This publication features an extensive collection of 1000 caricatures from Der Stürmer, a notorious Nazi newspaper from 1923 to 1945, The images represent a aspect of historical propaganda and are intended for educational and research purposes., Two caricatures that can be viewed at the Montreal Holocaust Museum, as well as on our website, clearly illustrate how easily drawings can spread antisemitism., Many scholars believe the cartoon to be the oldest known anti-Semitic sketch, and, according to historian Sara Lipton, writing in The New York Review of Books, it’s “something of a celebrity” in, The Katz Ehrenthal Collection—acquired through the generosity of the Katz family—consists of over 900 individual objects depicting Jews and antisemitic and anti-Jewish propaganda from the Medieval to the modern era, created and distributed throughout Europe, Russia, and the United States., On an altar of the Star of David stands the Inquisition and hammer and sickle, with graves and skulls in the background., e Jude (The Eternal Jew), replete with cartoons. This was on display between November 1937 and January 1939 and was viewed by hundreds of th usands of citizens in Munich, Vienna and Berlin. Its central theme of anti-Semitism was then transferred to the silver screen as.