In 1944 Rudolf Breslauer documented the everyday life in the Westerbork transit camp on film, commissioned by the German camp commander Albert Gemmeker. The Westerbork Film was never completed, but much of the raw footage is preserved.

In the wake of one of the worst social experiments in the history of mankind, 'I'm not Black, I'm Co...

Packed with drama, high emotions and cliff-hanger moments, Australia Says Yes is the intimate and pe...

In a forest in eastern Poland, an archaeologist digs to bring to light the traces of the Sobibor ext...

When Thomas Jefferson died in 1826, he left behind a mountain of personal debt, which forced his hei...

In the 1960s, the suburbs were meant to be modern havens for newcomers from rural France, Portugal, ...

The secret Nazi death camp at Sobibor was created solely for the mass extermination of Jews. But on ...

Holocaust survivors describe their experiences being interred at the Natzweiler-Struthof concentrati...

Thierno Souleymane Diallo sets out with his camera in search of the birth of filmmaking in Guinea. C...

A team of scientists search for the lost island of Testerep in front of the Belgian coast, venturing...

The history of the Warsaw Ghetto (1940-43) as seen from both sides of the wall, its legacy and its m...
This Emmy Award-winning documentary traces the rise of Nazism in general and the career of Adolf Eic...

13 years ago, director Bob Entrop made the film A piece of blue in the sky, the first film in the Ne...
One man's hat is another man's treasure when it comes to the importance and significance of saving i...

Lithuania, 1941, during World War II. Hundreds of thousands of texts on Jewish culture, stolen by th...

2010 documentary film on the Armenian Genocide by the Young Turk government of the Ottoman Empire du...

The story of the only three minutes of footage —a home movie shot by David Kurtz in 1938— showing im...

Filmed in IMAX, a young Mayan boy who lives close to the ruins becomes acquainted with an archaeolog...

Why did the Roman Empire, which dominated Europe and the Mediterranean for five centuries, inexorabl...