British director Luke Holland spent years befriending elderly WWII veterans, then interviewed them for his film; producers cast doubt on claim many Germans didn't know of Holocaust

In 'The Ratline,' Philippe Sands befriends son of Otto von Wachter, SS officer involved in killing his ancestors. Despite wealth of evidence, son says father was 'a great man'

Show has drawn criticism in the past from some Jewish groups for its premise and for its portrayal of the Holocaust

A true-life psychological thriller reports on 'Mio' Meidad's undercover mission, without backup, to exact justice -- and foil a German plan to give Nazis amnesty

Thousands answer crowdsourcing call to assist Germany's Arolsen Archives in making 26 million newly digitized historical documents searchable by anyone online

'I don’t want his apology, I don’t need it,' survivor says of Bruno Dey, who is accused of complicity in the murder of 5,230 of those killed at Stutthof camp

Because suspect was 19 when assigned to work as a guard at the Stutthof camp, case could be handled by a juvenile court; experts to assess if he has ability to stand trial

Kaylynn Williford, who has served in her position since 1992, slammed for sharing post saying 'Nazis tore down statues. Banned free speech. Institute gun control. Sound familiar?”

In 'The SS Officer's Armchair,' British-Jewish historian Daniel Lee retraces history of obscure lower-level Third Reich functionary, showing role he played in destroying lives

Top court in Germany says authorities were wrong to reject US woman's request to become a German citizen via Jewish dad on grounds she was born out of wedlock

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