The Joods Historisch Museum

The museum in Amsterdam dedicated to Jewish history, culture and religion, in the Netherlands and worldwide. It is the only museum in the Netherlands dedicated to Jewish history. The Joods Historisch Museum opened its doors on 24 February 1932 and was initially housed at the Waag (Weighing House) on Nieuwmarkt square. Following the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands in World War II, the museum was forced to close and much of the collection was lost. The museum reopened its doors in 1955.

The In Flanders Field Museum

The In Flanders Fields Museum presents the story of the First World War in the West Flanders front region. It is located in the renovated Cloth Halls of Ypres, an important symbol of wartime hardship and later recovery. The completely new permanent exhibition (opening 11 June 2012) tells the story of the invasion of Belgium and the first months of the mobilisation, the four years trench war in the Westhoek - from the beach of Nieuwpoort to the Leie in Armentières -, the end of the war and the permanent remembrance ever since.

Ardennen Poteau '44 Museum

The museum focuses on the Battle of the Bulge and it's located in a former Customs Office, which was by turns in German and Belgian hands in the last centuries. The museum displays dioramas and vehicles which would have been part of the historical event (jeeps, motors, half-tracks, cannons and tanks).

Widerstand und Verfolgung in Dortmund 1933–1945 ("Resistance and Persecution in Dortmund 1933-1945")

Built in 1928 as both a police station and jail, this building, which now houses one the city’s best museums, was under the Nazis one of the most notorious places of torture in the Third Reich. Now all five floors have been transformed into an exhibition using the original cells and charting the history of the little known about opposition to Hitler's regime from 1933 to 1945.

Museum of Family History

The Museum of Family History is a virtual one, and as such is a museum that exists only on the Internet. It has presented since its creation fourteen years ago, many exhibitions, ranging from short historical accounts of Jewish European history during the reign of the Russian czars to more elaborate presentations that feature a multitude of photographs, e.g. "Postcards from Home," an exhibition featuring more than one-thousand photographs of families who once lived in Eastern Europe before the advent of World War II.

Last Address Project

Walking through downtown Moscow, an attentive observer might occasionally notice small silver plaques attached to the entrances of apartment buildings. These memorials are part of the Last Address project commemorating the life and last residence of ordinary people murdered during Stalin’s purges. Inspired by the brass cobblestone project in Germany that pays tribute to Holocaust victims, each plaque contains a person’s name and the dates of his or her birth, arrest, execution, and rehabilitation.

Gelibolu War Museum

Gelibolu (Gallipoli) is a ilçe (district) center of Çanakkale Province in Turkish Thrace. It is situated in the north east of a peninsula bearing the same name. Its name is well known because of the Gallipoli Campaign, a series of 1915-battles during the World War I. There are frequent references to other wars also. Withdrawal room is the room of Allies withdrawal. In this room weapons and various tools the Allies left during the evacuation from the peninsula are exhibited. They are deliberatively cracked by the Allies.

The Documentation Centre of Austrian Resistance

The museum was formed in 1963 by a group of individuals that were actually part of the resistance movement in Austria during the time of the Third Reich. The colleagues of these folks were part of the two thousand seven hundred individuals that were executed by the German Gestapo during the war. In a secondary way, the location also covers the efforts of the resistance movement during the Fascist rule of Austria.