The United Nations has announced new actions to counter the surge in antisemitism, including encouraging governments to enforce laws against hate crimes and discrimination.
The core goals of the United Nations and its agencies are increasingly manipulated by antisemitic, anti-democratic, anti-Western powers
Israel's President Isaac Herzog addressed the U.N. on Monday at its annual Holocaust Remembrance Day event. His speech comes as a new report shows a worrying rise in antisemitic attitudes globally.
The UN had plans to build a city that would serve as its headquarters and the world's capital. A World War II Scituate spy base was key.
On January 27, 1945, Soviet troops entered the Auschwitz-Birkenau camp, where 1,100,000 men, women, and children died, including 990,000 Jews. For today's world, Auschwitz stands as a symbol of the atrocities of World War II. The United Nations has declared January 27 as the International Day of Commemoration in Memory of the Victims of the Holocaust. RFI was there and sent this report.
World War II was such an utterly massive conflict that it really is amazing how many great stories rarely get their due. When you have a war that big and...
The term “genocide” has been weaponized and diluted, with the International Criminal Court and Amnesty International complicit in the distortion of its meaning, undermining
The United Nations announced new actions Friday to counter the surge in antisemi-tism, including encouraging governments to enforce laws against hate crimes and discrimination.
OSWIECIM, Poland — Auschwitz survivors warned Monday of the rising antisemitism and hatred which they are witnessing in the modern world as they gathered with world leaders and European royalty on the 80th anniversary of the death camp’s liberation.
Thousands of people gathered in Poland to mark the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz on January 27. More than 1 million people -- mostly Jews -- were murdered at the infamous World War II Nazi death camp.
A free symposium at the museum Feb. 15 will look at African American engagment in World War II and its place in social progress.
The Battle of Okinawa in 1945 was one of the bloodiest of World War II. More than 200,000 people were killed during the three months of fighting, more than half of them civilians. Okinawans were victims not only to American artillery bombing,