who was clutching jewellery and coins, and a younger man.

The discovery of their bodies was announced last year.

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‘Fields were solitary’: Migration raids send chill across rural California

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‘Fields were solitary’: Migration raids send chill across rural California

Los Angeles, California — Recent raids carried out by the United States Customs and Border Protection (CBP) in a rural California county have struck fear into immigrant communities as President-elect Donald Trump prepares to return to the White House.

CBP says that the operation in Kern County, which took place over three days in early January, resulted in the detention of 78 people. The United Farm Workers (UFW) union says it believes the number is closer to 200.

“The fields were almost solitary the day after the raids,” a 38-year-old undocumented farmworker named Alejanda, who declined to give her last name, said of the aftermath.

She explained that many workers stayed home out of fear. “This time of year, the orchards are usually full of people, but it felt like I was by myself when I returned to work.”

The raids are being seen by local labourers and organisations like UFW as a shot across the bow from immigration enforcement agencies before Trump’s inauguration on Monday.

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His second term as president is expected to ring in a new era of enhanced restrictions and deportation efforts.

While the number of people arrested represents a small fraction of the hundreds of thousands of undocumented workers underpinning California’s agricultural sector, the anxieties caused by such raids extend far beyond those detained.

“On Wednesday [the day after the raids], I stayed home from work. I barely left my house,” said Alejanda, adding that she kept her five-year-old son home from daycare rather than risk driving to drop him off.

“Everyone is talking about what happened. Everyone is afraid, including me. I didn’t actually see any of the agents myself, but you still feel the tension.”

Emboldened agencies

Following a presidential campaign where he routinely depicted undocumented migrants as “criminals” and “animals”, Trump will likely try to fulfill his promise to carry out the “largest deportation programme” in the country’s history on his first day in office.

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About 11 million people live in the United States without legal documentation, some of whom have worked in the country for decades, building families and communities.

The January arrests in Kern County appear to be the first large-scale Border Patrol raid in California since Trump’s victory in the November election, which set off speculation about the potential impact of mass deportations on immigrant communities and the economic sectors dependent on their labour.

About 50 percent of California’s agricultural workforce is made up of undocumented immigrants.

In California, undocumented status has been cited as a source of persistent anxiety for workers — as well as a means of leverage for employers, who often pay such labourers lower wages and grant them fewer protections in the fields.

But Alejanda says that workplace raids like the ones that took place in Kern County have not been common in the area.

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“I have been here for five years and never experienced anything like this before,” she said, noting that workers were detained while leaving the fields to go home.

CBP said in a statement that the operation, named “Return to Sender”, had targeted undocumented people with criminal backgrounds and connections to criminal organisations.

The raids were carried out by agents from the CBP El Centro Sector, located near the border between Mexico and southern California, more than five hours by car from the site of the raids.

“The El Centro Sector takes all border threats seriously,” Chief Patrol Agent Gregory Bovino said in a press release. “Our area of responsibility stretches from the US/Mexico Border, north, as mission and threat dictate, all the way to the Oregon line.”

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Antonio De Loera-Brust, a spokesperson for UFW, said that the operation shows that agencies like CBP are likely to become more aggressive as Trump takes office.

He also disputed CBP’s characterisation of the raids as focused on people with criminal records, saying that the operation cast a wide net and profiled people who looked like farmworkers.

Two of those arrested were UFW members, whom the organisation described as fathers who had lived in the area for more than 15 years.

“By operating over 300 miles north of the Mexican border, and apparently conducting this untargeted sweep based on profiling on their own initiative and authority, Border Patrol has shown itself to be clearly emboldened by a national political climate of hostility towards hard-working immigrant communities,” De Loera-Brust told Al Jazeera.

“It’s certainly deeply concerning that this sort of operation could be the new normal under the incoming Trump administration.”

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