1941 ⟶ Charles Lindbergh's Antisemitic Speech
In a speech at an America First rally at the Des Moines Coli...Year
1941
1942
1943
1999
🗣️ Charles Lindbergh's Antisemitic Speech
In a speech at an America First rally at the Des Moines Coliseum on 11 September 1941, Charles Lindbergh accused American Jews of exercising "large ownership and influence in our motion pictures, our press, our radio, and our government" and of conspiring to make the United States join World War II.⟶

AntisemitismCharles LindberghAmerica FirstSpeechWorld War IIConspiracy TheoryPoliticsInfluence

🔥 Gabès Pogrom in French Tunisia
Gabès pogrom in French Tunisia leaves 8 Jews dead and at least 20 wounded.⟶

PogromAntisemitismFrench TunisiaViolenceWorld War IIJewish CommunityNorth Africa

🖼️ Antisemitic Exhibition in Zagreb
The Antisemitic Exhibition in Zagreb took place in the Art Pavilion in Zagreb, the capital city of the Independent State of Croatia (NDH), in May 1942. According to its organizers, the exhibition sought to expose the "destructive and exploitative work of Croatia's Jews prior to 1941."⟶

World War IIPropagandaCollaborationNDHUstašeAntisemitismExhibitionIndependent State of Croatia

🎬 Banning of the Antisemitic Film Vienna 1910
Vienna 1910 is a 1943 German biographical film directed by Emerich Walter Emo and starring Rudolf Forster, Heinrich George and Lil Dagover. It is based on the life of Mayor of Vienna Karl Lueger. Its antisemitic content led to it being banned by the Allied Occupation forces following World War II.⟶
World War IIFilmPropagandaAntisemitismKarl LuegerNazi GermanyAllied OccupationVienna


🎥 Antisemitic Propaganda Film Forces occultes
Forces occultes is a French film of 1943 that virulently denounces Jews, Freemasonry, and parliamentarianism as part of the Vichy regime's drive against them and seeks to prove a Jewish-Masonic plot.⟶

World War IIFilmPropagandaAntisemitismVichy RegimeFreemasonryConspiracy TheoryForces occultes

🗣️ Anti-Defamation League Disputes Pat Buchanan's Defense of Charles Lindbergh
Abraham Foxman of the Anti-Defamation League, in an 11 October 1999, letter to The Washington Post claimed that A Republic, Not an Empire by Pat Buchanan "defends Charles Lindbergh against charges of anti-Semitism, not mentioning the infamous 1940 speech in which he accused the Jews of warmongering." Pat Buchanan denies this and points out Foxman's error, saying that he mentioned the 1941 speech to say it "ignited a national firestorm," which lingered after the aviator's death, and shows "the explosiveness of mixing ethnic politics and foreign policy."⟶

Anti-Defamation LeaguePat BuchananCharles LindberghAnti-SemitismHistorical RevisionismAmerican PoliticsWorld War IIPublic Discourse
