2.7. Forced labor
October 1942. Architect Eugenio Gentili-Tedeschi (1916-2005) begins to create his ‘secret book’. Two of his sketches relate to work required from the Jews in Turin. In the ‘Cronache di Milano’ there is a reference to forced labour. Massimo Gentili-Tedeschi’s Private...
2.7. Forced labor
Milan, Niguarda district, May-June 1943. Among ‘conscripted’ Jews for compulsory work: Emilio Brüll (1908-1985), Salvatore Fiorentino (1902-1945), who would then be deported and killed at Auschwitz, and Renato Forti. Fondazione Centro di Documentazione Ebraica...
2.7. Forced labor
Campi Bisenzio (Florence), Casa Rossa, 1943. ‘Conscripted’ Florentine Jews at work. Istituto storico della resistenza in Toscana, Firenze
2.7. Forced labor
La Difesa della razza, 20 June 1942. The anti-Semitic weekly exalts the work required from the Jews with photos taken along the banks of the Tiber in Rome. Fondazione Museo della Shoah, Roma
2.7. Forced labor
2 December 1942. Peddler Anselmo Pavoncello (1908-1945) is awarded 0.50 cents for forced labour along the embankment of the Tiber River. When he realises the humiliating amount, Pavoncello tears and throws away the check, which would then be retrieved and kept by his...
2.7. Forced labor
Rome, 1942. ‘Conscripted’ Jews for compulsory work along the banks of the Tiber near Castel Sant’Angelo. Susan Zuccotti, L’Olocausto in Italia, Milano, Tea Storica, 1987
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