Nazi Persecution: Rare Photos of Roma Deportation (1938-1940)
A Roma woman and her child in a camp, subjected to investigation by the Nazi's Racial Hygiene Research Center, 1938.
Eva Justin, a researcher from the Nazi 'Racial Hygiene' unit, interrogates a Roma woman about her family history, 1938.
Dr. Robert Ritter, head of the Racial Hygiene Research Center, conducts a coercive interview with a Roma woman, 1938.

Dr. Ritter, a key figure in Nazi racial pseudo-science, forcibly takes a blood sample from a Roma woman, 1938.

Sophie Ehrhardt from the infamous Racial Hygiene Research Center conducts an intrusive interview with an elderly Roma woman, 1938.

A woman runs outside a Sinti encampment, likely fleeing or reacting to the presence of the Racial Hygiene Research Center, 1940.

A Roma man in Asperg, Germany, moments before his forced deportation to a concentration camp in Poland, 1940.

Sinti families are brutally rounded up by German police in Asperg, Germany, on May 22, 1940, marking the beginning of their deportation.

Sinti individuals are forced to march down a street in Asperg, en route to Hohenasperg Prison before their mass deportation to camps in Poland, May 22, 1940.

Sinti captives gather in the courtyard of Hohenasperg Prison, awaiting their impending deportation to concentration camps in Poland, May 22, 1940.
