Yahoo Malaysia Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    pogrom
    /ˈpɒɡrəm/

    noun

    • 1. an organized massacre of a particular ethnic group, in particular that of Jewish people in Russia or eastern Europe in the late 19th and early 20th centuries: "the pogroms of the 1880s drove many westwards to the USA"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. 2 days ago · Fascism in Romania. Between 21 and 23 January 1941, a rebellion of the Iron Guard paramilitary organization, whose members were known as Legionnaires, occurred in Bucharest, Romania. As their privileges were being gradually removed by the Conducător Ion Antonescu, the Legionnaires revolted.

  3. 2 days ago · Bewildered by the support of some of Lviv’s Jews for the Ukrainian cause, Polish troops entering the city (22 November) orchestrated a bloody pogrom that took lives of some seventy Jews and left about three hundred wounded.

  4. 3 days ago · 2022 marks the thirtieth anniversary of a pogrom in Rostock-Lichtenhagen. In August of that year, neo-Nazis attacked the “Sunflower house” in the northeastern city of Rostock which was the home to former Vietnamese contract workers and other migrants, like Sinti and Roma.

  5. 3 days ago · Culturicide involves the eradication and destruction of cultural artifacts, such as books, artworks, and structures. [8] The issue is addressed in multiple international treaties, including the Geneva Conventions and the Rome Statute, which define war crimes associated with the destruction of culture.

  6. 1 day ago · The massacres of Poles in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia ( Polish: rzeź wołyńsko-galicyjska, lit. 'Volhynian-Galician slaughter'; Ukrainian: Волинсько-Галицька трагедія, romanized : Volynsʹko-Halytsʹka trahediya, lit.

  7. 5 days ago · The “modern sense of the word” is, after all, modern. Some within the nascent “Zionist revolution” indeed made claims regarding the new nation that they imagined. It was, they thought ...

  8. 1 day ago · The great translator André Markowicz had never heard of The Jews, a forgotten play by Evgeny Tchirikov, written in 1903 after the pogrom of Kishinev. He translated it into French and had it published by Mesures. In partnership with Akadem, we have produced an interview – with English subtitles – which gives an account of the importance and ...