When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Brown Babies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brown_Babies

    Brown Babies is a term used for children born to black soldiers and white women during and after the Second World War. Other names include "war babies" and "occupation babies." In Germany they were known as Mischlingskinder ("mixed-race children"), a term first used under the Nazi regime for children of mixed Jewish-German parentage. [1]

  3. Persecution of black people in Nazi Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persecution_of_black...

    Even before the events of World War II, Germany struggled with the idea of African mixed-race German citizens.While interracial marriage was legal under German law at the time, beginning in 1890, some colonial officials started refusing to register them, using eugenics arguments about the supposed inferiority of mixed-race children to support their decision. [3]

  4. Rhineland bastard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhineland_Bastard

    Young Rhinelander who was classified as a bastard and hereditarily unfit under the Nazi regime. Rhineland bastard (German: Rheinlandbastard) was a derogatory term used in Nazi Germany to describe Afro-Germans, born of mixed-race relationships between German women and black African men of the French Army who were stationed in the Rhineland during its occupation by France after World War I.

  5. Lebensborn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lebensborn

    Lebensborn e.V. (literally: "Fount of Life") was a secret, SS-initiated, state-registered association in Nazi Germany with the stated goal of increasing the number of children born who met the Nazi standards of "racially pure" and "healthy" Aryans, based on Nazi eugenics (also called "racial hygiene" by some eugenicists).

  6. Afro-Germans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afro-Germans

    Afro-Germans (German: Afrodeutsche) or Black Germans (German: schwarze Deutsche) are Germans of Sub-Saharan African descent.. Cities such as Hamburg and Frankfurt, which were formerly centres of occupation forces following World War II and more recent immigration, have substantial Afro-German communities.

  7. Mischling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mischling

    Mischling (German: [ˈmɪʃlɪŋ] ⓘ; lit. ' mix-ling '; pl. Mischlinge [1]) was a pejorative legal term which was used in Nazi Germany to denote persons of mixed "Aryan" and "non-Aryan", such as Jewish, ancestry as they were classified by the Nuremberg racial laws of 1935. [2]

  8. War children - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_children

    betrifft. Besatzungskinder [Ref.: War children] (in German). Shown by regional German TV SWR/SR on 2 December 2009, 20h15–21h. Meeting of German-French children stemming from a German soldier stationed in France, or vice versa from a French father stationed in Germany, search for their fathers.

  9. Nazi crimes against children - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_crimes_against_children

    Czesława Kwoka, 14-year-old Auschwitz concentration camp victim. Nazi Germany perpetrated various crimes against humanity and war crimes against children, including the killing of children of unwanted or "dangerous" people in accordance with Nazi ideological views, either as part of their idea of racial struggle or as a measure of preventive security.