Les juifs d'Algérie du décret Crémieux à la libération.
Discusses the background to the Crémieux Decree (1870), which granted Algerian Jews French citizenship; anti-Jewish demonstrations between 1871-1900; the rise of antisemitism in the 1930s; the abrogation of the decree in 1940 by the Vichy regime; the expulsion of Jewish teachers and pupils from Algerian schools; the Vichy government's attempts to turn the Jews into a national minority; the application of the law on the status of the Jews in Algeria; Jewish youth in Algiers and the uprising of November 1942; Jewish internment camps in Algeria and Morocco; and the reintroduction in 1943 of the Crémieux decree. Notes the reluctance of the French High Commissioner, Henri Giraud, to implement the act with vigor. 374 pages illustrations 22 cm
- Ansky, Michel, 1889-1948.
- Paraf, Pierre, 1893-1989.
- NIOD Bibliotheek
- Text
- ocm01018792
- Jews--Algeria--History.
- Jews--Legal status, laws, etc.--Algeria--1870-1914.
- Jews--France--Algeria--Colonies.
- Jews--Persecutions--Algeria--1900-1945.
- Jews--Persecutions--Algeria--1870-1914.
- Jews--Legal status, laws, etc.--Algeria--1900-1945.
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