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European Sites of Holocaust Memory (ESHEM)
 

Historical Framework

ESHEM connects people and organisations that safeguard historical Holocaust sites across Europe. This section outlines the historical context that shapes our work and defines ESHEM's focus in a broader landscape of remembrance. 

The Historical Framework for our Work 

Following the introduction of anti-Jewish measures after the Nazis came to power in Germany in 1933, persecution intensified and ultimately culminated in the systematic mass murder of Jews during the Second World War in German-occupied Europe. It was implemented and supported by a variety of social, national and administrative groups, as well as individuals within and outside Germany, encompassing a vast number of people and German-allied governments. 
 
In the course of the German invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, those whom the Nazis defined as being Jewish were killed in mass shootings in the immediate vicinity of their homes. At the same time, Jews from most other countries in German-occupied Europe - often by way of transit camps - were deported to death camps in occupied Poland and killed through asphyxiation by poison gas.   
 
Before the war ended in 1945, approximately 6 million Jewish men, women, and children were killed on the orders of the German Nazi government and by collaborationist governments and authorities, by Nazis, their collaborators, and accomplices.

Traces of these crimes are still present in Europe's landscape today. There are former concentration and labour camp sites, some of them very famous, some of them virtually unknown. There are railway stations, provisional transfer camps, the ghettos, places of forced labour, hiding places, and escape routes. They tell stories of suffering, pain or death, as well as resilience, courage, rescue and survival, and many of them are sacred burial sites holding the remains of hundreds of people. These sites demand our respect and our enduring care.

Numerous initiatives across Europe have documented these experiences. They provide tools for education, commemoration, and research, enabling communities, scholars, and educators to engage with the Holocaust in more comprehensive and meaningful ways.

The list of key online resources below supports further exploration, understanding, and deepening of knowledge.

Timelines

Timeline of Events, The Holocaust Encyclopedia 
A detailed timeline of events from 1933 until after 1945; this is a section of the Holocaust Encyclopedia prepared by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. 
Holocaust Maps and Timelines  
Prepared by the Montreal Holocaust Museum, this website contains interactive Holocaust-related maps and timelines, as well as additional educational materials.   
Holocaust Explained 
Prepared by the Wiener Holocaust Library, this educational resource provides diverse learning materials on the Holocaust for students aged 13-18 and their teachers.   

 

Encyclopedias & Knowledge Portals

Yad Vashem 
Yad Vashem. The World Holocaust Remembrance Center is a website providing access to vast digital collections such as The Central Database of Shoah Victims’ Names, The Online Photo Archive, The Righteous Database, The Documents Database and many more.   
Facts About the Holocaust 
Established by the World Jewish Congress and UNESCO, this online tool aims to provide basic knowledge and essential facts about the Holocaust.      
Encyclopedia of Camps & Ghettos, 1933-1945 
Developed by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and divided into seven volumes, this comprehensive resource provides information on Nazi camps, ghettos, and other persecution sites (volumes 1-7: approx. 6,000 sites; forthcoming volume 7 database dedicated to forced labour camps: approx. 38,000 additional sites).l educational materials.   
Holocaust Explained 
Prepared by the Wiener Holocaust Library, this educational resource provides diverse learning materials on the Holocaust for students aged 13-18 and their teachers.   

 

Interactive Maps & Geographic Atlases

The Map of the Holocaust by Bullets 
An interactive, regularly updated map of Holocaust killing sites, prepared by Yahad - In Unum, a framework partner of the Remembrance strand of the CERV programme. It is regularly updated, and consists of 2,080 documented sites, of which 1,660 are currently available for consultation. 
Untold Stories: Murder Sites of Jews in Occupied Territories of the USSR 
The International Institute for Holocaust Research’s project dedicated to Jewish killing sites in the German- and Romanian-occupied parts of the former Soviet Union.  
The Holocaust Maps  
Created by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, this media essay presents Holocaust-related maps (covering, among others, the location of Nazi concentration camps and killing centres, deportations and death march routes).   
Holocaust Mass Graves  
An international joint research project that aims to map and present the locations of mass graves where Jews, Sinti and Roma are buried in the former General Government.   
Holocaust Atlas of Latvia  
Center for Judaic Studies at the University of Latvia’s project that maps Holocaust memorial sites in Latvia. Regularly updated, it contains approximately 160 locations.    
Holocaust Atlas of Lithuania 
Initiated by the Vilna Gaon State Jewish Museum and the Austrian Verein Gedenkdienst, the project aims to map all sites where the mass killing of Jews were carried out in Lithuania (approx. 230 are identified).    
Mapping Hiding Places  
Inaugurated by Dr. Dienke Hondius at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, the goal of this research project is to create a database of hiding places used by Jews (first in the Netherlands, with the aim of covering Europe more broadly in the future). 
Belarus Holocaust Memorials Project  
Website dedicated to the Belarus Holocaust Memorial Project’s activities, including the mapping and commemorating of all of the approximately 500 Holocaust killing sites in Belarus.  
Holocaustul in Romania  
An online platform dedicated to the Holocaust in Romania, developed by the “Elie Wiesel” National Institute for the Study of the Holocaust in Romania; part of the #memoriefărăură (memory without hate) project. 
Shoah Atlas Ukraine  
Lead by the Tsal Kaplun Foundation, this digital map aims to identify and present Holocaust killing sites located in today’s Ukraine (approx. 2,000 locations). 
Hungarian Roma During World War II   
A research project providing information about anti-Roma mass killings in Hungary, Roma deportations from Hungary, and the Roma population in Hungary during World War II.
Mapping the Holocaust. Places of Remembrance in Serbia 
Created by the Centre for Public History with the support of the US Embassy in Serbia, the Serbian map shows the locations of the largest camps for Jews, Roma, and Sinti, as well as killing sites.  
Online Warsaw Ghetto Map and Database 
Prepared by the Polish Center for Holocaust Research and regularly updated, this online resource contains information about places (20,088), people (43,501), events (45,191) and sources (3,388) related to the Warsaw ghetto and the ‘Aryan’ side of the city.
Placing the Holocaust  
Funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities and participating institutions, this interdisciplinary project is dedicated to presenting information on ghettos, Nazi concentration and death camps, and survivor testimonies.
Digital Holocaust Maps   
Created by Helmut Walser Smith, Martha Rivers Ingram Professor of History at Vanderbilt University, this website contains digitised maps and documents related to the Holocaust. 
Mapping the Holocaust in the Independent State of Croatia  
A digital research project  by the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Research in Southeast Europe exploring the Holocaust in the fascist Independent State of Croatia, the history of Croatian Jews, and contemporary commemorative efforts. 

Digital Databases

Holocaust (Shoah) Deportation Database // Transports to Extinction  
This Yad Vashem large-scale research project and digital database aims to collect and present reliable information on Holocaust deportation routes, the Nazi persecution system that carried out the transports, and fate of the victims.   nal educational materials.   
#LastSeen 
This collaborative project initiated by Free University Berlin and other organisations provides a digital atlas of photos documenting of the deportations from the German Reich in the years 1938-1945. 
Digital Lens: The Future of the Past  
Led by the ELTE Research Center for Computational Social Science, this website, focusing on the Holocaust in Hungary, contains data visualisations, early testimonies and the protocols of the National Committee for Attending Deportees.
DERLA: Digital Memory Landscape   
Run by the University of Graz, this digital project documents and interprets Austrian memorial sites and memorial plaques related to persecution and resistance during National Socialism. 
Holocaust Memorial Monuments 
A joint project of the Center for Jewish Art, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Miller Center/Feldenkreis Program, University of Miami, and International Survey of Jewish Monuments, this digital database collects documentation about Holocaust memorial monuments.  
Memorial Museums Database  
Run by the Memorial Museums Department (part of the Topography of Terror Foundation), this digital database presents an overview of Memorial Museums across Euros.   
Holocaust in Occupied Estonia 1941-1944 
Run by the Estonian Institute of Historical Memory, the website is dedicated to the Holocaust in Estonia and presents information on locations, victims, and survivor testimonies. 
Digital Jewish Monument  
Initiated by emeritus professor Isaac Lipschits and maintained by the Jewish Cultural Quarter in Amsterdam, this online monument is dedicated to more than 109,000 Dutch Jews, Roma and Sinti victims of the Holocaust, as well as those who fled to the Netherlands during WW2.    
Holocaust Mapping - Preservation of the Toposve Supe Camp  
Run by the Center for Public History, this scientific research project aims to provide detailed information about the Topovske Šupe (Artillery Sheds) camp, the Holocaust in Serbia, and the fate of the victims. 
The Genocide Committed Against European Roma and Sinti During the National Socialist Era
Run by The OeAD – Austria’s Agency for Education and Internationalisation, this learning platform contains information about the Nazi persecution and genocide of the Roma and Sinti, the fate of the victims and survivors, as well as postwar remembrance. 
Marginalised Histories: Persecution and Discrimination of Roma and Sinti  
Run by European Network Remembrance and Solidarity, this online tool equips teachers and educators with case studies and biographies of Roma and Sinti who suffered from discrimination and persecution in Europe before World War II. 
The Forgotten Camps  
Created by Vincent Châtel and Chuck Ferree, this website provides information about lesser-known Nazi camps, testimonies of survivors and liberators, as well as useful books and resources.   
Encyclopaedia of the Nazi Genocide of the Sinti and Roma in Europe 
Developed by the Research Centre on Antiziganism in the Department of History at Heidelberg University, this digital encyclopedia gathers information on the Nazi persecution and murder of the Sinti and Roma in Europe.