1938 ⟶ Evian Conference: Nations Refuse Jewish Refugees
Evian Conference: 31 countries refuse to accept Jews trying ...Year
1938
1939
1943
🚪 Evian Conference: Nations Refuse Jewish Refugees
Evian Conference: 31 countries refuse to accept Jews trying to escape Nazi Germany (with the exception of Dominican Republic). Most find temporary refuge in Poland. See also Bermuda Conference.⟶

Evian ConferenceRefugeesImmigrationNazi GermanyInternational ResponseJewish RefugeesBermuda ConferenceWorld War II





🚢 Voyage of the Damned: S.S. St. Louis Turned Away
The "Voyage of the damned": S.S. St. Louis, carrying 907 Jewish refugees from Germany, is turned back by Canada, Cuba and the US. After they were denied entry to those places, the refugees were finally accepted in various European countries, including Belgium, the Netherlands, the UK, and France. Historians have estimated that approximately a quarter of them were murdered in death camps during World War II.⟶

S.S. St. LouisRefugeesImmigrationWorld War IIJewish RefugeesNazi GermanyInternational ResponseHolocaustAnti-Refugee Sentiment








🎬 Linen from Ireland: German Anti-Semitic Film
Linen from Ireland is a 1939 German drama film that was part of an ongoing campaign of antisemitism in German cinema of the era, and it also attacked Britain with whom Germany was at war by the time of the film's release.⟶

PropagandaFilmAntisemitismNazi GermanyCinemaWorld War IIIdeologyAnti-British Sentiment

🚫 United States Rejects Wagner-Rogers Bill
The Congress of the United States rejects the Wagner-Rogers Bill, an effort to admit 20,000 Jewish refugee children under the age of 14 from Nazi Germany.⟶

Wagner-Rogers BillRefugeesImmigrationNazi GermanyUnited StatesJewish RefugeesWorld War IILegislative Action

✡️ The Holocaust Begins
The Holocaust. About 6 million Jews, including about 1 million children, systematically killed by Nazi Germany and other Axis powers. See also Holocaust denial.⟶

HolocaustGenocideNazi GermanyWorld War IIMass MurderConcentration CampsAnti-SemitismAxis PowersSix MillionJewish History
🤝 Bermuda Conference on Jewish Refugees
The Bermuda Conference was an international conference between the United Kingdom and the United States held from 19 April 1943, through 30 April 1943, at Hamilton, Bermuda. The topic of discussion was the question of Jewish refugees who had been liberated by Allied forces and those who still remained in Nazi-occupied Europe. The only agreement made was that the war must be won against the Nazis. US immigration quotas were not raised nor was the British prohibition on Jewish refugees seeking refuge in the British Mandate of Palestine lifted.⟶

World War IIRefugeesHolocaustBermuda ConferenceImmigrationJewish RefugeesAlliesPalestine


