See Also
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- Abraham Kaufman, a prominent Zionist in China
- An Investigation of Global Policy with the Yamato Race as Nucleus (1943)
- History of the Jews in China
- History of the Jews in Austria
- History of the Jews in Germany
- History of the Jews in Iraq
- History of the Jews in Japan
- History of the Jews in Russia and the Soviet Union
- International response to the Holocaust
- Jewish settlement in Imperial Japan, a controversial view on the reasoning for Japan's assistance to European Jewry.
- MS St. Louis (1939)
- Proposals for a Jewish state
- Haavara Agreement, worked out between the Zionist Federation of Germany, the Anglo-Palestine Bank, and the economic authorities Nazi Germany, to help facilitate the emigration of German Jews to Palestine (1933–1939).
- British Uganda Programme, a British plan to give a portion of British East Africa to the Jewish people as a homeland (1903).
- Jewish Autonomous Oblast, a Soviet territory intended as a Yiddish-speaking Jewish homeland in Siberia, established in 1934.
- Fugu Plan, a Japanese plan to bring Jewish refugees to Manchukuo (1934, 1938).
- Madagascar Plan, a Nazi proposal to deport European Jews to Madagascar (1938).
- Kimberley Plan, an Australian proposal to bring Jewish refugees to Kimberley (1939/1940).
- Slattery Report, an American proposal to bring Jewish refugees to Alaska (1939–1940).
- British Guiana, a British proposal of an alternative Jewish homeland in British Guiana was raised (1940).
- Racial policy of Nazi Germany (1933–1945)
- White Paper of 1939 (Malcolm MacDonald White Paper)
- Shanghai Ghetto (film)
- A Jewish Girl in Shanghai
Read more about this topic: Shanghai Ghetto
Famous quotes containing the word see:
“To see ourselves as others see us can be eye-opening. To see others as sharing a nature with ourselves is the merest decency. But it is from the far more difficult achievement of seeing ourselves amongst others, as a local example of the forms human life has locally taken, a case among cases, a world among worlds, that the largeness of mind, without which objectivity is self- congratulation and tolerance a sham, comes.”
—Clifford Geertz (b. 1926)