{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/5b7eee3536bf3f4166bc8c11/637692f09fe5fa001158e916?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Jud Newborn - Sophie Scholl and the White Rose","thumbnail_width":200,"thumbnail_height":200,"thumbnail_url":"https://open-images.acast.com/shows/5b7eee3536bf3f4166bc8c11/1668715131937-9bf1f3593dda538d62e168037353a819.jpeg?height=200","description":"<p><strong>Dr. Jud Newborn&nbsp;</strong>served as Founding Historian and co-creator of New York’s Holocaust museum (Museum of Jewish Heritage). An&nbsp;acclaimed multimedia lecturer, storyteller and erstwhile&nbsp;undercover&nbsp;operative,&nbsp;Newborn is&nbsp;co-author of the now classic&nbsp;<em>Sophie&nbsp;Scholl&nbsp;and the White Rose,</em>&nbsp;currently in a 3rd, special 75th&nbsp;Anniversary&nbsp;edition marking the execution of these incredibly courageous White Rose anti-Nazi student&nbsp;resisters in 1943.&nbsp;Newborn recounts in the book and his programs how Sophie Scholl and her brother Hans - former fanatical Hitler Youth leaders, the latter arrested for a teen gay relationship - transformed uniquely to become the greatest heroes of the German anti-Nazi resistance.&nbsp;Forming the&nbsp;secret \"White Rose\" with a handful of determined comrades, they issued a staccato burst of six impassioned, eloquent leaflets&nbsp;calling out against Nazi crimes from 1942 to 1943,&nbsp;stymieing an&nbsp;embarrassed Gestapo and outraging Hitler himself.&nbsp;&nbsp;Forcing Germans to confront the Nazi mass murder of Jews, they ended Leaflet Four with these words:&nbsp;“We will not be silent! We are your bad conscience! The White Rose will not leave you in peace!”&nbsp;&nbsp;On February 18, 1943,&nbsp;Hans and Sophie Scholl mounted a gallery high above the University of Munich’s vast atrium and tossed down hundreds of leaflets into the hands of astonished students.&nbsp;<em>It was the only fundamental public protest by Germans against Nazism as a whole ever to be staged.</em>&nbsp;Quickly&nbsp;captured, they were subjected immediately to a show trial - and summarily beheaded. But their&nbsp;message lived on after the war and has only grown in importance, especially as we face the&nbsp;rise of White Nationalism, antisemitism and the extreme right wing today.</p>","author_name":"House of Mystery Radio"}