Ebrei e fascismo a Bologna

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Editrice grafica Lavino, 1989 - Bologna (Italy) - 270 pages
A history of the Jews of Bologna from the first documentary mention (the expulsion of 1171) to World War II. States that after the emancipation of 1859-60 the Jews were increasingly integrated into Italian society, so much so that most of them accepted fascism as the lesser evil for Italy when compared with Bolshevism. They did not pay attention to the first racial law of April 1937 prohibiting sexual relations between Colored Africans and Italians, and did not denounce attacks against Italian Zionists and foreign Jews in newspapers such as "Il Resto del Carlino", "Il Popolo d'Italia", and "La Difesa della Razza" in 1938. The racial laws of October 1938 were followed by the dismissal of the Jews from the liberal professions and in 1940 by internment of foreign Jews and their assignation for forced labor. After September 1943, the roundup of Jews in Bologna and their deportation was organized by Theodor Dannecker and Glauco Buffarini.

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Contents

Section 1
5
Section 2
11
Section 3
38
Copyright

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