This book analyzes the role of the most relevant American press in the face of the genocide committed by the Nazis against the Jewish people in Europe. In it the author states that the press, and by extension the most influential North American media in the period between 1933 and 1945, did not do enough to report, publicize and denounce the tragedy experienced by Jews in Europe at the hands of the Nazis, and known as the Holocaust. This attitude turned some media outlets into impassive witnesses to the horror, an attitude that should never be repeated in the face of reportable events.
INSTITUTO FRANKLIN - UAH