13-year-old Ellen Brandt lived a joyful life in Berlin, Germany until the Nuremberg Race Laws were imposed in 1935. These laws imposed prohibitory restrictions on the rights and freedoms of Jewish Germans, and declared that Jews were no longer full German citizens. The laws also banned marriages between Jewish and non-Jewish Germans.
Ellen Brandt was born in Mannheim, Germany in 1922. She survived the Holocaust by fleeing Nazi-controlled territory. Ellen was interviewed by USC Shoah Foundation in Los Angeles, USA in 1996.
May is Jewish-American Heritage Month.
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USC Shoah Foundation – The Institute for Visual History and Education develops
empathy, understanding and respect through testimony, using its Visual History Archive of more than 55,000 video testimonies, academic programs and partnerships across USC and 170 universities, and award-winning IWitness education program. USC Shoah Foundation’s interactive programming, research and materials are accessed in museums and universities, cited by government leaders and NGOs, and taught in classrooms around the world. Now in its third decade, USC Shoah Foundation reaches millions of people on six continents from its home at the University of Southern California.
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