
Boycott of Jewish shopsStory RG-60.4554, Tape 2828 |
|
March 1938 | |
Vienna, Austria | |
US Holocaust Memorial Museum | |
00:02:13 | |
Pedestrians walk by a store with a large "JUDE" and a Star of David painted on the window. The name on the store is Roth. Close-ups of other "JUDE" graffiti. One of the street signs indicates that the store is near the Naschmarkt. 01:14:16 A woman wipes a store window, perhaps attempting to remove graffiti. A close-up on the store window shows a sign (in soft-focus) which reads "Nicht arisches Geschaeft [Non-Aryan business]." A shot of the Juden Gasse street sign is followed by shots of a clothing shop called "Kleider Fleischer" with metal shutters drawn. 01:14:49 A group of people, presumably Jews, stand in a small crowd. The helmets of Germans are visible in the middle ground and the street sign indicates that this is the Seitenstette Gasse. Another group of people stand and look down the street, which seems to have been blocked off. The offices of the Israelitisches Kultusgemeinde (Jewish Community) were (and are today) in the Seitenstettengasse and their offices were raided and closed by the SS on March 17 (Eichmann was present). See diary entry below -- Ross and Helen Baker were out with their camera on this day. Jewish men in hats stand in the street, talking to each other, followed by another shot of a shuttered shop. 01:15:25 An SA man stands with his hands behind his back in front of a Jewish shop. Helen Baker walks up and looks in the window, then attempts to enter the store. The SA man stops her and the two speak briefly. Two other women watch as she is turned away from the store. See Helen Baker's diary entry below.
| |
Mute | |
Amateur | |
No | |
Excellent | |
2006.265.2 The donor's father, Ross Baker, a chemist and professor at the City University of New York, was on a six-month sabbatical studying at the University of Vienna when the Germans entered Austria in March, 1938. Baker's wife, Helen, and three of his five sons were also living in Vienna. In September 2006, the youngest son, Stan, donated two reels of 16mm black and white film shot by his mother and father in Austria and Italy in 1938 to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. In addition to the footage, Mr. Baker donated other items from his time in Vienna, including pro-German propaganda leaflets, posters, and newspapers, the 16mm Kodak camera used to shoot the film, and his mother's diaries and letters, which detail her thoughts and perceptions of the events as they occurred. | |
ANSCHLUSS (ANNEXATION OF AUSTRIA)
| |
Ross Baker | |
Stan Baker | |
16mm b/w reversal original | |
16mm; DPX; 2K ProRes; DigiBeta; Betacam SP; VHS; MP4 | |
01:13:40 - 01:15:54 | |
US Holocaust Memorial Museum, gift of Stan Baker |
March 1938 | |
Vienna, Austria | |
US Holocaust Memorial Museum | |
00:02:13 | |
Pedestrians walk by a store with a large "JUDE" and a Star of David painted on the window. The name on the store is Roth. Close-ups of other "JUDE" graffiti. One of the street signs indicates that the store is near the Naschmarkt. 01:14:16 A woman wipes a store window, perhaps attempting to remove graffiti. A close-up on the store window shows a sign (in soft-focus) which reads "Nicht arisches Geschaeft [Non-Aryan business]." A shot of the Juden Gasse street sign is followed by shots of a clothing shop called "Kleider Fleischer" with metal shutters drawn. 01:14:49 A group of people, presumably Jews, stand in a small crowd. The helmets of Germans are visible in the middle ground and the street sign indicates that this is the Seitenstette Gasse. Another group of people stand and look down the street, which seems to have been blocked off. The offices of the Israelitisches Kultusgemeinde (Jewish Community) were (and are today) in the Seitenstettengasse and their offices were raided and closed by the SS on March 17 (Eichmann was present). See diary entry below -- Ross and Helen Baker were out with their camera on this day. Jewish men in hats stand in the street, talking to each other, followed by another shot of a shuttered shop. 01:15:25 An SA man stands with his hands behind his back in front of a Jewish shop. Helen Baker walks up and looks in the window, then attempts to enter the store. The SA man stops her and the two speak briefly. Two other women watch as she is turned away from the store. See Helen Baker's diary entry below.
| |
Mute | |
Amateur | |
No | |
Excellent | |
2006.265.2 The donor's father, Ross Baker, a chemist and professor at the City University of New York, was on a six-month sabbatical studying at the University of Vienna when the Germans entered Austria in March, 1938. Baker's wife, Helen, and three of his five sons were also living in Vienna. In September 2006, the youngest son, Stan, donated two reels of 16mm black and white film shot by his mother and father in Austria and Italy in 1938 to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. In addition to the footage, Mr. Baker donated other items from his time in Vienna, including pro-German propaganda leaflets, posters, and newspapers, the 16mm Kodak camera used to shoot the film, and his mother's diaries and letters, which detail her thoughts and perceptions of the events as they occurred. | |
ANSCHLUSS (ANNEXATION OF AUSTRIA)
| |
Ross Baker | |
Stan Baker | |
16mm b/w reversal original | |
16mm; DPX; 2K ProRes; DigiBeta; Betacam SP; VHS; MP4 | |
01:13:40 - 01:15:54 | |
US Holocaust Memorial Museum, gift of Stan Baker |
Contact:
U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum
100 Raoul Wallenberg Place, SW
Washington, DC 20024-2126
Phone: 202–488–6104
Fax: 202–314–7820
E-mail: filmvideo@ushmm.org
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