After defending Musk against allegations of making a Nazi salute at Trump's inauguration, the Anti-Defamation League criticizes his Holocaust puns.
Z for "Zigeuner" -- "Gypsy", then a number. Some survivors still have the horror of the Roma Holocaust tattooed on their skin, a reminder of a lesser-known genocide that researchers are now trying to document.
The Anti-Defamation League slammed Elon Musk after he posted a series of Nazi-related puns on X when defending his gesture at an inauguration rally for President Trump that many claimed was a Nazi salute.
Menachem Rosensaft, the son of survivors, challenges the comforting messages of Judaism’s best-known collection of verse.
“Making inappropriate and highly offensive jokes that trivialize the Holocaust only serve to minimize the evil and inhumanity of Nazi crimes, denigrate the suffering of both victims and survivors and insult the memory of the six million Jews murdered in the Shoah,” the ADL said in a statement from its official account.
A 100-year-old Holocaust survivor in San Francisco recounts the horrors of the Lodz Ghetto and the concentration camps. She also has advice.
STORY: Holocaust survivor Eva Szepesi has a warning for the world: don't let history repeat itself. Asked about how she views rising antisemitism and right-wing populism, she said:"It is terrifying. It is definitely terrifying that it is like this.
Days after Elon Musk set off a firestorm with an odd gesture that struck some as a Nazi salute, the billionaire entrepreneur drew criticism Thursday for a series of word puns using the names of Third Reich leaders.
After defending Musk's viral salute, The Anti-Defamation League is criticizing the tech billionaire after he made a series of Holocaust jokes.
The Queen has said that the atrocities of the Holocaust will never be forgotten as she spoke at a reception for the Anne Frank Trust...
Musk has been under scrutiny after making a hand gesture resembling a Nazi salute at a Trump inauguration event earlier the week.
We talk with organizers of the touring musical program, which features songs written by Jews in Nazi concentration camps and ghettos, ahead of its stop at Blair School of Music on International Holocaust Remembrance Day.